Relax Shiatsu ([info]relaxshiatsu) wrote,
@ 2007-07-29 20:36:00
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Bevan Loon asked me about my RSI the other day. I started to reply then and there but the answer got way too long, and besides it's kind of relevant here because it's (somewhat indirectly) why I got into shiatsu in the first place.

A brief rundown: I started getting pain from typing in 2001, and after a lot of procrastination and denial I ended up seeing some specialists. Their prognosis was that my nerves were too short; various actions associated with computer use were causing them to stretch and snag, and this had damaged my ulnar nerves where they pass under the elbow. It was recommended I have surgery to move the nerves to the tops of my elbows where they would be less prone to damage and be allowed time to heal.

I declined the operation. I couldn't say why — I don't fully know even now — but it just didn't feel right. Here's what I did instead, in no particular order:

Read up

This basically provided the context for everything else I did. There's all kinds of stuff on the net, but what did it for me was It's Not Carpal Tunnel Syndrome. I cannot recommend this book highly enough.

Breaks

I use Workrave to enforce 30 second breaks every three minutes and five minute breaks every fifteen. You need to stop and move your arms to allow your muscles to untense. Locked muscles from periods of typing or mousing without otherwise moving inhibit the smooth movement of tendons and nerves.

Keyboard

I use a Kinesis Advantage keyboard. I tried a couple of other keyboards first, but a major part of my problem is that I flatten my hands as I type and the Kinesis makes this impossible.

Mouse

There's a variety of options if holding the mouse hurts your hand — different sized mice, trackballs, etc — but this wasn't a problem for me. What does me in is reaching for the thing: it trashes my rhomboids. The Kinesis helps here — there's no numeric keypad between my hand and the mouse — and I make heavy use of keyboard shortcuts. I try and remember to type these with two hands so I'm not stretching unnaturally.

Desk

It's standard advice that you should adjust your chair so that your forearms and thighs are horizontal. The problem here is that you probably only have chair height to play with and you cannot set two things with one adjustment — one of them is going to be wrong. I have an adjustable desk. You set the chair to get your legs right, then you set the desk to get your arms right. This would not be such an issue if desks were roughly the right height to start with, but most desks are too high for most people. I'm 5'10" and the top of my desk is 26" from the floor. My old desk was nearer 30".

Physiotherapy

It was my physiotherapist who first figured out that the pain was snagging nerves. She did some stretches and trigger-point stuff to release locked muscles along the path of the ulnar nerve, and showed me some I could do myself. I supplemented these with some nerve glides from the book I mentioned earlier. We also figured out that cold made it worse and heat made it better, so I started having a bath after work each day to loosen everything out. Sometimes if I get sore hands I run them under the hot tap for a minute or two.

Posture

The physio and baths provided some relief but they weren't addressing the underlying problems. My nerves may well be shorter than average, but this wasn't helped by my posture. When you sit upright your nerves have a nice straight path through your shoulders and your muscles don't need to work much to keep you upright. Slouching means the nerves have to kink a little and so cover a longer distance, and the tensed muscles supporting you are take up more space and are less pliable than relaxed muscle; they fill the spaces your nerves should be able to move freely through. The physiotherapist gave me a load of exercises to improve my core stability — when you've slouched forever the muscles you sit up straight with need a kick-start. The book recommended some shoulder strengthening exercises which I also did.

Sleep

This is an odd one, but it's hard to sit up straight when you're tired. I try to make sure I get good quality sleep because everything hurts a lot more when I don't.

Yoga

Back then I thought that yoga was all about stretches and posture, and since my treatment was all about stretches and posture it seemed natural to me to try some. And it did help these areas some, but the major benefits were not what I was expecting. Firstly, it made me aware of what was going on in my body. Part of the reason my RSI got so bad was that I spent so much time in my head that I only paid attention to my body when it started going seriously wrong. And secondly, most importantly, it started the long, slow process of calming me down and chilling me out.

Alexander technique

Yoga is only incidentally about tension and posture; in Alexander that's all there is. I was recommended a teacher who'd got into Alexander because of RSI and spent an obscene amount of money learning how to sit down and stand up and pick things up off a table. It was totally worth it.

Shiatsu

Yoga was for me a huge step change in relaxation and posture and body awareness. Alexander was a change of a similar order of magnitude, and starting to learn shiatsu was another order of magnitude again. Obviously I'm not finished with this one yet!

