It is true but one does not need a special chair as much as learning how to sit on any chair. If the chair is really comfortable it invites the sitter in really bad unnatural positions and in no time that creates a bad habit. During my 20s, when I basically entered the workforce, I started having serious issues with sitting. I tried a lot of different chairs and while they ameliorated the pain and numbness something was still wrong. Now, almost at twice that age I have very few chair/back related problems. When something hurts I closely pay attention to how I sit. Of course, exercising with proper posture has helped me overcome some of my issues as well. While most chairs are really bad for most of us, I think chasing a perfect chair is not the solution but learning how to sit and have a proper posture is the essential part.
Some chairs cut off circulation or physically block proper posture. When so much "ergonomic design" is counterproductive, as the article details, it's worth it to be selective w/r/t equipment.
>Since yoga balls are made out of cheap plastic, it’s not a question of if the ball will pop, but when.
I don't get the feeling this author has much experience with yoga balls, or is just making a statement they want to believe is true and peddling it as fact.
> The University of Michigan recently banned employees from sitting on yoga balls due to “catastrophic failures.”
I mean... they had enough of these balls pop while people were sitting on them to decide to ban them. Do you really believe that most of these, which are probably bought on Amazon, etc., are all made of the highest quality materials, and testing using rigorous QA methodology? Chances are, people are buying the cheapest, $10 yoga balls and not trying to find which one will last.
> they had enough of these balls pop while people were sitting on them to decide to ban them
Did they, though? I can't find any news story about catastrophic failures of yoga/exercise balls at the University of Michigan (or another university). The author doesn't link or cite anything supporting this allegation. It may fit someone's "Amazon/yoga ball is cheap/crap" narrative, but I don't buy it when the underlying claim is unverifiable.
Anecdotally, I've had a yoga ball going on 4 years, though I only sit on them occasionally. I've never heard of one popping, failure on the other hand, can be a bouncing or tripping issue, also sliding off of the front. Though I wouldn't call these catastrophic.
The biggest takeaway from this article is the advice that you should not adhere to the 90-90-90 sitting posture and instead raise your seat so that your knees are below your hips. I've personally just tried this and it feels much more comfortable.
I theorize that the 90-90-90 posture encourages bad habits where your spine shifts backwards from the center so it is no longer supporting the upper parts of your body well. By changing my sitting posture to the author's recommendation, it feels easier for my spine to stay in the center and support my upper body better.
What about motorized desks that allow you to go from sitting to standing? I'm not standing all day, and I'm not sitting all day. Plus I take a walk at least once a day. It's helped me tremendously to have one.
I suppose it won't help that doctor sell his chairs, though.
This makes me think about Wolfram's blog post about his "personal infrastructure"
He found that for some reason typing while walking outside gave a much lower heart rate than typing on a treadmill. So he worked out a system to walk outside while typing...
This is something I have been looking into as well.
Those foods vendors carry their supplies in that body addon but I wanted to walk around my apt and have a couple of projectors setup so each wall has a copy of my monitor.
I had back problems from my crappy office chair that I used for more then a decade.
I searched for month for a good replacement, sat on every chair I found in nearly every furniture shop in town. After some month, I found the best chair I ever sat on, and it's by far, not the most expensive one ;)
This one is the hit, you can unlock the base so you can use it in different heights. The backrest pressure you can adjust with a button, different locks and full flexible arm rests.
I let everybody test sit on it who cares and I only heard excitement so far.
Combined with electric table I started to change my working position quite often and my back pain was gone after a month.
I bookmarked it, who knows. What I don't like about it is how wobbly it looks. Also, why me, as a software developer do I need those wheels to move in any direction. I just need to move back and forth and only when go or leave my desk. On my chair I removed the wheels and put static legs and I put my table on wheels that move only backward and forward. The wheels dig into the carpet, so the table stays put if you don't push too hard.
For me office chair is one thing, and software developer chair should be another.
They give 10 years warranty. I have quite some understanding in mechanical systems and it is well build, thick steel plates.
The point is this, sitting long in one position is bad for your back and general posterior. Of course you can change the rollers into static ones, but I wouldn't recommend it.
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 60.9 ms ] threadI don't get the feeling this author has much experience with yoga balls, or is just making a statement they want to believe is true and peddling it as fact.
I mean... they had enough of these balls pop while people were sitting on them to decide to ban them. Do you really believe that most of these, which are probably bought on Amazon, etc., are all made of the highest quality materials, and testing using rigorous QA methodology? Chances are, people are buying the cheapest, $10 yoga balls and not trying to find which one will last.
Did they, though? I can't find any news story about catastrophic failures of yoga/exercise balls at the University of Michigan (or another university). The author doesn't link or cite anything supporting this allegation. It may fit someone's "Amazon/yoga ball is cheap/crap" narrative, but I don't buy it when the underlying claim is unverifiable.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=S9A7ACL_n5Y
Remember this amazing post? https://writings.stephenwolfram.com/2019/02/seeking-the-prod...
I theorize that the 90-90-90 posture encourages bad habits where your spine shifts backwards from the center so it is no longer supporting the upper parts of your body well. By changing my sitting posture to the author's recommendation, it feels easier for my spine to stay in the center and support my upper body better.
I suppose it won't help that doctor sell his chairs, though.
With sitting if you sit cross-fold with legs not dangling at the edge it seems to prevent v veins?
He found that for some reason typing while walking outside gave a much lower heart rate than typing on a treadmill. So he worked out a system to walk outside while typing...
https://writings.stephenwolfram.com/2019/02/seeking-the-prod...
https://smile.amazon.com/s?k=swopper+chair
Bought one on Amazon in 2008, still love it.
I searched for month for a good replacement, sat on every chair I found in nearly every furniture shop in town. After some month, I found the best chair I ever sat on, and it's by far, not the most expensive one ;)
http://www.officeline.se/products/hoganas-eco/
This one is the hit, you can unlock the base so you can use it in different heights. The backrest pressure you can adjust with a button, different locks and full flexible arm rests. I let everybody test sit on it who cares and I only heard excitement so far.
Combined with electric table I started to change my working position quite often and my back pain was gone after a month.
For me office chair is one thing, and software developer chair should be another.
The point is this, sitting long in one position is bad for your back and general posterior. Of course you can change the rollers into static ones, but I wouldn't recommend it.