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158 lines
9.3 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 68
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Title: HPR0068: Shoulder Stretches!
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0068/hpr0068.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 10:57:19
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---
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dilemma.
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Okay.
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And welcome back to Hacker Public Radio, this is Peter Nicolitis from The Fresh
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Ubuntu Podcast.
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Today, I'm going to be taking a bit of a different approach and covering something not overly
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technical, but something that all of us hackers we ought to be aware of.
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And that is basically a little bit of desktop ergonomics.
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The reason I'm talking about this today is that just yesterday I was diagnosed as having
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Bersitis, and that's a rather painful inflammation, in my case, in my shoulder.
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And it makes certain things like opening doors and sometimes moving the mouse quite painful.
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So that got me thinking about RSI's and other things that we get from sitting hunched
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over a PC all day, and if you're like me, you probably spend a good amount of time at
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your computer.
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And not enough time stretching to make up for this.
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Now it was, I think, over a year ago, I remember there was a woman that was interviewed.
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I don't remember her name, but she was on the Linux link tech show.
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And I remember her saying how like the worst possible thing for any human being was to
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sit at a computer for more than an hour a day, something to that effect.
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And I remember a link going off on her, and I thought it was one of the funniest episodes
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ever.
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I'm going to have to try to dig that one up.
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Anyway, I'm not quite as extreme as her, obviously not, otherwise I wouldn't be in
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the computer industry.
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But what I've done is just collected a few simple exercises that you can do to help ease
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the strain that you're putting on your body by sitting at your desk all day.
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Now there are tons of ergonomic resources out on the internet.
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I'm not going to go through a lot of them, but I'll link a couple here in the show notes.
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And the best thing you can do for starters is make sure that your desk and your chair
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are set up properly for you.
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And basically that usually involves you sitting at mostly right angles, making sure that all
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of your joints, whether your hips, your knees, your arms, etc., are at right angles when
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you are sitting at your desk.
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So if your chair is too high, and for instance maybe just barely your toes are touching the
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floor, then your chair needs to be lower.
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And if you feel like your desk is too high as a result, then you probably need a lower desk.
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So something, these are things that you need to pay attention to and need to adjust so
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that you have the right height.
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Otherwise you may develop an injury or pain like I did where your desk was too high.
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And as a result, you're constantly lifting your shoulder too much and that may have been
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a contributing factor to my injury.
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So that's one thing to do is make sure that your desk and your chair are set up properly.
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You also want to make sure that your monitor or flat panel display is set up at the right
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height.
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It should not be too low so that your neck is always hanging down or too high so that
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you're always straining up to look at it.
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There are some different schools of thought.
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I personally prefer to have the monitor just slightly below straight ahead so that I'm
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looking down slightly when I look at the monitor.
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But do a little digging to see what your own personal preference is on that.
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But if you feel any sort of strain when you're sitting at your desk, you want to look into
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that and adjust accordingly.
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Now one thing that I think I feel a lot when I'm sitting at the desk is I feel the strain
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in my shoulders.
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And my friend said the expression he used to describe it was the shoulders love the ears.
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Basically I was his way of describing how the shoulders would creep up over time.
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If you ever walk outside and a chill wind, like a gust of wind goes through and you all
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hunch up, that's exactly the same kind of thing that happens over time as you're sitting
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at the computer.
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Your shoulders will kind of like creep up.
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What you don't realize is that that's putting a lot of tension on your muscles and tendons
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and then the joints in the whole neck and shoulders area.
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One great way to work that out is to take, if you don't have an exercise band like an
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elastic band, that's great, but you don't need that.
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If you have like an old t-shirt or in this case I have a smart wool sock here, which is
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about a foot or so in length, what you can do is grab the sock or the t-shirt by the
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ends so that your arms are about, well in my case about a foot and a half apart and hold
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it out in front of you.
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So I'm going to try to demonstrate this.
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Of course you can't see it because it's not a video cast, but hey, hold it out standing
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up straight and then what you want to do is grab both ends of the sock and try to get
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your shoulder blades to come together.