Let go

The yoga and Alexander and shiatsu started me learning just how much of RSI is from the mind. Not in the mind, but from it. It's Not Carpal Tunnel Syndrome actually covers this in great detail, but for some reason it passed me by until years later. A major cause of RSI is mental attitude.

It's about letting go of perfection, about letting go of getting things done right now. Sometimes when I'm working I'll not be happy with something. It's not 100% right, so I'll fiddle and fiddle and fiddle for hours on end. Then I'll decide that the original way was better and I'll revert all my changes. Then I'll think of another way to do it and start fiddling all over again. A big part of letting myself recover is recognising when I'm in this state and being able to walk away.

Ok, I think that's it!



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Alexander Technique
(Anonymous)
2007-07-29 08:41 pm UTC (link)
It's about a lot more than tension and posture - check out the website at http://alexandertechnique.com

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[info]relaxshiatsu
2007-07-30 08:22 am UTC (link)
I guess what I was trying to say was that in yoga the stuff about posture and flexibility is not the main purpose of yoga (ie to acheive enlightenment). In Alexander the stuff about tension and posture and freedom of movement is the whole point of it all.

relax shiatsu — shiatsu in bath

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[info]liveonearth
2007-07-31 05:45 am UTC (link)
Sorry, remedial question. What's RSI?

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[info]relaxshiatsu
2007-07-31 08:47 am UTC (link)
Repetitive strain injury. Typing made my hands hurt, basically :)

relax shiatsu — shiatsu bath

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[info]liveonearth
2007-07-31 07:59 pm UTC (link)
Thanks!

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[info]garlandtaber
2008-08-06 05:37 am UTC (link)
I am sorry to hear your condition is more permanent than a case of RSI, you have had a time of it I sympathise with your ankle injury, I've had bursitis for a couple of years and although the inflammation has largely gone, the tendon seems to have been damaged and is very stiff and sore, I really miss a good country walk or being able to walk downstairs properly, instead of crab-wise.

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[info]dg76
2007-08-01 08:12 pm UTC (link)
i first got into yoga because i have scoliosis and my doctors all keep telling me it'll get worse and i should get surgery but someone said "maybe yoga would help" so i figured i'd try it out and get a good stretch/learn not to slouch so much... but found the same benefits as you, namely, that i became more body aware in my day to day life and also learned to RELAX DAMMIT (i'm one of those people that is always running around to do "something productive" so strange as it sounds i needed a class to force me to actually stay still).

i always wanted to try the alexander technique, i've heard some good things about it.

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[info]relaxshiatsu
2007-08-02 07:52 am UTC (link)
I recommend it. The one problem with it is that you won't notice results until after about 20 lessons, so if you're going to start you kind of have to commit to spending a fair chunk of money blind.

PS nice photos :)

relax shiatsu — bath shiatsu

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[info]norokrex
2007-08-01 08:23 pm UTC (link)
huh. Intersting... maybe I don't have carple tunnel after all...

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[info]relaxshiatsu
2007-08-02 07:44 am UTC (link)
There's a test called Phalen's maneuver you could probably do on yourself.

relax shiatsu — shiatsu bath

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[info]grygon
2007-08-04 09:32 am UTC (link)
my doc sent me to a hand specialist to get the nerve conduction electromyography and that was how they ruled out cts and diagnosed tendonitis.

at least i THINK it was nerve conduction and electromyography. with the first they put a metal thing on my inner elbo and if i am recalling right, slightly higher) and then there were loud "thumping" noises that made my whole arm jump around.

with the second they stuck me with a small needle and used it like a joy stick until the box that the needle was attached to made static noise. i had a bruise where they joy sticked the needle in between my thumb and index and then inbetween two knuckles for weeks.

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[info]grygon
2007-08-04 09:26 am UTC (link)
I was diagnosed with tendonitis a few years ago and I too decided against spending $100 a week for therapy (with tendonitis i was told there is no option of surgery) and read up on exercises, herbs, etc.

i'm still in pain, but now i can manage it.

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[info]relaxshiatsu
2007-08-05 10:06 am UTC (link)
What kind of therapy was it?

I had the nerve conduction tests. The guy basically electrocuted my arm over and over again for an hour, then said the results weren't great because I wasn't sitting still. I tend not to when I'm being electrocuted...

relax shiatsu — bath shiatsu

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