Tuesday 27 August 2013

Be careful with someone like this:


  1. Handwriting slant determines emotional expressiveness
  2. The slant is a major indicator for extroversion or introversion
  3. Right slant indicates compliance with people
  4. Right slant shows an emotionally expressive person
  5. Right slanted writers will act according to emotions
  6. Pressure levels determine how intense the emotions are expressed
  7. Upright slant shows emotional reserve, suppression, and self-reliance
  8. Upright slant writers act with their head not their heart
  9. Upright slant writers are cool under pressure
  10. Leftward slant writers are emotionally cold and defiant
  11. Leftward slanted people are self-centered and/or selfish
  12. Leftward writers are often writers, poets, or artists
  13. Overly right slant writers cannot control their emotions
  14. Variable slants identify mostly emotionally unstable writers.

Handwriting Analysis: Slant

DIRECTIONS: Look at the chart to measure how far you slant. Slant reveals the degree to which you express your real emotional feelings to others, depending on your mood. (Does not matter if you’re left-handed or right-handed)

LEFTWARD: \\

Slant A — Emotionally ill. Totally emotionally repressed (keeps back) and locked up in his or her own world. Cannot be reached. Leans over backward to avoid emotional situations. Past- and self-oriented. (Among convicted rapists, there is a preponderance of leftward slanters. An inability to properly express real feelings.)
Slant B — Represses (keeps back) real emotional feelings. Appears cold, evasive (avoids answering directly), and self-absorbed. Independent, hard to fathom (understand), and difficult to get along with.

Slant C — Represses real emotional feelings. Cool exterior masks inhibited reactions. Diplomatic, reserved, not straightforward. (This is saying that how you react on the outside isn’t really how you feel on the inside; you put a mask on.)

VERTICAL: lll
Slant D — Suppresses (puts an end to) emotional responses. Head over heart. It is very difficult to write this way unless you have complete emotional self-control. Undemonstrative, independent, detached, cautious, diplomatic attitude. (Britains are taught to write this way)

RIGHTWARD: ///
Slant E — Moderate expression of feelings. Healthy emotional responses. (70% of Americans write this way - the Palmer Method)
Slant F — Dominated by emotions. Heart over head. Intensely ardent (enthusiastic/passionate), affectionate, friendly, sensitive, jealous. Emotional brushfire. 
Slant G — Carried away by emotionalism. Heart rules the head. Excessively fervent (displaying passionate intensity), ardent, romantic, touchy, oversensitive, nervous, high-strung (highly intense), capable of hysterical outbursts. Difficult to get along with. Volatile (explosive behavior). (After collecting and studying the writing of hundreds of murderers, graphologists have found that most of them have a very far rightward slant. They lack emotional control. We may all have murderous feelings, but we don’t act upon them.)

UNSTABLE: // \ ||
In all directions (in a short period of time) — Unstable person. Unpredictable, nervous, erratic, undisciplined, excitable, fickle, capricious, lacking in good judgement and common sense. As if you’re pulled in all directions. (These people might have a warm personality at the moment, but will have a cold attitude the next minute) 



The Slant of the Writing: What Does it Mean?

The slant is the second indicator to look for. The slant indicates the writers emotional response to external forces.
1) A right slant (////) signals one who responds strongly to emotional situations. They are caring, warm and outgoing-- their heart rules their mind.

2) A vertical slant (llll) writer tries to keep their emotions in check-- mind rules their heart.

3) A left slant writer (\\\\) will conceal their emotions and is observed as cold and indifferent.