Ask HN: How many of you are suffering from RSI or similar?
I'm interested to hear about other who in the same situation. I have searched a lot here on hacker news, but most of them are very old.
I think my issues could have been prevented if I had the knowledge before. My story is that I have had for long time a bad posture, but that was not the problem why I got RSI. I began slowly lifting weights because I knew strength training could help my hands, but I didn't know that tendons took more than 200 days to activate and combining with that I started a startup, my hands recovery simply could not keep up.
I am thinking about creating a community around those of us suffering from RSI, maybe mostly as a support group as I feel RSI can be a lonely injury.
What do you think and are you suffering from RSI?
14 comments
[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 42.0 ms ] threadI don't have RSI but had a brief RSI-scare after some intensive typing and came across it. Seems like it helped a lot of people. Including Etherpad's founder http://aaroniba.net/articles/tmp/how-i-cured-my-rsi-pain.htm...
I keep a tennis ball on my desk which is I squeeze when I'm reading or thinking and I've found that helps as well.
I started doing push-ups and felt a lot better in 2 weeks. I haven't had it since.
SNRI antidepressants are often good for chronic pain, you might want to try Effexor.
I have found online support groups for chronic conditions are not productive because they tend to bring in people whose identities are centered around a disability. For instance, I was looking for help for knee pain and found a forum run by a guy who saw the best orthopedic surgeon in the U.S. and was told he had the most screwed up knees the surgeon had ever seen, he was so inspired that he wants to become an orthopedic surgeon when he grows up...
1 - Use a vertical mouse. I like Evoluent best but they are expensive. Anker is much cheaper but not quite vertical enough for my liking.
2 - Set up my keyboard so that it tilts -away- from me. Meaning the back (F-key side) is about 1-2cm lower than the front (space bar side).
3 - Type with my wrists/palms raised up a bit and -not- resting on the desk or keyboard.
All of these things help keep my wrists and hands in a straight line with my forearms which seems to be the key for me.
It doesn't hurt to occasionally do some wrist stretches too.
After doing a bit of research, and going back to my old desk, things have gotten much better.
The changes I made are 1) don't wrest your wrists on the desk when typing. Apparently we're supposed to have our wrists raised...who knew?
2) I use more keyboard shortcuts. I've taken to using virtual desktops in windows to switch between screens rather than mouse between windows. Works great.
3) reduce mousing activity when you can (learn keyboard shortcuts if you haven't. When you do mouse, don't use your wrist. I used to place my wrist on the desk and my fingers on the mouse. Now I place my palm on the mouse. This causes you to use your arm to mouse around and is less stressful on your wrist.
That's what I've tried so far. Still not 100%, but definitely getting better.
Over the years, I've met a number of people who also also suffer from RSI in various forms. Fortunately, the majority of people I talk to suffer for some period of time, but do eventually recover, and are able to continue on with their lives having to be carful to avoid future flareups. A handful though, including myself, seem to fall into the "for life" category.
I've tried everything you can think of to varying results:
This is resulting in me spending a lot of time looking into other career potabilities, but I keep ending up back writing code to some extent.Voice coding is literally the first thing that comes to everyone's mind when you tell them you have arm pain, but it's a dead end in my mind. I tried to follow in the footsteps of Tavis Rudd, but I just ended up with voice strain from talking too much. You might have better luck though:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SkdfdXWYaI
At one point in my life, I had an intern who knew how to code type for me. No voice rec system will ever be as good as a human who knows how to code... and even dictating this way was slow and frustrating, though at least my voice wasn't strained.
Someone else here mentioned TMS. A good friend of mine who was suffering for months with arm pain was greatly helped by looking into and addressing it. I recommend Dr Sarno's book "The Mindbody Prescription". Even though it wasn't a cure for me personally, I did find it helpful to mitigate some of the pain.
As far as creating a community goes, I've never found reading about others suffering to be any help or comfort. If anything I've found it better to not dwell on it and just move on with life.
OTOH, a resource that offered suggestions and opportunities on how to make the most of the capabilities that are still available might be nice. Knowing there's still a lot that one can accomplished, even if you can't code for 8+ hours a day, 5 days a week.
Now I'm to be in the position that I was able to drop the stressful work. It's helped a lot.
I eventually narrowed down my RSI to mouse-wheel and track-pad use.
Since switching from MBP to ThinkPads with TrackPoints I've had zero issues. The TrackPoint contains two strain gauges, so you're not really doing a "dynamic" movement while scrolling around, rather you're just altering the applied force.
Just pretending to scroll a mouse wheel by doing the movement with my hand still hurts!