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Re: [OT] how to take care of hand



On Saturday 04,February,2012 09:33 PM, Arnt Karlsen wrote:
On Sat, 04 Feb 2012 11:18:55 +0800, lina wrote in message
<[🔎] 4F2CA39F.70701@gmail.com>:

On Saturday 04,February,2012 03:15 AM, Dotan Cohen wrote:
On Fri, Feb 3, 2012 at 18:57, lina<lina.lastname@gmail.com>   wrote:
Hi,

are there some suggestions about how to take care of hand?

for weeks, I felt the hand especially the thumb get strengh-less
in typing, and kinda of stiff,

I can't avoid using mouse ( even has changed to a light one) and
keyboard, googled some way, a bit horrible, someone even said need
do operations.

are there some good way of avoiding it. 3 years ago I once had,
but gone within week. now I get handache about it.

just curious about the answer, thanks,



Hi Lina, I suffer from manual disability (inoperable right thumb)
and my hands hurt (especially the left) after extending typing.
Here is how I cope:

1) I put my index fingers on D and K instead of F and J. This not
only leads to better posture, but it removes much work from the
weak pinky fingers and transfers it to the strong index fingers.
Also, the Enter, Tab, Shift, Esc and other keys are much closer.

2) I use VIM, which although has a terrible learning curve lets me
keep my hands on the home row. I use Anki to learn VIM, and it is
going great.

3) I swapped CapsLock and Esc keys. Now Esc is closer, which I use
often due to VIM.

4) I take frequent breaks. RSIBreak in KDE helps me, in Gnome you
have the excellent Workrave applications.

5) I often swap between two very different keyboards: one
low-pressure split keyboard, and a conventional-layout board with
mechanical (Cherry) switches. I take care not to bottom out.

6) To prevent from bottoming out, I often swap between Colemak and
QWERTY. The confusion slows me down and makes me more conscientious
of my typing.

7) I stopped using my phone one handed! The terrible contortions
necessary to use the phone was actually hurting my hands, I found.
Now one hand holds the phone, and the other operates the buttons.

8) I brush my teeth with my left hand. This is partly due to my
manual disability in the right thumb, but it also helps strengthen
the left arm a bit. Men might find that other right-arm activities
should be moved to the left arm whenever possible or practical.

9) I just bought a pair of Baoding balls. I have yet to see if they
help, actually right now they hurt, but I will keep at it.

10) I take Omega 3 pills. These reduce any swelling in the left
hand, and make it more comfortable to type.

11) I notice that I grip pens and eating utensils very stiffly. I
now contentiously try to reduce that pressure.

12) I take great care not to hit anything with my hands. Even
pushing open the door to the building is now done by first placing
my hand on the door, then pushing. Or with my foot if nobody sees
me!

Thanks all, for your warm suggestions.

I am sorry about Dotan's right thumb. It might be hard.

Now I drag my laptop near me, before I put it a bit far,
unconsciously to reduce radition (might be wrong). Thanks for Juan's
suggestion.

also practise the left hand control the mouse,

It's a bit hard to put index fingers not on F and J. I barely looked
at keyboard for years already. i will try.

..if you're changing your keyboard habits anyway, follow the
dvorak advice, it's a more dramatic change that will help stop
you from falling back into your bad qwerty habits, also because
it's about 40% speedier once you're up to speed.

You mean, put index finger on D and K?

..being 40% quicker, means you can do 5 days work in 3 days,
or use those 2 more days a week to come up with wiser ideas,
_while_ taking care of your own health, you've only got one.

..downside is the vim like week_s_ long agony while you learn.
Consider it an investment in your career and health. ;o)


installing the workrave now.


Thanks again for the kind suggestions,






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