Ologies with Alie Ward - Graphology (HANDWRITING/FORGERY) with Sylvia Kessler
Episode Date: July 31, 2019Is it weird to have different handwritings? How do you forge ancient documents? What pen should you use to write checks? Who is the greediest person in American history? Forensic document examiner Syl...via Kessler met up with Alie in the back of a Nebraska office store to chat about penmanship, ransom notes, court cases, self-expression, and we *very* lightly touch on the fringe -ology that uses handwriting to analyze personalities and how Barnum knew best when it comes to carnival "magic."More about Sylva: http://forgerydetectionexperts.comA donation went to: Care.orgSponsor links: Stitcherapp.com/ologies; Trueandco.com/ologies (code: OLOGIES); Progressive.com; HelixSleep.com/OLOGIESBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a month: www.Patreon.com/ologiesOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, pins, totes!Follow twitter.com/ologies or instagram.com/ologiesFollow twitter.com/AlieWard or instagram.com/AlieWardSound editing by Jarrett Sleeper of MindJam Media & Steven Ray MorrisTheme song by Nick ThorburnSupport the show: http://Patreon.com/ologies
Transcript
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Oh hey, it's your old poddad Ward, just me, hanging out in a breezy summer tunic in linen
kool-lots.
Ally Ward, back with another episode of oligies.
Are you ready for a weird one, kind of a random one, kind of a dark one?
If you're all about bank robberies and or calligraphy and or murder, she wrote why.
The writing's on the bathroom wall.
You've landed at the correct episode, my friends, but before we get deep into it, let's
first thank some folks, patrons at patreon.com, who make this show possible.
Thank you to everyone buying merch at oligiesmerch.com.
Thank you to the folks who subscribe and rate and especially review, which I read gingerly
each week.
I pluck a fresh one, but your reviews keep it up in the charts.
So thank you to this week, Anna Banana, who says, my first blood meal was acrology, but
unlike ticks, I needed more, lots and lots more.
Where did I think I would stay sitting in my car for an extra 30 minutes to finish a
podcast about hagfish?
But here I am.
Thank you, Dad WordVound podcast.
The pleasure, Anna Banana, it's all mine.
Okay, graphology.
Let's just roll our sleeves up, let's sharpen our pencils, let's get into it.
So in Greek, graphos means to write.
So it's a study of writing.
Should be simple, right?
Not so much.
Okay, so graphology is a study of personality through the analysis of handwriting traits.
So can you tell if someone is organized or anxious or ambitious or critical through the
way they write their F's and T's and I's and such?
This was a field pioneered by a Frenchman, Jean Hippolyte Maichon, in the mid-1800s.
And before you say, wait a second, analyze a personality via handwriting, isn't that
flim flam?
It's been called pseudoscience, which is why this episode doesn't focus much on it.
Instead, we're talking all about actual forensic handwriting analysis and signature forgeries
and wills and fraud and court cases.
So that field is technically called graph analysis.
And this guest is an expert in that, as well as does graphology on the side.
So yeah, this episode title is called Graphology and this expert does do graphology, but really,
there's not a lot of graphology in this episode.
We stick to mostly the scientific penmanship analysis and expert witness stories.
So I was in Nebraska, I was on a tour through the Midwest talking to differentologists,
and this was a stop in Lincoln, Nebraska.
I think it was Lincoln.
It was at our Omaha.
God, Nebraska.
I'm so sorry.
So I had looked on a site for expert legal witnesses in the area and I'd come across
her name as a graphologist before I really understood the distinction.
Anyway, we met at a conference room in the back of the Kinkos, which I don't even think
they call Kinkos anymore, but whatever.
She came in, she was smartly dressed with curled blonde hair, carrying a folder of paperwork
in case we needed visual references.
She's kind of like the aunt that makes family barbecues a little more lively and gives you
dating advice that you remember for years, a real hoot.
So she completed a four-year comprehensive handwriting, profiling, and forgery detection
training program.
She developed and taught, quote, red flags of forgery classes, and she teaches handwriting
analysis through the Metropolitan Community College in Nebraska.
She's so passionate about handwriting.
So if you like sitting around and gabbing about weird court cases and upstrokes and downstrokes,
this is your lady.
So cross your eyes, dot your T's.
Let's hear about why your handwriting is unique, how to protect your signature, which letters
of note and ransom notes in history may have been fakes and how you can chill out by writing
stuff with graph analyst, court witness, forensic handwriting experts, and also on the side
graphologist, but we don't talk about that much, Sylvia Kessler.
I'm about right there.
Yeah, that's great.
They're on and they're ready to go.
And so now Sylvia, you are a graphologist.
Yes.
Yes.
How long have you been a handwriting expert?
Oh, since 1980.
Since when I opened my business.
How did you get into it?
I met a lady that was a retiring chiropractor, and she, it was my teacher, and I was just
fascinated.
I was just fascinated right from the very beginning with it.
And so she said, well, if you're going to study this, you also need to study forensic
document examination.
And so I was with her for four years training.
It's quite in depth.
And I absolutely love it today.
That's how come I still haven't retired.
You're like, I don't want to give it up.
I like it too much.
Well, it's exciting.
It's exciting and it's different every day, even though we're still talking about handwriting
and documents and now technology and things like that.
It's a very exciting business.
Did you have impeccable penmanship as a child?
Yes.
You did?
I did.
Do you remember when you'd have to do the cursives?
Did you always like doing it?
I learned to write in a one-room schoolhouse in Pennsylvania, Taylortown, Pennsylvania.
We had grades one through six, and we had to use the quill pen with inkwells.
So quick aside, what is this Palmer method?
Well, news to me, different styles of penmanship over the eras have different names.
This hasn't just evolved organically.
So back in the 1700s, that gorgeous, curly-cued script was called English Round.
And following that was another beautifully ornate, oval-based, Spensarian-style script
designed by this Victorian penmaster Spencer.
