Your Affiliate Account
 
Basket Empty  
What is the Method?  |  Dr. Feldenkrais  |  Articles  |  Research  |  Testimonials  |  Videos  |  Featured Lesson  |  Getting Started  |  eNewsletter Sign-Up

About the Feldenkrais Method®
  What is the Method?
  About Dr. Moshe Feldenkrais
  Articles
    About the Method
    In the News
    Product Reviews
    Related Articles
    Language and Learning
  Research
  Testimonials
  Videos
  Featured Lesson and Talks
  Getting Started
  eNewsletter Sign Up
Products for Everyone
Products for Practitioners
Resources

Alan Questel
Alice Brydges
Bonnie Kissam
Bridget Quebodeaux
Carrie Lafferty
Cliff Smyth
Charles Faulkner
David Calof
David Zemach-Bersin
Deborah Bowes
Donna Ray
Eileen Bach-y-Rita
Elizabeth Beringer
Erin Ferguson
Frank Wildman
Jack Heggie
John Tarr
Jerry Karzen
Josef DellaGrotte
Larry Goldfarb
Lavinia Plonka
Mark Reese
Mary Spire
Moshe Feldenkrais
Moti Nativ
Pamela Kihm
Paris Kern
Ralph Strauch
Richard Corbeil
Robert Burgess
Ruthy Alon
Steve Andreas
Yochanan Rywerant

 
Home > About the Feldenkrais Method® > Articles > About the Method
previous  next
Hands, Computers and You
Hands, Computers and You
 
Author: Cliff Smyth
Code: a_hands

Media: Article

Read and Write Reviews


Send this article to a friend  |  Questions or comments?

We use them almost constantly. A considerable portion of the neurons in the somato-sensory strip of our brains is devoted to them. Yet, as with many aspects of our embodied lives, we often don’t pay much attention to our hands and arms – until we experience some discomfort or pain.

The computer revolution, especially rapid in the Bay Area, means more and more of us spend more of our time sitting (or slumping!) in a chair, making fine movements with our fingers, holding up our arms and hands, and focusing our eyes on characters on a screen.

I remember 30 years ago we used to laugh at the futuristic cartoon character George Jetson who got pain in his finger from his job of pushing a button all day! Today many of us know that pain and discomfort associated with using a keyboard is no joke.

Conventional wisdom says that changing the physical environment through ergonomic improvements or altering the amount of work done (not always an option for many of us) are the best ways to prevent or reduce computer-related injuries. From the point of view of the Feldenkrais Method, of vital importance is also how we use ourselves. For example, how we organize our movement and our attention in relation to the functional tasks at hand and the physical and social environments we find ourselves in (represented by chairs, keyboards, the work process itself, etc.). Attention to how we move, breathe, sit, look, etc. can be essential to reducing strain and increasing comfort. In this way we can enhance our responses to the stresses, prevent injury or re-injury and promote recovery of our abilities.

Recent research shows that prolonged computer use can lead to fatigue of the muscles of the back, shoulders and neck, and arms. When muscles fatigue others are recruited to the functional task – often leading to the progressive and moving symptoms many people report with repetitive strain injuries. Other research shows people with overuse injuries sometimes lose some of the sensory precision in their hands.

Individual lessons and group classes in the Feldenkrais Method can assist through helping you to:

  • become aware of, and alter, habitual patterns of muscular imbalance and tension
  • find comfort and support in functional activities, e.g. how to find skeletal support in sitting and for lifting your arms, thus reducing the strain on muscles and tendons
  • gain a better sense of the appropriate effort and force for the task – reducing excessive effort and subsequent wear and tear on joints, tendons, muscles
  • find new way to respond to stress, e.g. through attention to your breathing, etc.
  • refine or regain more precise sensation in our hands and our whole selves.

 You might also like
 
Easy Arms and Hands
Author: Cliff Smyth
Code: smy1

Media: 6 CDs in Jewel Cases with Booklet, 12 Feldenkrais® Lessons
$79.95

 
$14.95

 
Low Stress Computing
Author: Ralph Strauch
Code: str2

Media: Book, Paperback, 86 Pages
$11.95

 
A Healthy Back™: In Less Than 20 Minutes a Day
Author: Jack Heggie
Code: HB

Media: 1 CD in a Binder or MP3 Download, 4 Feldenkrais® Lessons
$16.95

 
Stop Sciatica Now
Author: Pamela Kihm
Code: Kih1

Media: Book, Paperback or PDF eBook, 100 pages, Illustrated
$39.95

 Customer Reviews and Ratings

   Login to review this item.
 
 
About the Feldenkrais Method®
  What is the Method?
  About Dr. Moshe Feldenkrais
  Articles
  Research
  Testimonials
  Videos
  Try FREE Lessons
  Getting Started
Products for Everyone
  Books
  CDs & MP3s
  DVDs
  Espanol and Deutsch
  NLP and Hypnosis
  Latest Additions
Products for Practitioners
  Books
  CDs & MP3s
  DVDs
  Supplies
  Advanced Trainings

Resources
  
About Us
  Contact Us
  eNewsletter Sign Up
  Feldenkrais FAQs
  Store FAQs
  Download FAQs
  Product FAQs

  Affiliate FAQs
  Affiliate Login
  Store Policies
  Wholesale/Bulk Ordering
  Profession & Affiliate Sites

 
Feldenkrais Guild Logo Solution Graphics USPS Logo The Feldenkrais Store is a BBB Accredited Business. Click for the BBB Business Review of this Online Publications in Longmont CO

ABOUT SSL CERTIFICATES

© 1999 - 2012 Genesis II Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved. | Terms of Use | Privacy and Security
Feldenkrais®, Feldenkrais Method®, Functional Integration®, and Awareness Through Movement®, are Servicemarks of The Feldenkrais Guild®