Longhand: Honouring Words

Long hand.

I’m returning to writing in it. Today I decided to pick up my pen again.

To write long hand.

The slow way

Long hand is the long, slow way.  The long way round.  Travel for the sake of travel.  Journeying for enjoyment.  Taking time.  The long hand of the clock moves slowest, but marks the greatest measure of time.  So long hand can be the long way to the purest, most reasoned, most considered, most deeply felt words.

Writing long hand forces us to take care of the journey, to take our time, to look at the view, to slow down.

This morning I noticed how untidy my writing was and realised that I was trying to write long hand as fast as I am used to typing.  Impossible!  So writing long hand takes on new meaning.  As I write with a pen I’m thinking about the way I’m forming my letters and words; thinking about ink pens and calligraphy.  Perhaps, in a time when most of us clack away on our keyboards, long hand will return to the revered art form it once was.

Honouring words

For years I kept a specially bound plain page notebook into which I carefully copied the poems I’d written that I felt merited keeping for history – to show my children and grandchildren.  A fresh page for each poem, carefully lettered in real old-fashioned ink. I suppose it was a way of honouring my own words, or the words that had honoured me by appearing in that particular order, organisation, understanding.  The long way round.

I think our words, poems in particular, arrive via the long way round, even though sometimes they seem to appear as if by magic.  They have travelled, brewed.  A loved one doesn’t appear magically in ‘arrivals’ at the airport!  Sometimes we write the journey, sometimes it’s a long and arduous one we’re keen to be rid of – how quickly do we leap in the shower after a long haul flight?!  Sometimes the journey is all it’s about, and that’s what we show, rather than the arrival itself.

However words arrive, they have journeyed, the long way round, to be here.

Giving our words, or the words of others, the honour of being written in long hand is, I think, an art form that will not be lost or forgotten, but rediscovered, studied and cherished.

The human voice

I firmly believe that for a very long time yet, if not forever, a real, present human, delivering a script from their mouth and their heart, will have more gravitas than an AI. It’s the precious long hand of the audio world.

When a voice over artist delivers a script we bring to it our whole lives to that point. Every success, rejection, sunset, tumble, great meal, lost friendship… An AI can never, truly have those things.

When I grow up, I want to be a scribe.


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