But some folks thought it was too girly, so they created the Palmer method, which was
simpler and less beautiful, but it was faster.
Now, the Palmer method reigned in schoolhouses from like the 1840s to the 1950s.
So if you wonder why old letters from 50 years ago look like they're all written by
the same great aunt, well, it may be because everyone was all palmed up.
But of course, the only constant in life is change and wanting snacks.
And since the Palmer method, a few different types of printing and cursive have been taught
in school.
So you may have learned the Zanier-Bloser method of printing, or you may have learned
nothing at all.
And now, was there something about writing with quill pens that was soothing to you?
Well, no, that was just what we had.
We had pencils and quill pens, and the only time we got to write with a quill pen.
Ballpoint pens were invented in 1940, and they were invented to go through carbon papers.
It was wartime, and they needed those to go through those duplication of papers.
And so those weren't available.
So side note, let's take a trip through time to just appreciate the pen in your purse,
which you probably got for free from a car wash or something.
So 4,000 years ago, Egyptians made pens out of hollow bamboo reeds.
And then about 1,500 years ago, folks were like, I have a great idea.
Let's sneak up on an alive goose, or maybe a turkey.
Let's rip a feather out of its butt and sharpen it with, yes, a pen knife, and then use that
as a writing instrument.
Everyone loved this idea, except alive birds.
And then in the early 1820s, steel nibs were the next great thing.
Literacy rates improved because of this advancement.
And then only five years later, the fountain pen was patented.
Who cares, you say?
Well, guess what?
Having a pen on your person as opposed to carrying around a jar of ink and a smeary goose
feather was huge, all right?
This was a big deal, but fountain pens still smeared, which sucked.
So ballpoint pens, as we know them, were inspired by quick drying newspaper ink.
When this newspaper writer was damn sick and darn tired of spending time refilling his
fountain pens and then smearing them all over the page, so he invented the ballpoint
pen.
Now, ballpoint pens involve pigment suspended in oil, or in some cases now, a smooth, silky
gel in the kind of pens that you borrow from an office mate, and then quietly refuse to
give back.
And now it's still chemically manufactured, but it's mostly alcohol or gel.
And so that comes into play in forensics to see what kind of ink was there.
And so I'm not an expert in ink, but I've studied about ink, all of the things that
have to do with handwriting or documents I have studied over the course of the years.
What was it like when you were learning for four years, kind of like, it seems almost
like an apprenticeship almost with a master?
It was an apprenticeship.
Yeah, yeah.
What are you studying?
What was really funny about it is my teacher said, I don't want to take you as a student.
I had to beg her to take me as a student because she was just retiring.
And I said, I will do anything you want me to do, I will pay you whatever you want me
to pay.
I will not argue.
I will be a good student.
So she finally agreed and I would go every other weekend to Kansas City.
That's where she lived.
This, my friends, this is passion.
So pour yourself a cup of tea, stare into the morning mist and ask yourself, what would
I drive to Kansas City to learn?
And at the end of that question, may hang the secret to a happier life.
Anyway.
And what are some things that a handwriting expert learns?
Do you learn about the idiosyncrasies of each person's handwriting?
Every person writes differently and there's a Supreme Court ruling on this that goes back
to the, I want to say 1846, something like that, the Holland Will.
This was not the Holland Will, but the Howland Will.
Now the wishes of the late Sylvia Ann Howland, whose fortune today, BTW, would be equivalent
to $32 million.
So she left half of that to charities, various entities, and the remaining half to her niece,
a woman named Henrietta Howland Robinson.
So upon Sylvia's death, Henrietta produced an earlier will that said everything was to
go to Henrietta with an attached note that said, any future will should just be ignored,
which is a weird thing to have attached to your will.
But anyway, Henrietta produced it saying, give me everything.
So based on the number of overlapping downstrokes in the late Sylvia signature, an expert handwriting
witness concluded that it was statistically near impossible to do an identical signature.
And so this must be a tracing, a forgery.
And this was a fascinating story.
A grandson took his grandfather's letters, kept his grandfather's letters, maybe for
sentimental reason, I don't know about that, but in the long run, he made out a will, cut
and pasted a will, and that's called a holographic will when it's handwritten, leaving everything
to him and ruling out the rest of the family.
And then he got an agreement with a printer that had some paper that was age-appropriate.
They printed up this will.
And he actually got everything, however, the way the story goes is the printer got greedy
and wanted more money, and when the grandson wouldn't give it to him, then he ratted him
out.
So I think they both went to jail.
Oh my God!
I don't know how it ended, but that was this ruling that no two people can ever write the
same and mathematicians were brought in, and somehow they proved this.
It's like families may have similar writing because sometimes the parents will be teaching
their children, however, it's just no two people write alike.
If you have enough handwriting, you will see the differences.
How has handwriting changed over the decades?
How has it changed like in our society?
Yeah, because if you look at a document from the 1800s, it's gorgeous, and if you look
at a note that someone leaves for the mailman, it's garbage.
So what happened to our beautiful handwriting?
Well, people quit practicing, they quit learning cursive writing over the years.
One of the things that was a big influence on why they quit teaching cursive writing
was computers.
I was invented to ruin your handwriting.
Because everybody types now and texts now, and there's very, that people aren't writing
as much as they used to.
If you get a handwritten card in the mail, you treasure it because you get to see it,
and I have collections of handwriting over all these years, and it's just fascinating.
Sometimes I'll look at it and go, oh, wow, I got to keep this.
This is really important.
Is there someone in the world or in history whose handwriting you think is the most beautiful?
Any documents you've seen that you're just like wowsers?
Well, the Declaration of Independence, not only the content of it, but the beauty of
it.
Before now and then, I will run into someone that still writes like that, with all the
flourishes, and they've practiced that for years.
So if you don't like practicing or mastering stuff because there are things on the internet
to look at and naps to take, I get it, you can always use this Declaration of Independence
font.
It's available via p22.com, and it's called What Else Declaration.
