Sunday Blog 223 – 22 Feb 2026

This is my love note to handwriting.
At some point in my school life, possibly in primary school, I developed a writer’s bump on my right hand. As someone who can be spatially challenged, I have by now an almost unconscious habit of touching my right hand to orient myself in space.
Perhaps my writer’s bump was caused by a burst of conscientiousness when I studied with extra force. Or maybe it was just normal at that analogue time of teaching and testing when pen and paper was where it was at.
I had tried to learn typing in my first year of high school, but the nuns assured me ‘there are girls that do French and girls that type, and you are a girl that does French.’ However even my Dominican Nun high school had become sufficiently renaissance by 1980 to concede that perhaps there were girls that could do both. (The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog, anyone?) Being able to touch type was the single most useful skill I learned at high school.
But in those analogue days, I do know that by the time I’d finished high school and completed every last sodding exam, my handwriting was unravelling to the point of illegibility. In Year Thirteen when worked in a bank to fill in time before I could start at university, I had to learn how to print neatly again. None of the data processors who viewed my handwritten account application forms could understand what on earth I’d written.
Instead of going into medicine where poor handwriting is a career-long phenomenon, I went into the arts and community services. But by then, everything was being digitised.
And yet. Handwriting has been my go-to since I started journalling at age 23, committing the horror that is our twenties to the page. Even in those days when I would often note how much I wanted a Word Processor (remember those?), there was a recognition of the magic of handwriting. The moment of sitting down, pen to page to this day generates a deep sense of peace. Perhaps it is the different parts of my brain coming together to create words on the page, rather than just tapping them out on a keyboard. (See NPR article for a synthesis of a research article on the topic.)
And if ever I’m creatively stuck, analogue writing always shifts me into a slipstream of delicious forward momentum. And while life is much simpler at 60 than it was at 23, my journal will always and ever be my constant companion.
