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Home » The Benefits of Writing By Hand: Katie McCleary (Transcript)

The Benefits of Writing By Hand: Katie McCleary (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Katie McCleary’s talk titled “The Benefits of Writing By Hand” at TEDxEustis conference.

In this talk, Katie McCleary emphasizes the profound impact of handwriting on cognitive processes and personal expression. She recounts her 25 years of experience encouraging diverse groups, from students to CEOs, to engage in creative writing. McCleary details her unique method, involving prompts from an orange suitcase, to stimulate natural, thoughtful writing.

She argues that handwriting aids in filtering and deepening critical thinking, contrasting it with the superficiality of digital typing. The talk includes a case study of ‘Derek,’ a businessman who discovers deep personal insights and emotional connections through handwriting. McCleary asserts that writing by hand improves academic performance, critical thinking, and social-emotional skills.

She concludes by urging the audience to embrace handwriting as a tool for better self-understanding, focus, and leadership.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

The Power of Handwriting

I want to share with you a simple practice that can improve the quality of your thinking and help you focus on what really matters in a noisy world and a noisy mind. For the past 25 years, I have written with thousands of people, from elementary kids to students of all ages, to foster youth, to people in prison, to senators, CEOs, women escaping violence, veterans suffering from PTSD. I have written with electricians, biologists, truckers, people in the circus, NBA basketball players, and with everyday people just like yourself. Now, the process is creative.

I hand out composition notebooks and pens, and I bring out a prompt from my orange suitcase. Things like seashells and sand, spices to smell and taste, coast cards from foreign countries, and mundane objects like this one, a simple red kitchen spatula. Then I ask you to write whatever bubbles up. I want you to speak to the page in your natural mother tongue, and I want you to not overthink what you’re going to write about.

I ask you to let go of the feeling of being judged by red pens, the grammar police, or the gatekeepers, you know, the internal and external ones in your life. I set a timer, I repeat the instructions again, let go, try slow, be present, and just write whatever bubbles up. There is great power in gathering people to write and share stories, and there are a lot of TEDx speeches about this, right? Journaling to understand the self, finding our voice, being brave to share who we are, and truly becoming the authors of our own lives.

The Essence of Handwriting

I could decoupage this entire stage with gobs of printed research about the positive impacts that expressive writing can have on your life outcomes, yet there is one element that fuels all of this transformative magic that we underestimate. Is the magic in the method or the orange suitcase? Maybe. Is the magic in the gathering of the people in the group? Maybe. Is the magic in your facilitator? No. Like Dorothy in “The Wizard of Oz”, the magic is inside you and quite literally in your hands.

I want you to brace yourself, guys. The magic is handwriting. It’s not typing or texting or screens or keyboards, talking into a device for transcription. It is no-tech. Now, I know that every generation bemoans the next generation for the choice of their communication tools, and this is not going to be a speech about spanking you about screen time or forcing us to go to the good old days or even creating a bunch of fear about how most kids can’t read or write cursive anymore. Yet we are losing something really precious when we default to write digitally versus pen and paper, from a cognitive perspective, that is.

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So when you write by hand, you are accessing a different cognitive process than if you type or text. And the act of writing itself, it is super complicated brain work. You are intersecting different neurosensory experiences along with your fine motor skills. But wait, when I’m texting or typing, aren’t I using my hands, too? So what is the difference, you might be asking? Well, screens, keyboards, technology, devices, those were instruments that were built for speed, efficiency, and conformity.

Handwriting’s Unique Impact

Handwriting, it is none of those things. Handwriting is slow. Handwriting is messy. And your unique handwriting is as one of a kind as your DNA and your fingerprints. I mean, think about it. When you write by hand, you are directing unconsciously a movement that is precisely your own. You create a font of your own on that page. And it is beautiful, even when your hand shakes, even when you don’t like it.

Also, think about the power of your signature. You sign your name in ink as an ethical commitment and promise to uphold your end of a bargain. In this way, your handwriting, it is sacred, it is a part of you, it is meaningful.

Now I want you to meet Derek. Derek is a man in his late 40s, and he’s part of a mastermind group for small business owners. Derek’s a busy guy, and he already takes time out of his really hectic schedule to strategize with his peers about things like KPIs and Q4 finances and management issues, you know, all that like super fun stuff in life.

Well, Derek, he is serious business. I show up one day with my orange suitcase, and I’m going to give him and the fellow masterminds an experience about how they can leverage the power of their conscious and unconscious minds in order to be more intentional and impactful leaders. Derek grumbles loudly, passive-aggressively. “Yeah, well, I don’t know what creative writing has anything to do with my business or leadership.” I meet a lot of Dereks in my line of work, and that’s okay. I get it.

They don’t have time for this kind of nonsense. “Derek, that’s a great question. Would you mind if I just had seven minutes of your time, and then I promise you that when we debrief the activity, we will explore this connection together, and you will have your answer?” “Sure,” he says, smug, suspicious.