As long as you can print it on a thin sheet of aged cow tissue, no one will ever know
it's fake.
Also, the original penman of that Declaration of Independence document was Timothy Matlack,
who was a Quaker and a professional and grocer who lived to the ripe old age of 99.
So if you're scared of dying young and are convinced that good handwriting will help,
you could practice the artful penmanship of calligraphy, or you could start kiddos young
and then have them compete for money.
There's one competition called the Zanier-Blozer National Handwriting Contest, and it offers
five hundred bucks in prizes for the neatest penmanship.
In this year, a ten-year-old, Sarah Heinzley, earned the Nicholas Maxim Award in the National
Handwriting Contest.
One detail, she was born without hands.
She learned to hold a pencil and write impeccably anyway, and she told reporters she's not sure
what she's going to do with the cash, but she said, quote, I felt proud and I hope others
who have challenges learn from me, that if you try your hardest, you can do it.
So that thing you want to do, but you're afraid you can't do, learn from Sarah Heinzley and
try hard and then just do the thing.
Nowadays, it's a simplified writing that we do, but computers were the biggest influence
for the printed word, and printing is just fine, except I can't evaluate, there's very
few extensions, but not in all printing.
If it's block printing, those people are usually very constructive, and you get that with engineers,
architects, they will naturally write that way, because it feels best to them.
So handwriting is a kinesthetic activity.
So when you're learning these exercises, they were taught with number two lead pencils,
when you feel that motion.
And I've actually gone to a hospital before where someone had had a head trauma, and their
motor skills were involved, and I've done the circular motions, help build back coordination.
Has anyone ever come to you just maybe not trauma related, but just said, listen, Sylvia,
my handwriting sucks.
What can you do to help me?
I'm an adult.
Can you help me with my handwriting?
It's not good.
What's interesting is most people will tell me my handwriting is terrible, or I have two
different kinds of handwriting, and it's seldom.
I've only seen one or two people in my whole career that had two separate different hand
writings.
So let's address the elegant elephant in the room.
Graphology proper.
Okay, this again, not considered hard science.
So graphology hangs out kind of in the same lunch table as astrology or numerology or chirology,
which is a technical term for palm reading.
No joke.
Should I do an episode on that?
Maybe I will.
Anyway, this show is ologies, and Sylvia is a legit forensic handwriting witness by
day and a graphologist on the side.
So let's just ask her opinion on that ology.
What do you think handwriting says about a person's personality?
A lot.
Yeah?
How so?
Now, let me qualify this.
Not everybody that says they're a handwriting expert is a handwriting expert.
So they'll read a book and say, oh, I can go make 20 bucks on this or something at the
mall or at the carnival or whatever.
In fact, when I'm an expert witness about documents and signatures on documents, and
I have to prove that to the benefit of the judge or jury.
And so I've been asked when I was getting qualified in the beginning, well, is this
like what they do over at the carnival or at the state fair?
Oh, no, it isn't.
It isn't.
Yeah.
I said, I don't know what they do at the state fair because I've never been hired to
go over there anyway.
So to get back to your question, cursive writing is now coming back and pimpship is
now coming back into the school systems in some states.
The last I heard, there were like 12 or 13 states that have put that back into their
educational system because it does build discipline.
It builds self-determination.
It builds all the characters that you can find.
Now when I get a court case, my reputation in that area, that arena, that is a really
heavy duty.
And now, tell me a little bit about the forensic side of it.
What kind of cases do you get called in for?
Oh, you know what, I get unfortunate.
There's a lot of probate cases, which means when somebody dies, there's wills that are
questioned, there's wills that show up that counter other wills, there's forged deeds
of trust.
There's a lot and it splits families.
I bet.
I will say to them, let's sit down at the table and discuss this.
I'll tell the attorney, get the other attorney because this is going to cause a divide in
this family that will never be healed unless we do it now.
Some attorneys will look at me like I'm a bleeding heart.
Some attorneys will say, you know, that's a good idea, maybe we can get it settled.
So when I come back with the true answers, they will usually come to some kind of agreement
and they don't always forgive one another, unfortunately, but ...
Sorry, I didn't mean to do it.
Does one person say, well, I have a will and it's the latest will and someone else says,
well, I have a will from 1975, but he was in maybe a better state of mind here or you
don't ...
There's no records to back that up.
It's called capacity.
If the person had capacity at the time they were signed in and if they do not have capacity,
whoever's there with them at the moment can influence them quite easily.
So what else does Sylvia's job entail?
That's just one part of it.
I work with stocks ... Right now, I have six cases.
I work with a Fortune 500 company on fraudulent invoices.
One of them is with an artist that agreements were broken and he thinks that they've forged
his name on something.
It's just really interesting the different cases, wills, contracts, I've done athletic
contracts that were forged.
Really?
Yes.
And how do you see when something is forged?
Where do you even start?
You start by getting known signatures of the person that signature is supposed to be and
then you do the habitual patterns.
People cannot help but they have patterns.
You write your name more than anything else in your whole life and so there will be patterns,
habitual characteristics in your signature that you don't even see.
You don't see it because it's unconscious.
And so that's the first thing.
She recalled another case that went down in Carlsbad, New Mexico.
I had the man's writing for over 60 years.
He was in his 80s.
I had handwriting over 60 years.
Even though the writing changed as he got older, you could see how he came out of being
a young man and got more serious and more efficient in what he was doing and came into
his own and then you could see where his health started to decline over those 60 years but
the same habitual patterns were there.
And so was it a forgery?
In that case, it was a forgery, yes.
What's it like when the verdict comes out?
Well, they settled.
I'm there in the courtroom after this long journey and they settled when the opposing
attorney looked at the report and looked at my illustrations.
They were back talking to the judge and it was all settled.
Oh my gosh.
And now what other kinds of things come up when you're doing forensic hand-ring analysis?
Is there the type of papers or the type of ink?
Is it the hardness?
