Reverse Graphology
The art and science of handwriting analysis allows you to see what your letter formations reveal about your attitudes and behaviors. Reversing the musceletal movement through Graphotherapy is a thrilling extension of handwriting analysis, as graphotherapy identifies stumbling blocks that can be easily and painlessly eliminated by making simple changes to one's handwriting. All of us are basically ok, yet we may have some rough edges. Graphotherapy is the practice of eliminating letter formations and writing styles that indicate recurring, self-sabotaging attitudes/behaviors and then substituting these writing styles with formations that are still true to the inner self but are more finely developed.
Graphotherapy is very concrete and predictable. It is designed to produce specific outcomes, so you will know what changes to expect before they occur and will be able to recognize the subtle changes taking place in yourself even as they are occurring. You will see subtle results within a month if you focus on writing correctly four or more pages a day. Within three months of starting your program in graphotherapy, the transformations will be so dramatic that others will see a significant improvement and gain a more favorable opinion of you. You may expect to improve your life skills, your relationships with others, and to gain such confidence in yourself that you can set your goals higher. I guarantee that from this place of strength you will experience major improvements in your life. If you write only in your checkbook, changes will take much longer and be so subtle that they may pass unnoticed, but they will eventually occur if you make the changes in your handwriting.
One thing that is absolutely true in graphotherapy is that the negative traits which are most predominant in your personality, the ones you may have heard about time after time, will be the hardest to eliminate from your handwriting. For example, one client had “ t’s ” that indicated persistent stubbornness. He tried to eliminate them, but said his hand just refused to make the correct formation. He had to first eliminate the persistency and then work on the stubbornness. Another client had, “ d’s ” that indicated she was overly dependent. Again, she tried to eliminate the trait from her handwriting, but reported that some days it was there in full force. To eradicate the thought that she could not manage life on her own, and to develop the independence necessary to start her own business, she had to adopt an entirely different way of making “d’s”, with a new starting and ending place.



