Pressure is the amount of force you use pressing the pen into the paper when producing handwritten material. Pressure is best evaluated using a ball point pen.
The heavier the writing, the deeper and more enduring is the feeling. A person with great depth of feeling is likened unto a blotter. He writes heavily. He takes everything in and soaks up every emotional reaction and influence around him. These emotional experiences stay with him just as the ink stays in the blotter. With very heavy writing, such emotional experiences are not forgotten. The writer never forgets. He will never forgive and never forget. On the other hand we have the light writer, who barely touches the paper with the point of the pen, who passes through situations that would be traumatic to the heavy writer without much effect then or later. Light writers can get hotly angry, but they will probably have forgotten by the next day. Interestingly, light writers often do not understand why a |
person would remain upset or angry. Things just don't impress them much or have any lasting effect. These writers have a more superficial involvement. Much of the joy of anticipation and the pain or joy of remembering, which the heavier writer experiences, are quite frankly lost on the light writer. This writer will forgive but it will take a long time for him to ever forget.
Relatively medium pressure is a mid-point between light and heavy writing. There is less force and duration of feeling or emotions than with the heavy writer, but there is more than with the light writer. This writer forgives and forgets easily.
Pressure in writing reflects the depth and duration of feelings. The deeper the pressure the deeper the feelings.
For questions regarding this article contact Terry at president@chaiuniversal.org
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