Sure, those are all things but now our technology is about electronically lifted signatures
that have been manufactured from other documents and it's amazing how much of our signatures
are out there.
I bet.
Yeah.
And now when it comes to electronic documents, how do you feel about things like DocuSign
where it's just essentially you sign a PDF?
Oh.
I know.
I'm worried about that.
We just bought a house.
Yeah.
We just bought a house and we got some final paperwork in the mail but it doesn't have
any of our original signatures on it.
Yeah.
It's all electronic.
That seems, I just had to do a bunch of DocuSign things too and I'm like, this isn't even
my handwriting and all I'm doing is clicking a button but how is that legit?
They can check your, where it's coming from, your computer and stuff like that, your IP
address.
Okay.
All right.
And now what about signing the back of your credit card?
Should you do that or should you not?
Well, if you don't, it's not going to be accepted but what I do is I say ask for ID.
Okay.
That's a good tip from someone who is a professional forensic graphologist.
And if they, if we're in a restaurant and the person, the waiter or waitress, whoever
takes our credit card and comes back and they don't ask for it, I said turn over that card
and look at it.
I need to see some ID.
And have there been any huge forgery cases in history that have really captured your
attention?
No.
No?
What?
Why?
I've studied some of those and I can't even remember their names.
You know, I think probably one of the, the most famous one is the Howard Hughes Diaries.
They were all forged.
Oh.
Side note.
If you're like, what?
Okay.
Howard Hughes, business magnet, film director, pilot, wealthy person, became a recluse and
in the 1970s a few scoundrels devised a scheme to have artists mimic his handwriting and
they got this lucrative book deal, so many dollars based on this autobiography, which
was totally fake and they were found out and the main perp, a guy called Clifford Irving,
went to prison for like a year and a half.
But during that time he gave up smoking and he took up weightlifting.
So maybe it was like a bit of a glow up for him.
Then he wrote a book about it and he made gobs of money.
He was married six times.
They made a movie called The Hoke starring Richard Gere.
So yay, crime does pay.
And after this whole scandal in the 1970s, Hughes died just a few years later, likely
still very annoyed.
Now any other cases that Sylvia has been really taken by?
I'll tell you something though that this, this fascinated me.
I saw some of Marilyn Monroe's handwriting in one of Oprah's magazine years ago.
And then I saw a letter that was sold at Sotheby's for some big amount that was not
the same handwriting.
And I go, whoa, I should really take the time to look into that, but nobody, nobody's asked
me about that or, but I noticed it when I saw it.
So a little Googling turned up two different sad letters supposedly in Marilyn's handwriting.
One to her acting teacher, Lee Strasberg, on Hotel Bel Air Stationery, which was written
in loopy cursive, kind of slanted forward as if leaning into a wind it read, my will
is weak, but I can't stand anything.
I sound crazy, but I think I am going crazy.
It's just that I get before a camera and my concentration and everything I'm trying to
learn leaves me and I feel like I'm not existing in the human race at all.
So this cursive note looks nothing like another one written to her psychiatrist, which was
in print saying, I guess I've always been deeply terrified to really be someone's wife.
Since I know from life that one cannot love another really, Sylvia says she'd love to
sit down and compare them.
Now she didn't leave a note before her overdose of barbiturates at 36 and it was ruled a probable
suicide by coroners.
Sylvia notes that a slim percentage less than 30% by my research do leave notes in such
a tragic occurrence.
And as your pod dad, just a reminder that folks are here to listen and the National Suicide
Hotline is there 24 hours a day, 1-800-273-8255, I'll add it in the show notes.
Now another famed note left by Nirvana singer Kurt Cobain has been the subject of widespread
conspiracy theories.
The last few lines raised a bunch of eyebrows for decades, but Dateline at one point passed
it off to four handwriting experts who concluded that it was either in Kurt's own penmanship
or it was inconclusive.
I've had several cases that I knew or murder and we just couldn't get the attorneys to
move forward with that or we couldn't get it investigated properly.
Oh my gosh.
And it's heartbreaking.
It really is heartbreaking.
And it's interesting that something like handwriting can come in to speak for the person who's
gone, you know?
Oh, absolutely.
Absolutely.
And so I consider that part of what I do is I have to take a stand for the handwriting.
The truth is always in the handwriting in the papers.
So you get enough of those papers and enough of the handwriting and you can figure it out.
Anonymous writing, hate mail.
If we're texting and typing more than we're writing, are we leaving behind evidence of
your language patterns, yes you are?
Oh, really?
So our language patterns are something that maybe...
Language patterns are something that I have looked at before.
Another case I had, it was about the known handwriting had never been more than maybe
six or seven lines of a paragraph on a page.
And then here's this big, long letter.
It's indented.
It's typed, but it's indented and the language patterns are completely different than what
the person used.
And that was on a harassment suit that got solved real quickly.
Oh, wow.
Well, here's a fun little confidence booster to remind you about intrinsic versus extrinsic
motivation.
You get your image out of work.
You get your image out of production, whether it's work in school or work...
It's not about the pay, it's about the accomplishment.
That's where people get their confidence.
It's not something that just comes down to the sky and blesses you.
You get it from...
You become competent by doing things and that builds the confidence.
So sometimes people will say to me, well, I want to have more confidence.
And I said, so what kind of person would it make you if you had a lot of confidence and
you didn't listen to feedback?
Right.
Which we have a lot of those today, don't we?
Yes, we do.
And now, what do you think about the daily habit of journaling or doing morning pages
of just connecting pen or pencil to paper?
What do you think that does?
I think it's a wonderful...
It's wonderful not only as therapy, it's wonderful to focus.
It's wonderful to have that time for yourself to really get your thoughts down on paper.
And when you go back and read that years later, you go, oh my goodness, that is so interesting.
Because you can see it in your...
I can see it in my handwriting over the years how it's changed.
Any movies about forgeries or handwriting that you like?
Movies I don't know.
There's been a lot of movies where in CSI, you can...
