
Enter the experiment.
Write wrong-handed. Think sideways. Speak in subjuntive.
About us:
We threw out our computers, boycotted our Right hands and went back to kindergarten. After spending some quality time with lined notebooks and mechanical pencils, we have returned to dominate the non-dominant hemisphere. Out of the crooked letters and sideways doodles, SubJUNCtivo was born.
The name comes from grammar’s weirdest mood: the subjunctive. It’s the one you use when reality isn’t enough — when you want to talk about what could be, what should be, what you desperately hope might be true. That’s our playground.
SubJUNCtivo is not polished, not corporate, not trying to be your therapist. We’re here for the left-handed scribblers, the language nerds, the dreamers who doodle in the margins, the people who know that a misplaced accent mark can change everything.
Right now, SubJUNCtivo lives in blogs, essays, and a growing archive of strange experiments. Soon, maybe, it will sprout workbooks, games, and gatherings. But we’re not rushing. Crooked lines take time.
We don’t offer easy answers. We offer “what ifs.” What if you wrote with the wrong hand? What if you asked questions in a new language? What if imperfection turned out to be the sharpest tool you have?
This is not self-help. It’s not grammar class. It’s not even a magazine (at least not only a magazine). It’s a living experiment in creativity, multilingual play, and brain-bending perspective shifts.
Welcome to SubJUNCtivo. Leave your right hand at the door.

