Now now, I really have to step in this lovely conversation you two are having here, because of you two having a very, very! Lovely conversation about grammar spellings in English language.
Let me give you the short answer is because we do. But that’s not a very satisfactory answer. Even though it feels natural to English speakers, capitalizing I is unusual. In fact, English is the only language that does.
At first, the new word, i, was left lowercase. However, it began to grow taller than other words. It grew for a silly reason: a single letter looks bad. Look at it: i. How sad. By the time Chaucer wrote *** ********** ***** in the late ****, I, the personal pronoun, was slightly taller than its lowercase equivalent. From that point on, it was typically capitalized. In other words it's called " The Pronoun I "
--
Now, for the comma's. There's many people which has few grammar fails about it, I can pleasely explain it.
You don't make space before a comma, however you make a space once you've made a comma. Also, you don't make a capitalized letter after a comma, but you do with I.
-
Is there anything else you guys wants to be clear of about grammar spelling etc.