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So you're basically opening up the chest portion of your body, opening up your chest and
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clenching your back.
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This is almost exact opposite of what happens when you normally sit at a computer.
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If you can envision yourself hunched over, that's the position that people normally end
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up getting into when they sit at their computer.
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You want to do the opposite.
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You want to unfold, open up your chest, open and then clench up the scapula or your shoulder
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blades.
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So do that and then hold the sock out in front of you and just hold that position pulling
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out on the sock and hold that position for about 15 seconds and you should feel the stretch
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pretty quickly in the shoulder and the scapula area.
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Now if the sound, the volume levels are changing a little bit because I'm moving back and
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away from the mic as I actually do these stretches.
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So once you've held that for about 15 seconds or more if you're comfortable with it, you
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can repeat the stretch this time straight up.
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So again, bring your shoulder blades together as much as you can while gripping the ends
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of the sock and this time hold your arms straight above your head.
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So you're doing the same stretch.
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You're like Superman flying straight up and again pulling that and you should feel that
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anywhere from your shoulders all the way down to the middle of your back and afterwards
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it feels really great.
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It may hurt while you're doing it.
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You don't want to do it so much that it really, really hurts but you should at least feel
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the stretch which is a good thing.
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Once you've held that for 15 seconds or so, hold your arms down behind your back straight
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behind.
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So just grab the sock and on both ends with the sock behind you and do the same stretch
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again, clenching your shoulder blades but this time with the sock down, so down at around
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hip level.
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So you're doing the same thing.
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Now you're like the human cannon ball or what not.
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You're flying forward but your arms are down behind you because the tendency when you're
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doing this stretch is to lean forward.
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That's not really going to help in the shoulder area.
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The point is to bring these finally what you can do is do the same stretch once again.
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Stand your shoulder blades together, but try to bring your arms up with both hands.
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This is probably the hardest part of those shoulder blades together.
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You want to bring your arms up behind your back, standing straight.
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So instead of raising the mouth, you get good at raising your arms up behind you, it's
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kind of tricky.
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Squat, for instance, with your back to your desk or to a table and actually get yourself
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more of a stretch but that's kind of advanced.
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I would not recommend that if you're new to this or if you're likely to fall over because
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then you could really wrench your arms out of their, you know, out of whack.
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So you may not want to start with that.
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But again, grab the sock, hold it behind you, clenching those shoulder blades tight, arms
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about a foot and a half apart, and just raise them up as high as you can hold them until
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you feel the stretch.
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You don't want to feel extreme pain, obviously.
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And then just hold it there for about 15 to 30 seconds.
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And again, when you're done, you let those go.
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If you've done all four of those stretches, you should feel an improvement in your shoulders
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all around.
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You should feel your muscles be a little more relaxed like they've gotten some exercise.
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And this will help you long-term.
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It will help you cope with hours a day of sitting at the keyboard.
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So do those, do these stretches, literally they take a minute, right?
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I gave you four positions and you know, each one takes about 15 seconds.
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So you can spend one minute a day and help undo a lot of the hunched up posture that we
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get from sitting at PC's all the time.
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There are a number of other stretches you can do.
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If you're interested in stuff like this, you know, things that you can do, sitting on
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the floor, sitting in your chair, all sorts of things.
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Right things for your lower back and your hips.
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I'm not going to cover those right now because again, I said, shoulders are the most, most
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common place where we need the work.
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So that's it.
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That's not really a super technical thing, but again, I think something that applies very
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much to the hacking community.
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So stand up straight, guys, you know, there's no excuse for poor posture.
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All right.
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Until next time, this is Peter from the Fresh Ubuntu podcast.
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You can follow us over there at freshobuntu.org.
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And my blog is over at pn72.com.
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And if you've got any questions about stretching or shoulders or the wonders of bursitis, just
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drop me a note.
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Take care, everybody.
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Bye.
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Thank you for listening to H.P.R. sponsored by caro.net, so head on over to C.A.R.O.N.C.
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