The art of handwriting has been practised for thousands of years, evolving from ancient cave markings to the refined scripts of medieval monasteries.
Each generation adapted the craft to suit its needs, developing new styles and tools along the way. The quill gave way to the steel nib, which gave way to the ballpoint pen, and each transition changed the character of the written word.
Yet the fundamental act remains the same: a human hand moves across a surface, leaving a trail of meaning behind it. There is no hurry in it, and no machine can do it for you.
When you write slowly, the breath slows with the hand. The shoulders loosen, the jaw unclenches, and the noise of the day settles into the steady rhythm of the line.
So take your time. Let one letter follow another with no thought of the page's end. The point was never to finish; the point was to be here, moving gently, one word at a time.