Connected or Disconnected Hand Writing and Thinking Styles

The degree of connectedness between letters in your handwriting can give a clue to the thinking processes you typically use.  Although there are varying degrees of connected or disconnected writing, there are four major categories:
(1) Connecting types - these people tend to be expressive and logical.  When writing is mostly connected, the writer tends to reach conclusions based on logic.  They plan ahead and use strategies to achieve goals while being quite verbally expressive.
(2) Disconnected types - when most of the letters are cursive but disconnected, the writer tends to be intuitive and conceptual.  His or her opinions come from a sense of feeling rather than from reasoning.  Their thinking tends to be conceptual instead of systematic and they will use an intuitive or instinctive reaction to ideas of others.  These writers also tend to be selective in their verbal expression.
(3) Upper and lower case printers tend to be inward focused and impressionable.  They have a somewhat difficult time expressing their imaginative ideas and tend to be shy about expressing feelings.  They may be somewhat withdrawn by nature, preferring to be a bit of a loner socially.
(4) All capital printers with a strong middle zone focus tend to be independent, active and sociable.  These writers can be somewhat self-involved, not always listening to their intuition or to other people's ideas.  They tend to be competitive and are often leaders although others may find them difficult to understand until they have been around them for a while.  Source: Achieving Compatibility with Handwriting Analysis by Karen Kristin Amend and Mary Standbury Ruiz.
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