Real Life Adventures by Gary Wise and Lance Aldrich for February 03, 2023

  1. The rat
    Ratkin  about 1 year ago

    Not as ancient as cursing.

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    some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member about 1 year ago

    I assume some time around 100AD we had people complaining about how kids didn’t learn cuneiform any more, and made do with this alphabet nonsense.

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    TheWildSow  about 1 year ago

    All part of the Purfuit of Happinefs.

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    Doug K  about 1 year ago

    It’s more of a secret code.

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    joegeethree  about 1 year ago

    My grandson was very proud to inform me that he learned to cursive write his signature on his own.

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    magicwalnut Premium Member about 1 year ago

    Every time I address an envelope in cursive I wonder if the youngsters at the post office can read it…

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  7. Mr haney
    NeedaChuckle Premium Member about 1 year ago

    Hieroglyphics are easier to read in most cases!

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  8. Gameguy49
    Gameguy49 Premium Member about 1 year ago

    As an eBay selle,r I sent a personal thank you by email with the promise to ship it within 24 hours then I enclosed a typed/printed note with the purchase thanking my buyers and giving them my contact information in case there were any problems to which I added, in cursive “Thanks again (Gordon) and my signature”. For that I received two negative ratings for communication (out of 6328 buyers). They must have been non-cursivers.

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    exness Premium Member about 1 year ago

    I tend to write too fast in cursive, and then it is unreadable, so I mostly I use printing.

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    ragsarooni Premium Member about 1 year ago

    And I’ll bet cursive writing isn’t taught in school anymore,either…..

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    eleesgargoils  about 1 year ago

    The letters of the Gods.

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  12. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member about 1 year ago

    There’s no urgent need to write it these days, but it’s useful to be able to read it. It can be mastered in a couple of hours (assuming you’re a good reader to begin with).

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    GoBlue  about 1 year ago

    I have a couple of 20-somethings who work with me. I left one of them a fairly lengthy note one day (we don’t have emails at work) about something I needed him to do, and wrote in cursive. Of course, the task didn’t get done since he couldn’t read it. I hate that we’re forced to print to accomodate the younger generation.

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    ladykat  about 1 year ago

    Not that ancient!

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    bobbyferrel  about 1 year ago

    I’m 80 and my handwriting is OK. Not great but readable. Hasn’t changed for all my life. But my forebears’ writing was gorgeous. I have always wished I could write like that but not so much that I’d put in the work on penmanship that they did. (Or were forced into)

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    crazeekatlady  about 1 year ago

    I will never PRINT again! Says the retired Electrical Engineer. I prefer secret codes!

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    goboboyd  about 1 year ago

    To the block letter generations, cursive makes me look way more intelligent than I can hope to be.

    I find writing in cursive enjoyable, though I have to warm up and practice a bit to stay in form. (Eliciting the judgement of my second grade teacher still haunts me. That “She’s Heeeere” sensation. )

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    drycurt  about 1 year ago

    I learned early, when teachers gave me a note, written in cursive, to give to my mother, to “forget” to give it to her or lose it. The teachers learned to call my mother, in addition to the notes.

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  19. Koala
    dalerpederson Premium Member about 1 year ago

    My wife thought a better last line would have been, “Yes, it’s a note from your Great-Grandma”.

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  20. Calvin
    Baucuva  about 1 year ago

    With ever more communication being electronic, cursive writing is redundant.

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    gopher gofer  about 1 year ago

    thankfully, today’s youngsters won’t have to go through the pain and suffering of penmanship class…

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    pkdavis  about 1 year ago

    So, if kids aren’t learning cursive, do they print their signatures?

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    Sailor46 USN 65-95  about 1 year ago

    I was glad that I was taught Cursive, it is much easier than printing.

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    harvey812abc  about 1 year ago

    Wait til the kid learns about other ancient things like respect, ethics, hard work, common sense, responsibility for your own actions, etc.

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    Willameano Premium Member about 1 year ago

    Once I read where a local bank had all the materials, (with their logo) to teach students how to write checks and properly balance out a checkbook to prevent overdrafts, etc. School nixed it, even though it was provided “free of charge to the schools” because they didn’t want to appear to “endorse a commercial enterprise”. Glad they protected their students so later on they could learn how a bounced check could cost them $50-to $80 in fees and penalties in the real world.

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