You know, the thing about going to trial now is the jury expects all of it to be like
CSI.
I'm going to steal the Declaration of Independence.
And it's not always like CSI.
Sometimes they'll say things and I'll go, that is not true.
How can you say that?
Who wrote the script?
And I've had several people that are writing books that have contacted me with different
handwriting questions and I've given them information about what they could do or where
they should look or that sort of thing, you know.
One time I had a case and the attorney told me he couldn't get any handwriting.
I said, well, then we're going to lose this case.
And I said, I can tell you from what I have, this man has been a real scrapper.
This is a small town.
Go down to the police station and ask him if he's ever been arrested.
That's public information.
You're an attorney.
Get out of your office and go down there and get me some handwriting.
Well sure enough, he had been arrested three times for assault and bars and here it is,
just exactly what I needed to prove that that was his signature.
It was really an interesting case.
What was he guilty of?
Conspiracy to the fraud bank.
Wow.
Oh my gosh.
She's single.
And now I have questions from listeners.
Can I ask them?
Yeah.
Oh, you got listeners?
Yeah.
Okay, patrons, before we get to your numerous excellent questions, a few words from sponsors
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Okay, these sponsors made that donation possible.
Okay, your questions.
There were 193 questions.
So I'm not going to ask you all of them.
No.
We'll run through.
We'll just rapid fire.
Okay, sure.
We'll get as many lightning round as we can.
This next question was also asked by Ariel, Emma B., and Ira Gray.
Liza and Elizabeth wants to know, how accurate is forensic handwriting analysis and is it
a reliable source of evidence?
It is if you have someone that's well trained and well qualified.
You have to prove your case.
You can't just write a report.
That happens a lot.
Where they write a report, it's my opinion.
Well, that and what, two bucks, we can go get a cup of coffee.
Jessica Bailey wants to know, is it true that people with sloppier handwriting tend to have
a higher IQ?
Not necessarily.
Okay.
So there you have it.
This has been a known fact for decades.
And one 1984 study published in Human Learning, the Journal of Practical Research and Applications
states,
It is concluded that the lack of a significant correlation between handwriting legibility
and IQ scores clearly disconfirms the popular stereotype of illegible writers as unintelligent.
Boom.
So Lacey Gilbert, Lisa Burbridge, Katie Spinoe, Danielle Rivera, and Deli Dames, who also
asked about that and maybe have terrible penmanship, but sharp minds, breathe easy
letter slobs.
You're all good.
Now, the following folks all had a similar question to Jenny Bergstrom's.
Caitlin Carter, Jessica Beard, Ray Kasha, Madeline Rogers, I, Renee, and Rosaria Naira.
Jenny Bergstrom asks, does handwriting change over time because your personality or interests
or maturity changes?
All of it changes.
Physical, emotional, spiritual, all of it changes.
What about when people dot their eyes with hearts?
What do you think about that?
There's something about them they want, that's called an idiosyncrasy.
And that means there's something about them that's really different, and they're kind
of into the love, you know, sweetness and love and all of that, you know.
I'm a romantic like that.
Michelle Grandine wants to know, what's the most commonly forged piece of writing?
Oh, I would have to say, let's see, most commonly forged piece of writing.
That's a very good question.
I would say probably wills.
So the most common, oh, checks would probably be the one.
Is it better to write a check in Sharpie so that no one can...
You can actually buy pins now that they cannot bleach out the writing.
You know, I want to encourage everybody to get a locked mailbox or make sure that their
mail is secure.
Because one of the common easy accesses is to go along a line of mailboxes or just regular
mailboxes, pull them down, go through the mail.
If there's checks going out, they take those.
If there's birthday cards or cards that look like they're cards of some kind that might
have money in them, they take those, open them up, take the checks, bleach them, and honestly,
they will still pass those checks.
For more on how Bleach does that, just hit that old disinfectiology episode from a few
weeks ago.
Bleach, not just for toilets and pools, it's also great for mail fraud.
Just kidding, don't do that.
So get a locked mailbox.
Get a locked mailbox and get a...
You can get the pins at any of the stationary stores that's for forgery.
I've actually had people call me up and ask me if I could come and forge a document that
they needed somebody's name on a document.
Could I come right away?
What'd you say?
I said, sure.
Where do you want me to come?
I got the address and then I called the police and told them that they were expecting me.
Nice.
You're like, wrong person to kid, wrong person.
Well, I just went along with that.
I thought, oh, wow, this is interesting.
What kind of document is it?
And I told them, you know, scam, scam, scam.
Blasting crimes, speaking of crimes, Stephanie Brougharties and Derek Allen also had a similar
question to Sophie's coming up.
Sophie Beer wants to know, what's your favorite crime that was solved with the help of handwriting
experts?
What is the one?
What was your favorite crime that's been solved by the help of handwriting experts?
Anything historical?
Historically.
I think probably the Hughes Diaries is one.
So in your carpet, a cool question.
Is handwriting gender related at all, even though, you know, gender is fluid and gender
is schmender?
But why do boys typically tend to have less neat handwriting than girls?
That is broad generalization because I have in my files handwriting of men that has all
the flourishes, even more flourishes than you have, more flair than you have.
Wow.
I had taken a peek at my little binder earlier and decided, based on my flair, that I am
inquisitive with perfectionist tendencies, but that I am not moody.
And I did not have the heart or the balls to tell her that I am moody as hell.
And I can get bummed out for hours, just after seeing a dead bee.
And in your writing, and so there's three things that you cannot tell from handwriting.
Everything else is open.
So the three things are, whether it's a male or female, whether it's right or left-handed
or how old they are, you cannot tell exact age.
Those three things, everything else, if you have enough handwriting and you're trained
well enough, you can figure out a complete profile on the person.
Even though lefties do a little smearing, they, no, no, that is a misconception that's
across the board.
One misconception is, like, if you're going to forge something, you better make it different
because you cannot write your name the same way twice in your entire lifetime.
