Friday, June 8, 2012

Identifying The Gift Of The Gab For St Patricks Day

With St. Patrick's Day Coming Around Again, our thoughts are with shamrocks, the "luck of the Irish" and "Gift of Gab".

We will leave the Irish on their luck and their shamrocks, and focus here on the gift of gab, which in less colloquial terms would be identified as persuasive communication skills.

This article is going to learn to identify only those who have sought this gift, which did not, and how they are used. And you can tell all this without ever meeting the person in question. How? Looking at their handwriting. So dig those Valentine's Day last month and check for them, "Irish-ness" for this month.

Handwriting is a form of body language, and how you can tell a lot about someone by their body language, so you can tell a lot about someone from their "body language as it appears frozen in their writing.

Just as, I ask you, can you identify the gift of gab write.

First of all, this requires talking. Letters rim (a, b, the part of circle D and G) can be thought of as the mouth. If the mouth is open, you can talk. If the mouth is closed you can. So look for the letters circle with a gap open instead of closed with care.

How many letters are closed circle than those in the writing sample? This is a rough guide HOW talkative the writer is. All letters circle open and attentive, even if this person has no kind of charm and gift that will certainly be talkative.

Will be true what they say? A very important question.

If the letters circle, both open and closed ones, have loops everywhere, or are only "clean" looking for? A loop or a knot on the right side of a circular letter is an indication of secrecy. This does not mean that there is some dark secret hidden, but certainly not always the whole truth, begorra! (Sorry, got carried away with my Irish-ism there.)

A course on the left shows the deception or self that the writer does not see things quite the way others do. He represents the things in his own light, in his understanding, which could be misleading if it is far from what the basis for general understanding of the problem is.

But to really watch out for is the circular rings on both the left and right sides. This is an indication of a deliberate deception - if it is repeated throughout the text. A double loop does not make a liar - is repeated, so that pathological liars do not go labeling people just because they have made a slip of the pen, which ended with two rings on an "o".

So now we know that they talk a lot and if what they say is true.

Now, finally, we want to know if they are convincing. People are in danger of being influenced, driven by verbosity of this person.

Watch the angle of writing. The rightmost tilt more emotion - and it is an emotion that persuades - will be with words. An inscription on the right angle, with open circles is a persuasive speaker - the gift of gab, truthful or untruthful.

And I lied, (double loop?) That was not the last element. Let me add another - long T-bar radicals, the longer the better. This is the stretch of enthusiasm that swept the others along in its flow.

As you enjoy your celebration of St. Paddy's Day, think of all that is Irish, and writing for all to see the gift of gab, I leave you with this anonymous quote:

"May you always walk in sunshine, may you never want more. May Irish angels rest their wings beside your door."

Happy St. Paddy's Day.

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