Today’s
post is a sequel to the one preceding,
as I continue musing on the value of handwriting. I will try very hard not to
beg the question or to exaggerate the case to be made in favor of cursive
script. I'm also including some sunny winter scenes to sweeten the pot.
Why
do we put a high value on health, other than the fact that being sick is
usually no fun at all? Aside from the yucky aspects of illness, don’t we also
love to feel strong and healthy, in large part, because it means we can do
things for ourselves, because we’re not dependent on others when we’re healthy?
Getting old brings changes much more serious and unwelcome than wrinkles and
sags, white hair and dry skin. There is the inevitable losing of strength and
energy, the dreaded “slowing down” -- in short, not being able to do all
the things one took for granted when young and strong. That’s what makes old age
such a drag!
And
human independence goes way beyond the physical. Americans generally consider a
driver’s license, a valid passport, plenty of money, and freedom from debt as
possessions and states to be desired. Being grounded as a teenager, going to
jail or prison as an adult – the punishment in each case is loss of freedom and
the curtailment of choices – but crushing student debt, burdensome mortgages,
and payments on credit cards and/or new cars also place restrictions on
independence.
Are
you with me so far?
Okay,
how about this: I can’t help believing that real, sustainable, and continued intellectual
independence
and efficacy demand an ability to function in the absence of electronic
devices. I’m not arguing against ever using the devices. How could I do that
and not be a complete hypocrite, given that I composed this essay on a laptop
device and uploaded it to the Internet? My argument is, rather, that we should
not become so dependent on them that we are helpless when the power goes out.
We need basic competencies.
For
a long time, parents and grandparents have been worrying that children relying
on calculators are not learning basic skills in arithmetic. Well, why should
they? They have
calculators, so why should they bother calculating in their heads or on paper?
Isn’t learning to do that a waste of valuable time?
Math
skills make a good subject for me to defend because math was always my weakest
academic subject. If I could, I would have avoided it altogether after third
grade.
But
now, as an independent adult, I don’t have to trust blindly in a cash register
total or what a clerk tells me “the computer says,” because I can estimate the
cost of my selected items before I got in line. I don’t even have to take a
calculator with me to the store and hope the battery doesn’t go dead, either,
because I learned addition and subtraction, multiplication tables, and
estimating (that last, for me, the most difficult) back in my school days. I do
it in my head. Estimating did not come naturally to me, and my math anxiety,
supplemented by innate stubbornness, resisted it for a long time. Why look for
approximate answers when I could do the calculation and get an exact number?
Now I estimate on a daily basis and am thankful to have the skill. I have three avenues open to me –
mental estimating or exact calculation, calculation on paper, or resorting to a
calculator. Isn’t that range of possibilities preferable to dependence on the
electronic device?
My
mother learned shorthand when she was young, and I never did, but I did learn
cursive handwriting and also developed my own idiosyncratic abbreviations for
note-taking in college and graduate school. Relying on someone else’s notes
would have made me very nervous. How could I know another student had
understood the lecture or captured all the important points? In all honesty, I
admit that I only took a typing class in high school because my parents
insisted. Moreover, having that skill as “something to fall back on” – their
argument -- worked against me for a long time: I kept falling back
into jobs I hated!
But finally I got it together to finish an undergraduate degree and go on from
there, and being an excellent typist still serves me well.
Touch typing, that is. All
fingers employed. One hundred and twenty words a minute. No two-thumbs texting
or pathetic hunting-and-pecking with forefingers!
I won’t reiterate here all my reasons for
valuing books on paper a topic I’ve covered before (most recently here), but I do apply similar reasons to my case for handwriting. That is, I
value it not simply out of nostalgia or because I grew up writing by hand or
because ink is retro and cool, but because I can write on paper wherever I
am, without an expensive device, without charging cords or batteries, without
rare minerals having been extracted from the earth and without sending plastic
and worse to landfills, and because I needn’t trust in a “cloud” to store my
words or a sophisticated system to transmit them. With pen and paper, I
exercise independence.
Blogging would not exist without the Internet,
and those of us who participate obviously use electronic devices to share our
thoughts. Blogging takes place only by virtue (!) of a virtual world. But my entire life would not be
over if my online
life came to an end. The truth is, I like being offline at home, and I like
being disconnected
when I’m out walking with my dog. That, of course, is a matter of preference.
Perhaps others would feel their independence – their powers – diminished in the
circumstances I find so freeing. I get that. I do.
But that’s my point. I can go back and
forth.
And that, I think, the ability to live in different worlds, to use different
tools and media, as circumstance demands or as preference indicates, is the
greatest degree of independence possible.
What does it matter, one of my readers
responded (on my Facebook link to the earlier post), the form of communication
young people use, handwriting or texting or some other digital means, since all are ways to
communicate. True, but to me this is like asking why learn to add, subtract,
multiply, divide, and estimate if you have a calculator. For that matter,
given the availability of audio books, why be bothered to read? Why not just listen
to someone else doing the reading?
As for me, I’ll listen now and again, but I
would certainly not trade literacy for listening. Neither would I give up
handwriting (or touch typing) and be confined to poking my fingers and thumbs
at a tiny screen.