Oh, so you can have similar patterns, but nothing exact.
There's habitual patterns and variation.
And so this is why it takes so long to study this.
This is not just something that you pick up a book and read it and, yeah, you can gather
a lot of information that way.
Tyler Q. wants to know, when was the first case of a ransom letter being written with
newspaper clippings, and is that to fool people so that they can't be traced?
I don't know.
He'd have to Google that.
That's why we have Google is because we don't know.
I don't know about the ransom notes.
Okay, I'll look that up.
This, as it turns out, is an excellent question because it pulled back the curtain to reveal
a big flashing neon sign that read in curly script, flim flam.
So apparently, people don't even ransom note like that.
According to design historian Dr. Arden Stern in her thesis, the ransom note effect, cut
and paste typography in American visual culture.
The imagery of a note penned by a criminal with cut and paste letters originated from
the Sherlock Holmes crime novel The Hound of the Baskervilles from the early 1900s.
But before you go doing evil with the written word, be warned that your printer might be
secretly encoding its own signature via tiny yellow micro dots that show up under blue
light.
And it's on everything you print.
Oops, so don't go criming.
Also, you'll know I'm not a big true crime lover.
Please see Get Sad About a Dead Bee, but many of you brought up a certain famous handwritten
ransom note involved in the 1996 death of a small child.
And there's plenty of media spotlight on this case already, so I'm sure I don't have
to name it.
But before today, I didn't even know that there was a ransom note involved, but an
overwhelming percentage of forensic handwriting analysts agree that the ransom note is in
the mom's handwriting.
And either way, that life was still lost.
Now what about lifesavers out there?
This next question was also asked by Nikki D, Abigail Manolin, Kate Chapman, and Michael
Sadambuga.
Sarah Terry and a lot of other people asked, what is the old, or is the old stereotype
true that all doctors have sloppy handwriting?
Where did that even come from in the first place?
Oh my goodness.
Every doctor that I've ever seen has it.
I can't say that they all have it.
I think where it comes from, though, is speed and acceleration.
When a doctor goes through the residency, it's completely insane what they put doctors
through.
I have several friends that have told me horror stories about working, you know, all those
long hours, and doing double shifts, and they're grinding all the time.
It's very stressful.
And when you get stressed, you tend to make more of the mountain peaks, you imagine that.
And Donald Trump's handwriting is a really good example of that.
He shows his signature all the time, and it's just pure mountain peaks.
Donald's stubbornness shows up because they're like TPs.
Okay, so side note.
I Google image searched the president's signature, and it did not remind me of anything related
to indigenous people's culture.
It's more like a few people standing at the forefront of a big crowd, but they're all
wearing hats, but like pointy ones, any who's all.
So a bunch of people had this next question, including Laura Schulte, Lawrence, Ashra
Kolhaktar, Robin Cohen, Robin Coon, and Charlotte Rodriguez.
Taryn Hake asked, there's such a rise in mobile devices that they seem to sign their
name more with their finger than an actual pen these days, and they don't think it looks
anything like the real signature.
So does the method of finger signing capture really hold up?
What do you think?
I've done a couple of drug cases where they were serious drug cases on narcotics, where
people were selling prescriptions.
And the signatures that they gave me, it was amazing that you could see the patterns in
the signature.
It wasn't perfect, but you could see the handwriting, the habitual patterns that I mentioned.
You could see those on the ones that this one person had.
Really?
Yes.
Even on a finger swiping?
Even on, and it was on where you just write out your name with your finger.
Timothy Dykes asks, what is the best way to train your handwriting, both in print and
in cursive?
To get a go online and get a penmanship printout and make sure you have on the cursive writing,
make sure that you have your upper loops, your lower loops, and your middle zone loops.
How many other people asked about different handwriting?
So many of you, including Jenny Bergstrom, Kaitlyn Carter, Jessica Beard, Ray Cascha,
Madeline Rogers, I, Renee, Rosaria Neyra, Sonia Karp, Graham Tattersall, Rachel Wahlberg,
Troy Clarkson, Kayla Patton, Don Aewald, Emily Hoban, Kelly Bradenthal, Cody Albert, Wayne
Brantley, Emma Fiori, Jen Athanas, and...
Casey Arden had a great question.
Why the heck do I have 87 different handwritings?
Sometimes it's so neat.
It looks like a typeface.
Sometimes it's illegible.
Sometimes I have curly letters.
Sometimes not.
What is up with this?
Jen Athanas says, yes, what she said.
Well, that's something I would have to look at.
But generally speaking, people will tell me they have different handwritings, and all
it means is sometimes it's sloppy and sometimes it's neater.
Sometimes it's bigger, and bigger if we are real scattered, if our energy is real scattered
and we have too many balls in the air, so to speak, then our handwriting will be large
and sloppy, generally speaking.
Now one way that you can calm yourself is to write a sentence, and then just keep making
it smaller and smaller and smaller, and you will actually feel, internally, you will feel
a sense of focus.
Wow.
It's like meditation.
It will bring you into focus very quickly, just as long as it takes you, you know, like
a few minutes just to write three or four sentences and making it smaller.
Your mind knows what to do with these things.
It's really cool, and like you could have a child, if you have a child that's having
a fit or tantrum, you could have them draw a line, and then draw another line a little
shorter, another line a little shorter, and even if you're directing their hand, they will
still calm down.
Oh, that's a great tip.
I love this question from Jen Anathas.
She says, why does it seem some kinds of pens make my handwriting nicer and some are not
as good for my handwriting, and is there an ultimate pen?
And like, what is the most expensive pen?
What's the nicest?
Do you have a preferred pen?
I have a preferred pen.
I use a uniball.
Okay.
And I only sign documents, important documents, with blue ink.
Okay.
And I use a uniball rolling writer, and I never use ballpoint pen.
Ballpoint pen will seep into the fibers of a paper in a few years.
I discovered that when I was going through some original checks that had been written
in ballpoint pen.
