I've forgotten the name but this thing I found at goodwill has been great for my hips/lower back while working!!

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I've forgotten the name but this thing I found at goodwill has been great for my hips/lower back while working!!

That looks like it vibrates.
Yeah the vibrations relieve tension.
Cornhole tension?
The worst kind of tension!
Not for my laundry!
Yeah, I've never had such a good massage chair. Super lucky find!
That device actually exacerbates low back pain because it causes you to arch your back & scream.
Fun story, there's a sex shop in Orlando with one of those on the second floor. When you turn it on, the actual entire second floor balcony rumbles
Sybian
The only thing which finally helped my back was physical therapy. It was the list of 7 exercises she told me to do. I searched each on youtube and one of the videos included 2-3 extra beyond the one I was searching, and 1 of those extra exercises finally worked like a miracle! π I still have the video bookmarked if you want me to search for it and link it.
Sure pls, i would like to know this miracle exercise!
Here it is: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkUNt4QBtA0
Specifically at 5:11 with the broomstick in between your legs
Thanks a lot, never saw this technique, will try!
100% this! When I was around 35, I got a herniated L5/S1; it was debilitating. I have a desk job, and years of bad posture and zero core strength caught up to me. I would get shooting pains where I had to grab something to steady myself to stand.
My doctor prescribed Dilaudid, a pretty powerful hydromorphone. I have addiction issues in my family and did not take anyβand I'm really glad I didn't. I've seen friends have to go to rehab for similar 'doctor-prescribed' opiates.
What helped me was exercise. First, just holding a doorway and kicking my legs backward to loosen up the area. Then leg lifts while lying downβone at a time at first, then both at the same time. Then pushups and situps. Then a gym routine of lifting heavy weights and cardio on a reclined bike where I also incorporate lighter 15 lb barbells.
I'm 47 now, in the best shape of my life with no back pain. Treat the root cause, not the symptoms!
Then leg lifts while lying downβone at a time at first, then both at the same time.
Were you lying on your back? Or lying on your stomach?
On my back, start off slow and they get easier over time as your abdominal muscles strengthen.
Herniated L6/L7. No chair has helped me. Only things that have are
Not medical advice in any way. These are just the things that have helped me immensely. If you take any lifting advice off the Internet, get a coach.
I know if my back starts to hurt itβs because Iβm not doing one or all of them enough.
L6/L7? Lumbar ends with L5 and joints with S1. Bro got that spine DLC. Lol
There do be some long-ass bois
Exercise balls. After my boss bought a dozen for the workplace, I realized how much less my lower back was hurting. If I make an effort to also move my hip in various ways, it hurts even less. I decided to buy one myself to use when gaming on my PC. Works like a charm. Does my back still hurt? Yes. Has the exercise ball worked better and been more cost-effective than any other option thus far? Yes.
My problem is some kind of hypertension after overdoing cycling about six years ago. At least that's what they think. After having seen several specialists and doctors, they still don't know.
I have exercise-induced hypertension too and the docs can't figure that one either. It started around Covid. So did yours.
Covid killed everything. Nothing has been the same since.
People are... different too, and not in a good way either. I think we all died and this is purgatory or some shit.
That thought never occurred to me. What the... Have you seen or heard or read any articles that talk about back pain among those that have been infected by covid or that have been vaccinated?
I have a talent. I'm able to slouch on any chair or equivalent that is presented to me.
If I remember to correct my posture I just put the pillow for my lower back, slide to the edge of my seat or do both.
Standing desk, don't be static, change positions often.
If standing is a problem the saddle stools are pretty good
PT/weight lifting really help.
Also metabolism has a big impact on joint issues and pain. If you have obesity, hypertension, snoring, skin tags, nafld, t2d, etc... they are all indicators your metabolism could use some improvement, and it probably will help your back too.
The last one in your image is terrible. I have one and it just made my knees and lower back hurt worse. HermanMiller is really the only way to go. My wife and I both have the embody. I can sit for an entire day and my back feels the same as it did at the start. Thereβs a reason people gush about those chairs.
I have one of those chairs as well. I like to tell people that it's not the most comfortable chair I've ever sat in but I'm never uncomfortable no matter how long.
That is a perfect description
Those kneeling office chairs really hurt my knees, I'm too tall to use saddle chairs at a regular desk and with exercise balls its hard for me to get the height right. As far as chairs go what helped me was finding a chair with adjustible lumbar support, and adjustible spring tension on reclining. Steelcase used to offer all of these features but it looks like they don't have as much adjustment now. I've heard good things about Herman Miller but I've never tried them. As for lifestyle changes: a heating pad to loosen cramps, free weights to strengthen, and a foam roller to help realign the spine have all helped me. ymmv obv.
I gave up trying to sit for 15+ minute sessions. I have a standing desk and two barstool-height chairs of very different designs, cycling between the three options throughout my workday.
Great that I can work from home. In the office I would look like a fidgety child.
Instead of sitting or standing, without knowing your particular type of pain/injury, I suggest gently moving.
Walking pad/treadmill is an option, but if so go reallly slow so you take smaller steps, as walking "incorrectly" can also strain your lower back.
Perhaps a better fit would be to look for vertical motion than forward or static... standing on pedals similar to on a bike or on a stair machine or even just with one foot on a stepping board and switching whichever leg is on it frequently. Still when peddalinf, stepping or climbing stair steps: go slowly, we're not trying to break a sweat.
But probably the absolute best chioce is to ask a physician or physiotherapist that are knowledgeable about your specific kind of back issues how to sit, move, train and rest.
Good luck!
Switching to standing desk every once in a while. Motorized desks are very affordable these days.
Swapped between normal and kneeling chair for a while as budget solution to back pains. Switched to sit/stand lifting desk + normal chair, stand pad (do not cheap out on the stand pad, get a nice thick one) and balance board when I upgraded my desk.
Kneeling chair was great, but shouldn't be used for long periods of time (2+ hours) according to lots of easily corroborated medical advice easily found even on the kneeling chair supplier websites.
Sit/stand desk is the best investment I've ever made, felt the improvements after 3 weeks of casual use. Balance board is awesome bonus but requires a solid hard surface. Had to buy a wooden panel to put over my plastic carpet protector cuz my place has fairly deep carpet.
What in the fuck is bottom left?
And I kinda just included it for larfs. Looks like BS to me, personally.
SteelCase Leap was my favorite chair ever. I currently have a SteelCase Think. But honestly the thing more impactful than the chair, to me, is an adjustable height desk with an adjustable height monitor stand.
In the office, I have a regular office chair, a wobble stool, and a height-adjustable desk riser if I want to stand. Constantly switching between them makes the biggest difference for my back. Sometimes I use one setting all day long, sometimes I switch several times a day, however I feel
I've had lumbar pain from bad chairs in the past, but nothing medically diagnosed (so bear that in mind, your situation might be a lot more serious).
For the past years I've been using a Secret Lab chair, and it's been wonderful. I usually tilt it so it allows me to distribute the weight across my back and not on top of my lumbar, probably not really ergonomic but I haven't experienced any problems with it.
That being said if I needed to get a new chair it wouldn't be a secret lab, as much as I like it and I think it's built like a tank and will last me forever, the lack of a way to limit the tilting is very annoying for my use case.