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The words reveal it all
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Want to know the truth about your boss? Or want to know your spouse better? Pune's graphologist Kulwinder Singh helps you do it all.
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Show me your writing, I will tell you your secrets...Kulwinder Singh in New Delhi. Photo: Anu Pushkarna.
MAHATMA GANDHI didn't have patience. He made people do what he wanted. But he was a lovable dictator. Einstein never kept malice in is heart, but he was a very cautious man. He always kept his personal and professional life apart. Till 15 years of age Marilyn Monroe was an introvert, by 25 she was depressed, repressed and insecure and after that she grew very confident. She was fame hungry too. Picasso was an extremely angry man. Had he not been a painter, he would have been another Hitler.
No, these are not jottings from a book on these personalities. These are the views of 25-year-old Pune-based graphologist Kulwinder Singh on observing the handwriting of these and many more such individuals.
And he can tell about you too, in case he has your handwriting with him. "Those with a left slant in their handwriting are emotionally repressive and insecure. Those with right slant are very expressive, explicit and extrovert, while vertical handwriting represents very logical and rational thinking. People with such handwriting never take the initiative to greet someone, but they welcome warmly when the other person takes the initiative. Such persons are always in fear of losing their self-control. Those whose handwriting has dots at unnecessary places are hesitant and less efficient, and those who leave dots after almost every word may have some severe health problem," he explains. The signature, he says, is "only a public image", so it does not reveal all the personality traits.
Still an uncharted territory, many confuse graphology with occult sciences as astrology, numerology, palmistry, etc. "Graphology is the science of knowing personality traits by one's handwriting," he informs.
A healing turn
Kulwinder was introduced to graphology as a catharsis after a major accident that killed his closest friend and confined him to bed for nearly a year. "After this accident, the physical and emotional pain that I underwent made me feel I must do something for those in emotional need. So I took recourse to graphology," says Singh, a science graduate from Pune University. He has also completed a course from the Institute of Graphology, Pune.
Graphology has proved to be a "successful career choice" for five years now. His clients include industrialists, businesspersons and even politicians. Kulwinder feels graphology has yet to pick up in India.
"This field has unlimited opportunities," he assures. To those who want to go for it as a career choice, he suggests, "One year of training under a graphologist is better than 18 years of studies from books."
In India most books on graphology are "bombarded with information, but hardly any one of them is analytical in content". So he recommends reading Andrea McNichal's "Handwriting Analysis", Nadia Olivia's "Handwriting Tells" and one of the earlier books of Alfred Alter. A study of psychology helps too.
RANA SIDDIQUI
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