Are ballpoint pens bad for writing checks?
What the fuck?
So I looked into this, and apparently most ballpoint pens are dye-based, and they're
easy to wash using a solvent of matching polarity, like nail polish remover.
But uniball and other gel pens are pigment-based, and you can't remove pigments without destroying
the paper also.
So, texture crush, cup bangs, catch yourself a nice gel pen, live for today.
What about point size?
Are you a 0.5?
Are you fine?
I like 5 to 7.
Now what do you think?
I hold my pencil on my third finger.
I think we're supposed to hold it like this.
Is there a best way to hold your pens?
It's however is most comfortable for you.
Yeah, I think I do it on the third.
And to answer her question, each person will have a preference for what kind of pen and
paper.
I love papers.
I have more paper at my house than you can imagine.
And I love pens, pencils, and I don't like those erasers on there that blur.
I like the white, gummy erasers that get it cleanly swept off.
So many, maybe lefties, had the same question, including Jack Callagher, Kitty Halverson,
Juan Way, Ariel Bruce, Katie Chavez, Wayne Brantley, Don Eowald, Michelle Grandine, Sophie
Cosano, Nathan Elgrim, Jessica Irone, and...
And a lot of people had this question, Hannah Lease asks, why is the right hand considered
to be the proper hand for writing?
Does it have a practical or religious background?
I know my sister went to Catholic school and the nuns wouldn't let her use her left hand.
Isn't that, you know, we program our children by where we put their silverware.
Oh, really?
Think about that for a moment.
We were always taught that this is how you set the table.
Sylvia paused here to get a cough drop.
In Catholic school, they would come and smack you because Sinistra left, you know, the hand
of the devil.
I know, it's just superstitious stuff.
Right most things have been developed for right-handed people because of that very fact
that we were forced to write with our right hand or program based on where our silverware
was.
So I recommend that if you're with your children, you just put the silverware in the middle
of the plate and let them decide which hand they want to use.
Nice.
Isn't that a good idea?
Yeah.
Do you know what a hagfish is?
A hagfish is a kind of a slimy eel-like fish that doesn't have a backbone and it exudes
just gallons of mucus.
But they coil into a little coil and some of them coil one way and some of them coil the
other way.
They have right-handed and left-handed preferences, isn't that cute?
These little hagfish at the bottom of the ocean, I think that's wonderful.
And so if you look in nature, that's the same truth.
And so even back in the cave dwellings, back in Caesar's time, he would select his people
by their handwriting.
He would.
Yeah, that's what he told me anyway.
Yeah.
Back in the day.
No, that's something that I read in one of my historical books about handwriting.
Oh wow, that surprises me.
So back then, side note, there were people who acted as assistants and then they just
take notes as orators orated.
They were called amenuensis, which sounds a lot like a medical condition that I don't
want.
What do you think of celebrities who are asked to give autographs?
Are they giving away their signature to everyone who asked for it?
Is there any security issues now?
Not really.
Well, it's going to be probably, it probably gets pretty sloppy as it goes along because
I've watched them sign these autographs and they do it just, you know, they're standing,
they're in a hurry.
Some of them will actually have different pens for them to use and then they take the
pen back.
So I think that's fine.
I don't think that there's a problem.
That is where the most fraud is committed though, is in memorabilia, so be very cautious
about that.
Yeah, because if you have some scribbled on poster, Halle Berry, how do you know that
she actually signed it?
You don't, unless you have some of her known signatures and there can be natural variation.
It could be that she had a signature for her public and a signature for her own personal
account.
Do you have any autographs from famous people that you treasure?
Well, James Taylor, I actually, James Taylor signed a guitar for me, one of my good friends
took me to see James Taylor and got a picture of me with James Taylor.
He's always been one of my favorites and he signed a guitar for me.
What did you think of his signature?
Didn't pay much attention to it, truthfully.
What?
No, people think I look at everything.
No, I don't.
I have had people's personal diaries that had all kind of stuff in it and I'm just looking
at the characteristic.
And then when I took it back, the guy said, well, what did you think about all of that?
And I said, oh, what?
He said, you didn't read it?
And I said, no, I don't read the content usually.
Now in forensics, I have to read the content, but it's just funny.
When it comes to, you know, leaving behind a will or something, I talked to a fanatologist
who was a grief counselor and she said that written wills in an envelope just saying,
yo, this is my will, those are legit.
Do you think people should write those in their own handwriting instead of typing them?
Absolutely.
Okay.
Anything that's typed has doubt on it.
And if you write it out, it's called a holographic will and each state has different rules on
it.
John DeJon, peace paper, please.
Well, I think it's terrific to have one typed by an attorney or a law firm and signed
and witnesses.
And then I also think that on your personal stuff that you want to give away, if you have
that in your handwriting and include your handwriting with it.
Oh, good idea.
You know, letters and put the evidence there.
Yeah.
Makes your job easier.
Well, it makes the job for the heirs easier, too.
Because I have seen families just say, I can't find anything.
Yeah, I know.
So just leave it behind.
That's a great idea.
So I think we always think, oh, with a will, you've got to type it up and have a notary.
But it better have something than nothing.
Well, the notaries are always suspect, too, these days, because not everybody keeps a
notary log.
I have one case where the man, let's see, his first wife died.
He got married the second time.
She had three children.
He had two.
They were married for like 30 years.
The man dies and he leaves everything to his wife.
If she's deceased, then it's to go to the children.
So here's what happens.
He dies, she gets everything, and then she lives quite a long time, maybe 10 years longer.
And then she leaves everything to her kids and rules out his.
And each one of those girls lost a million dollars.
Oh, boy.
And it came primarily from his retirement.
But because of the way it was written, it wasn't spelled out.
You think the step kids would be like, we know this is rightfully yours.
You would think with that much money.
Yeah, even step sisters, indeed.
I saw the will of the mother and someone had written over it in written over her seat.
It was a fraudulent will, the signatures on it.