Here’s another thought: Most Ph.D. programs
have traditionally had foreign language requirements. Some gave that up to
allow computer “languages” as substitutes, which seems suspect and squirrelly
to me in most cases. A language is not, after all, a code. The intention of the
original requirement was to ensure an ability to read important texts in their original
language; a secondary benefit that comes with second-language acquisition, however,
is the realization that many of the concepts we take for granted in our native
language are not universal. Different people divide the world up differently.
They see
the world differently. It’s important to learn that. It’s the difference
between learning to converse and read and write and think in a second language
and having to rely on a program or “app” to translate for you.
So as far as the ability to read historical
documents is concerned, what if future students of history were required to learn
cursive handwriting in the same way they might be required to learn Latin or
French or Russian? As a specialized professional skill? I can imagine the day,
not far in the future:
LANG 350: “Cursive as
Foreign Language”
And for many people, if an ability to read
historical documents is all that’s at stake, I’m sure there’s nothing wrong
with the vision. Well, here’s what’s wrong with it from my point of view, and
it’s the same thing that’s wrong with giving up on learning second languages
(or learning to read, for that matter) because “smart” machines can do the
work for us:
Having the machines should make our worlds bigger, not smaller; enlarge our access to the
world rather, not shrink it; give us greater flexibility and
choice and independence. Not stunted brains and overgrown thumbs.
And I’ll stop now to ask, as the scary truck
driver asked a hitchhiking friend years ago, in an ominously threatening tone
of voice after subjecting her to his extreme political views, “Agree or disagree?” If you disagree with me, though, that’s
fine and dandy, because I’m enjoying thinking about the pros and cons of
cursive writing on this winter’s day. It’s a pleasant mental vacation from the
season’s national political campaigns and primaries, isn’t it?
4 comments:
My great grandfather had a penmanship school. His daughter, my
grandmother, wrote in beautiful cursive. Due to apparent genetic
drift, my own cursive is legible. At best. Many of history's greatest writing was done with ink and quill and perhaps we can
blame the beginning of the end on Gutenberg's press. Already in
high school, many decades back, teachers were requesting themes be typed. Like many on the cusp of that change, I wrote my theme in
cursive, did my editing and then typed it. While the computer has
diminished cursive, possibly making it a 'dead language', we note
that the richness and beauty of cursive, as well as its use in our own national early documents and eye catching modern advertisements
has led surprisingly to the plethora of cursive scripts available
for our computer keyboards. IMO, the rate of tech change has become exponential, too fast for some of us ancient codgers. In my field of
chemistry, I was born and raised on the slide rule, reluctantly pushed to the personal calculator and dragged complaining to the
punchcard computer and its digital progeny. So, though my grown
children constantly chide, I am one of the few who has resisted
the cellphone!
I, um, have had a long day and thus read "Cursive" as "Cursing." I am still giggling at the thought of Cursing as a second language. I believe I could teach that course.
I digress. (We are astonished.)
I thought people my age were being alarmist and hyperbolic when they deplored the lack of handwriting skills. I misunderstood the situation. I thought they were bemoaning the sloppy handwriting of Kids Today. But no - Da Yute in fact do not know how to handwrite. They are astonished - enchanted even - by the decorative patterns that flow from my pen. And we are not talking calligraphy here. We are talking grocery lists, scrawled notes to self, journal entries involving a good deal of creative cursing . . .
I am become a High Priest of Hieroglyphics (which I had to look up because I care how it is spelled--but why would Da Yute care?)
I am such a grouch. Move over, we can sit together. Here, have some popcorn.
Agree. And yes, it's a pleasant vacation from the political campaigns. I need all the vacation from them I can get.
Thanks to ALL of you (from my generation!) for your thoughtful comments. Here’s another story from my life: The phone company talked me into a deal that involved an almost-free “tablet,” and I took the plunge. Received device the next day, UPS, and took it to the library the next day. It had to be “activated” before I could use it. (1) To activate, I was asked to set up an account and manage all my phone bills online. I really don’t want to do that. (2) Somehow I got to a place that asked for my Google password. I gave what I thought it was, but it wasn’t. (3) Turning to my laptop, I went to the Google homesite to have my password either verified, re-sent to me, or to change it, but I couldn’t proceed because my browser hadn’t been updated. (4) I tried to download the latest iteration of the browser. Failed at that, also. Next day called my gurus at City Mac to ask them why I was having so much trouble. (5) Turns out the processor on my laptop (a device going back a full four years) is not powerful enough to run the new browser.
All this reminds me of the escalation of the Cold War back in my childhood. There is no way, ever, to “catcu up” to the technology, because that world is speeding up nonstop. There is nothing wrong with my trusty laptop: it is the online world that has outstripped its powers. And so we are urged to keep spending, keep upgrading, keep up, keep up.... There is no such thing as “enough” in all this.
But now, on the other hand, the very day I threw this post out into the world, David and I received two REAL letters in the mail! Mine was handwritten and came from Kalamazoo; David’s was two pages typed, all the way from the south of France. We have each read our letters several times over already. We love our friends and the time they took to share their lives with us.
BB, my father was an engineer who worked with a slide rule. Gerry, I love to hear that young people over in Antrim County are seeing and admiring your penmanship. Maybe they will be inspired to learn to do it, too. Deborah, David listened to the blah-blah-blah through his earbud last night, while I read my book.
Books never need upgrading! Year after year, you just reach out and use them, as is. I love them!
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