About Me
I am a Licensed Masters Level Psychologist, which means I have 6 years of college and passed a state test. I am not a Ph.D. psychologist, which requires 8 years of college, or a psychiatrist, which requires 12 years of college. You may think that since I am a Masters Level Psychologist, I must have been successful most of my life, but I wasn’t. Even though I had my college degrees for years, at 40 years old I had worked most of my life as a waitress. It was not until I changed my handwriting that I finally got a professional job, and my life began to work.
Initially I taught myself enough graphotherapy techniques to make very needed changes in my attitudes and behaviors. Then, after having succeeded in gaining my first job as a psychologist, I began sharing my knowledge with friends and relatives who were having difficulties they could not solve. Three gained $20,000 each in salary within two months of changing their handwriting. Another three were promoted (salaries unknown). Two overcame agoraphobia. One overcame attention deficit disorder. Another stopped manipulating and playing one authority figure against another. Everyone who made the handwriting changes I suggested experienced a dramatic positive change in their lives within three months. Most were willing to admit that their lives changed as they had changed their handwriting, and the changes were in the exact direction I had told them to expect. A few made the changes but remained skeptical. One said, “We are rational people living in a scientific society. I can’t believe this opportunity came (after three years of looking in vain) because I changed my handwriting six weeks ago.” I thought to myself, "Well, you may believe that the doors of opportunity just finally decided to open for you, but I believe the changes to your handwriting changed you so that you were finally able to live up to your potential".
My first job as a psychologist was doing initial assessments for inmates entering the prison system. There, I had the opportunity to compare the inmate’s handwriting to six psychological tests. I also conducted an interview with the inmate to see if my interpretation of his personality, based on the tests and handwriting, was correct. Over the next five years, I learned to tell more from looking at the handwriting than by looking at the psychological tests. Co-workers, who sometimes read my reports, said, “You really nailed that guy, but where did you get that information?” Social workers who utilized my reports expressed, “With your reports, I feel like I know the guy before he ever walks in the door.” With more experience and confidence, I began sharing graphotherapy techniques with inmates. I can tell you that most were so grateful that they shook my hand as they left my office. They did not want to be in prison; they just didn’t know how they could live their lives any differently. Some, I saw on the streets years later, told me they still had the papers (handwriting analysis and graphotherapy techniques) I had given them when they entered prison, and recounted successes they had experienced since they last saw me. I only saw these inmates once, so you know those pieces of paper must have made a big impression.
One thing I have learned over the years is a note of caution. Many people change their handwriting in the ways I suggest, overcome long term obstacles, launch out on the course of their dreams, and then revert back to their old handwriting styles. They fall back into their old self-sabotaging behaviors and fail in the acquisition of their dream, which seemed so close. Some have believed their dream to be so close that they have risked everything for the sake of their dream and have been crushed by the losses incurred when they ceased making therapeutic handwriting a priority.
As for me, I keep writing in cursive and life is good. Continually practicing graphotherapy techniques in my everyday writing, I grow healthier, wealthier, wiser, and happier each year. I feel my feet are now on the path that leads to self-actualization. If you too would like to “Be All You Can Be”, contact me now and see how graphotherapy can improve your life.
