![Image](http://i735.photobucket.com/albums/ww351/Lazar_Taxon/MyTypingStyle.png)
Pink areas are left hand, blue areas are right hand. Letters are I for index finger, M for middle finger, R for ring finger, P for pinky. Parentheses indicate that I may use a different finger based on neighboring keystrokes, and two colors indicate that I may use different hands. White areas either don't match my keyboard, or I don't use them often enough to have intuitive keystrokes for them.
In 6th grade they tried to teach me the standard touch typing method at school, but I found it inferior to my method: I felt that the standard method made me bunch up my fingers uncomfortably in the central row, and I found it strenuous to try to hit keys like Q with my very weak left pinky finger. Using my own method and completely ignoring what the teacher told me, I managed to be the fastest typer in my class of about 20 kids.
So... I'm right handed. I have all the key positions memorized. I start with my right hand resting a bit higher and more broadly extended than my left hand, and both hands tilted to the left. Most of the time when I'm typing, I don't have to move my palms off their resting positions. My left index finger gets the most use and moves around the most; I use my right pinky finger for Enter, Space and Delete, but I don't use my left pinky at all.
For A and Z, I switch from ring to middle finger if the preceding key hit by the left hand is Shift.
For S, I switch from middle to index finger if the preceding two keys hit by the left hand are Space and A.
For D, I switch from index to middle finger if the next key is going to use the left index finger.
For H, I switch from index to middle finger if the preceding key hit by the right hand is Space, unless the next key is going to be U, I, O or P.
For M, I switch from index to middle finger if the preceding key is Space, unless the next key is going to be hit by the left hand.
For 1, I switch from middle to ring finger if the following key is going to be 5 or 6.
For 2, I switch from middle to index finger if the preceding key is 1, and from middle to ring finger if the following key is going to be 5 or 6.
For 6, I switch from index to middle finger if the following key is going to be 7 or 8.
For 7, I switch from right middle to left index finger if the preceding key is 4, 5 or 6.
For 8, I switch from right middle to left index finger if the preceding key is 5, 6 or 7.
I just now wrote all this down, and I had to re-upload the diagram several times as I reconsidered things.
Here's a blank keyboard in case you want to make your own diagrams:
![Image](http://i735.photobucket.com/albums/ww351/Lazar_Taxon/BlankKeyboard.gif)