Will the middle finger of the right hand cocoon when practicing hard pen calligraphy?

When practicing hard pen calligraphy, the middle finger of the right hand will cocoon.

The correct holding posture of hard pen calligraphy is to place the pen holder between the fingertips of thumb, index finger and middle finger, and hold the pen in three different directions with the thumb, index finger and middle finger of the right hand to form a resultant force. The ring finger and the little finger naturally bend, and the wrist gently sticks to the desktop, forming a stable "support point".

Common wrong writing posture:

1, holding a fist to hoe the ground and burying his head in writing.

2, the tiger's mouth is writing, and its movements are stiff.

3, four fingers grip the pen, and it is difficult to lift the pen.

4, hook wrist pen, the operation is ineffective.

If the child holds the pen incorrectly and holds it too low, not only will his hands get tired when writing, but he will also block the line of sight because he holds the pen too low, thus turning his head, resulting in a bad sitting posture and his eyes being too close to the object.