Real Life Adventures by Gary Wise and Lance Aldrich for September 12, 2021

  1. The rat
    Ratkin Premium Member over 3 years ago

    My kids can read cursive, but not write it.

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    momofalex7  over 3 years ago

    They still taught cursive when my daughter was in 2nd grade. She’s 31 now.

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    wiatr  over 3 years ago

    I can read it but I rarely write it anymore.

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    wldhrsy2luv  over 3 years ago

    I addressed an envelope to one of my grandchildren and the post office returned to me “address unknown”. I checked with his mother and the address was correct!

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    some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member over 3 years ago

    I don’t think I’ve used cursive since maybe 1982.

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    A Common 'tator  over 3 years ago

    I use cursive on my daughters’ and grandchildren’s birthday cards. So much more personal…

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    Doug K  over 3 years ago

    A non-cursive signature doesn’t seem write.

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    ralphkramden  over 3 years ago

    Wait until he encounters one of their spacecraft – Clutch and Shift!

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    oakie817  over 3 years ago

    old, yes, but wise……

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    walstib Premium Member over 3 years ago

    I spent half a school year in high school learning block lettering in Mechanical Drawing class. I’ll bet that’s been dropped from the curriculum.

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    carlosrivers  over 3 years ago

    When did schools stop teaching cursive?

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    Lee26 Premium Member over 3 years ago

    I wasn’t allowed to use cursive words when growing up. I hated that soap taste.

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    Gandalf  over 3 years ago

    Yes, children; it’s a secret code. And they scroll their lives away…

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    WCraft Premium Member over 3 years ago

    A powerful group of clerics – who were known to solve math problems with nothing but a pencil and paper!

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  15. The rat
    Ratkin Premium Member over 3 years ago

    A little known fact: companies that use Captchas in pairs often use only the first one to verify your identity and the second one is an image of cursive writing that they can’t read with certainty. So they take the majority opinion of the thousands of users who type the “right” answer to the second image to help translate it. Basically we’re beta testers for their OCR software.

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    LJZ Premium Member over 3 years ago

    Cursive was designed to prevent blotches of ink when a pen nib was lifted or placed on a writing surface. Particularly useful with early fountain pens.

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    Jujeebean  over 3 years ago

    I got a ‘D’ in penmanship when I was in elementary school. It never got much better and there are days I think I could fill in for a doctor writing prescriptions. A lot of the time it is a mix of cursive and printing.

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    Drgnslr Premium Member over 3 years ago

    I saw the minutes of a city council meeting written in the 40’s. It was like a piece of art.

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    944im Premium Member over 3 years ago

    I write in cursive in order to work on maintaining motor skills, also it slows me down so I have to think about what I am writing.

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    mistercatworks  over 3 years ago

    Cursive is actually the best way to write on paper that is not quite flat, such as post-it notes that have been on your table for six months.

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    TheWildSow  over 3 years ago

    Writing styles change. Check out the Declaration of Independence, with the “Purfuit of Happinefs.”

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    Sailor46 USN 65-95  over 3 years ago

    I learned cursive by printing then connecting the letters, it was pretty easy. Just saying…

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    KenDHoward1  over 3 years ago

    Oddly, my late father enjoyed using the cursive font when he typed his letters … go figure, eh? … I can write cursive, but often don’t … ;)

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    harvey812abc  over 3 years ago

    That’s way too complicated for this generation of snowflakes.

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    tinstar  over 3 years ago

    Way back when, while I was in the Service, I had friends that told me to be sure to write to them. I would, they wouldn’t write back, so, I started messing with the letters, such as printing the letters backwards. Finally, my last act was to write letters to them in cursive, again, backwards. 45 years later, I still write something like that just to keep up the “skill.”

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    donut reply  over 3 years ago

    My grandson learned cursive. He doesn’t use it. Doesn’t need it, he can type 100 words a minute not looking at the keyboard.

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    Laurie Stoker Premium Member over 3 years ago

    I still can’t believe they stopped teaching cursive. It really doesn’t take that long to learn and cursive signatures are required for legal documents.

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