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by Ralph Strauch
Sitting at a computer may be the hazardous occupation of the new millennium.
The repetitive actions that computer use requires, done in ways that put harmful
stress on the user's body, lead to a variety of injuries and painful conditions.
These conditions are often referred to as repetitive stress injuries (RSI).
The incidence of RSI in the workplace is rising, and the monetary and human
costs of computer-induced injury and disability are staggering.
Factors such as workplace and equipment design contribute to this toll, and
ergonomic improvements can certainly reduce it. Ergonomic improvements alone,
however, can not solve the problem. They do not address the role that the computer
user plays in producing her or his own injuries, through excessive effort and
poor body organization. And they do nothing to address the underlying cause
of this excessive effort and poor body organization -- a lack of self-awareness
which makes efficient functioning difficult if not impossible.
Low-Stress Computing is a somatic education program which uses greater self-awareness
and improved body organization to reduce the stresses which lead to RSI. The
program is currently under development and will eventually include experiential
movement lessons, guided self-exploration, and various forms of explanatory
material.
This 86 page manual
covers the basic concepts on which Low-Stress Computing is based. Topics include:
- The difference between
environmental stress (what the external world does to you) and behavioral
stress (what you do to yourself).
- Three major sources of
behavioral stress -- excessive effort, poor body organization, and lack of
self-awareness.
- The "work hard fallacy"
and repressed feelings as causes of excessive effort. Co-contraction and the
bio-mechanics underlying the effort-injury connection. Body organization as
a component of efficient movement. Self-awareness and the need to know what
you're doing in order to move well. Social conditioning against self-awareness.
- What you can do to reduce
behavioral stress -- the action/awareness cycle and its role in the process
of somatic exploration. Tools for somatic exploration, including awareness
practice, integration practice, sources of guidance, and conceptual shift.
Paperback book, 86 Pages
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