And yet they couldn't do anything about it because so much time had passed.
I mean, they should just do a CSI handwriting and you should be the producer of it.
Well, sure.
Absolutely.
And just show me the money.
And then I'll show you the signature on the check first.
What do you dislike about your job?
What sucks about your job?
Sometimes it's stressful because everything seems to come at one time.
I had these five cases that all came last week.
And that doesn't count what I've got on the back burner waiting.
And so sometimes it'll come all at one time and it's with heavy deadlines and stuff like
that.
But I wouldn't even say I hate it.
It's just stressful.
And I love my job.
I love the fact that I can do it and I feel very competent in doing it.
And it's just a lot of fun.
Yeah.
What's your favorite thing about what you do or about handwriting?
Helping an attorney solve a case, whether it's in probate or helping a family that's
got a problem child and they don't know what to do.
And I can't tell you how many gifted children.
I can think of three right off the top of my head where they were in trouble at school
but it's because they were bored out of their head.
They weren't turning in their homework.
They were quite gifted.
And one little boy, he was 11 years old.
I insisted that the parents take him and get his IQ tested and he was off the charts in
math.
And here he is just suffering.
I mean, school was like prison to him.
Yeah.
And he was just bored.
And there's just, yeah, he was just bored.
So helping people, helping families, making a measurable difference?
Yeah.
Things that I can see results.
Yeah.
Do people write you handwritten thank you notes?
Because they should.
Not very often.
They should.
But they will usually send me emails.
Close enough.
They'll send me emails and they'll express their gratitude and that's sweet.
It is sweet.
Yeah.
And do you write handwritten thank you notes?
Absolutely.
Of course you do.
Of course I do.
Anything else, all of us listening should just remember how important it is.
Yeah.
Go buy some nice note paper and think of somebody that's been important to you and just write
them a nice little sweet little note that says you're so important in my life.
Thank you for all the things.
I have a friend that I was struggling with, my oven racks, scrubbing them meticulously
and I could not get them clean.
And I was just ready to, there's an upper oven and a lower oven, there's six racks
all together and I'm going, God, I'll never get through with these and I'm not a domestic
goddess anymore, I just can't do this.
And so I was complaining to my friend and she said, put them in your dishwasher on the
highest temperature and put two pods in there and it'll be just fine.
And they were.
So young people have a lot to contribute to us.
Do you write her a thank you note?
You got to write her a thank you note.
Oh yeah, I did.
I wrote her a thank you note from Brian Andreas' collection.
He's an artist that does these quirky things and I love his work.
PS, I looked up the stationery and I expected to find like an ornate cream colored paper
maybe with gold foiled Venetian floral motifs.
Like no, his work, very bold colors with sketchy modern drawings, very cute.
And so I said, you've helped me with so many things, but those oven racks, that was off
the chart.
What's her name?
Her name is Roxanne Brand and she's in Warwick, New York.
Well now Roxanne Brand is going to have a lot of people with their oven racks.
There's a lot of people that are going to be like, but I'm in the dishwasher with two
pods.
So yeah.
Hot, hot temperature.
Okay.
Hot, hot two pods.
This is Roxanne of Warwick.
Thank you so much for being on.
This is amazing.
Oh, you're welcome.
This is so much fun.
Thank you for coming to Nebraska.
Absolutely worth it.
Okay.
Thank you.
So ask smart people stupid questions and maybe treat yourself to a stationery store.
Write someone a letter, get yourself a little notebook, wake up early, let your mind dribble
out of a pen.
No judgment.
Now to learn more about Sylvia's work, she's at forgerydetectionexperts.com and more links
will be up at alleyward.com slash ologies slash graphology.
We're at ologies on Twitter and Instagram.
I'm at alleyward with one L on both.
I'm also on the CBS show Innovation Nation every Saturday morning and I host my own science
show on the CW called Did I Mention Invention and I'm on the Netflix Kids series Brainchild.
You can get ologiesmerch at ologiesmerch.com, tag at ologiesmerch on Instagram and we'll
repost that photo.
Look at us.
Thank you to Shannon Feltis and Bonnie Dutch of the podcast.
You are that for managing the merch and thank you Aaron Talbert and Hannah Lippo for admitting
the Facebook group full of wonderful people.
If you're not on Facebook, you can also join the subreddit ologies podcast to chat about
episodes and science stuff there.
Thank you, Jarrett Sleeper of the Mental Health Podcast, my good bad brain for assistant
editing and helping with some extra research this week and of course to the pen man who
keeps it all in ship shape, Stephen Ray Morris of the podcast Sea Jurassic Right and The
Percast for stitching it all together every week.
Nick Thorburn wrote and performed the music and he's in the band Islands and they're
a great band.
Now, if you stick around to the end of the episode, you know, I tell you a secret.
This week, the secret is I got a dog at long last.
I've wanted one for like 10 years.
She's a gray little rescue poodle mix with giant ears.
She looks like a gremlin and so her name turned out to be Grammy.
But before naming her, I asked all the folks on the Patreon page what their aunt's names
were because I wanted to name my pup somehow after them just for making the show possible.
It's totally changed my life.
It's given me the guts to finally get a dog.
And so her name is officially Gremlin G-R-E-M-L-Y-N-N-A-K-A Gremlinda because I crunched the numbers
and Linda and Lynn were some of the most popular aunt's names that y'all had.
So part of her name is named after y'all on Patreon.
So thank you, Patreon.
I have a dog now.
I get to keep making this podcast every week.
It's the best job ever.
So I ate granola for dinner while writing this, but I had like three bowls.
I feel so sick now, but it was so good.
Okay.
Bye-bye.
Hackadermatology.
Homiology.
Cryptozoology.
Litology.
Amethystology.
Meteorology.
Peptology.
Nephology.
Seriology.
Peptology.
Peptology.
Peptology.
Peptology.
Peptology.
Peptology.
Peptology.
Peptology.
Peptology.
Peptology.
Peptology.