I'm glad I wasn't the only one that when seeing Chloe's handwriting I couldn't tell the different between her "characters" and her exclamation points. Even Laplus couldn't. And what makes this even worse is... this is legit the best handwriting from Chloe I've seen yet.
I don't want to make a diagnosis as I'm not at all qualified to do so, but I have a friend with a similar ailment called "spatial dysgraphia". He has trouble with both writing and drawing but he can spell and read just fine. I believe it simply affects one's hand-eye coordination ability.
but her drawing is quite good actually, only writing... The main problem is she is writing in a completely different way, which is pointed out by laplus as well, 書き順 (order of writing) is not quite correct which affects much, especially in Japanese, Chinese, Korean, etc that those with complicated characters. IMO, the way she stressing the force to write a character might be also wrong, as I also encountered similar problem when i was in primary school. These needed to be trained hard in primary school to write a "understandable" chinese (or japanese,... etc) character. Usually, the parent will catch your hand to write at least for two years + years in kindergarten.
@@makoto_lys Interesting. Honestly, I've always felt like it's order and more direction that's important, especially learning the alphabet, but trying to learn kanji, I can see why both are important. Note that the "direction of order" only matters with writing direction. It seems like the stroke order goes from left to right horizontally just like with writing direction, but vertically, it can be either way since you're working with columns, but apparently the stroke order was traditionally from right to left since the columns were written from right to left.
@@stekeln you have a mental disorder about sloppy writing and drawing? That's the most middle school award trophy nonsense I've ever heard! My oven drip trays are gross, commit me to an asylum!
This definitely looks better than what she has put up elsewhere... but oh my god it looks exactly like my handwriting. It's funny how the same issues can be visible in Latin and Japanese characters.
Our hands are all the same and there are only so many ways to hold a pen/pencil/stylus. She probably has the same instrument grip or hand movement vices as you do.
Yeah, I can see it how she drew lines in the wrong order most of the times almost from the result, the "yuu" is still the worst I've seen probably. Yet, knowing what she wanted to say as an idea it wasn't like so terrible you couldn't understand, but from here the "she can't write" thing started and she kinda made it worse.
“She’s better at handwriting now, compared to before” 💀
Lol. I love the "Decrypted message" there.
lol yeah
I'm glad I wasn't the only one that when seeing Chloe's handwriting I couldn't tell the different between her "characters" and her exclamation points. Even Laplus couldn't.
And what makes this even worse is... this is legit the best handwriting from Chloe I've seen yet.
I don't want to make a diagnosis as I'm not at all qualified to do so, but I have a friend with a similar ailment called "spatial dysgraphia". He has trouble with both writing and drawing but he can spell and read just fine. I believe it simply affects one's hand-eye coordination ability.
but her drawing is quite good actually, only writing... The main problem is she is writing in a completely different way, which is pointed out by laplus as well, 書き順 (order of writing) is not quite correct which affects much, especially in Japanese, Chinese, Korean, etc that those with complicated characters.
IMO, the way she stressing the force to write a character might be also wrong, as I also encountered similar problem when i was in primary school. These needed to be trained hard in primary school to write a "understandable" chinese (or japanese,... etc) character. Usually, the parent will catch your hand to write at least for two years + years in kindergarten.
@@makoto_lys Interesting. Honestly, I've always felt like it's order and more direction that's important, especially learning the alphabet, but trying to learn kanji, I can see why both are important. Note that the "direction of order" only matters with writing direction. It seems like the stroke order goes from left to right horizontally just like with writing direction, but vertically, it can be either way since you're working with columns, but apparently the stroke order was traditionally from right to left since the columns were written from right to left.
@@stekeln you have a mental disorder about sloppy writing and drawing? That's the most middle school award trophy nonsense I've ever heard! My oven drip trays are gross, commit me to an asylum!
I won't lie. Definitely improved. Buuuuuuuuut... it started off fine and went downhill at the same time. 😂
She started alright but getting worse each lines 😂
This definitely looks better than what she has put up elsewhere... but oh my god it looks exactly like my handwriting. It's funny how the same issues can be visible in Latin and Japanese characters.
Our hands are all the same and there are only so many ways to hold a pen/pencil/stylus. She probably has the same instrument grip or hand movement vices as you do.
Most fascinating is us foreigners following this tale.
Barely is understatement
I lost it when I realized that it got progressively worse through out the message 😂
This is actually above average good for people who are past school and aren’t doing a calligraphy class (mostly housewives).
Chloe's handwriting is worse than the average kindergartener.
Yeah, I can see it how she drew lines in the wrong order most of the times almost from the result, the "yuu" is still the worst I've seen probably. Yet, knowing what she wanted to say as an idea it wasn't like so terrible you couldn't understand, but from here the "she can't write" thing started and she kinda made it worse.