The two notebooks look like different handwriting to me... 🤷
Thought the same.
"School(s)" used on booth sheets. There is a glaring difference on the "oo" in these two. Some similarity in the first "s", but the the entire word is a very different writing style.
But then there are similarities too.. when "p" starts a word is different than when used in the middle of a word. "tt" used in "attack" and "little" are similar. When "p" is used to start a word, it is different than when used in the middle of a word and consistent between the two. "backpack", used in both is very similar.
Overall. The page dated "2/3/23" is just much more sloppy. But that makes sense. The schedule page was probably written in a more calm time frame. Sit down, think it out, this is what I want to do, this is important, take my time. Where as the note was written in a hate filled, no thought, write down everything that pops in my mind, no real focus except on my angry thoughts, blast through it style.
The post it is odd too. Written later and possibly even more calm manner than the schedule itself, maybe a few days before the attack? Trying to go over the whole plan and cover any missing details. Overall, it's a more feminine writing style and what I would expect from a female. Most letters are spot on or close enough. But there are exceptions.
"L" is used four times on that page and only some what resembles "Lock". Could be written off as they start "u" and "o" similarly. But, they lead into "e" everywhere else, and you would expect a similar swoop on the L here, except the two instances of "
Leave".
The continuation in the "b" in "be" is completely inconsistent.
The "d" in "around" is very inconsistent. Seems to be the only letter in the whole thing where the pen was picked up without drawing towards the second part of the letter. Written as a "c" and "\". The only other time this is closely resembled is the "y" in "yellow" on the angry note page, but even that has has more consistent curve/swoop. a, B, b, g, P, p, g, y*, 9 and nearly every f and t is written in a single contact or near single contact motion.
But I'm no expert and this may all be shit.