![]() ![]() Take a moment to remind yourselves about the challenges you’ve overcome and think about all the wins, both big and small, that have contributed to where you find yourself today. GAAD presents an opportunity you to reflect and to celebrate how far you have come on your accessibility journey. We have lots of ideas to get you started: Celebrate Your Success Whatever you choose, please send us the details so that we can tell others about your good work and build on this for future events. It might be an event surrounding awareness building and advocacy or it might be a more technical dive into what makes an accessible ebook. In 2022 there were some exciting events surrounding GAAD and we have put together a few ideas in our annual GAAD Toolkit to help you organize something yourself. If your organization has an accessibility advocate then this is their chance to build awareness and co-ordinate activities that your teams may be able to take part in whether at home or in the office. I’ve wanted to write a blog post about my journey with repetitive strain injury (RSI) for quite a while now.GAAD takes place on May 18th this year and we’d like to encourage all our readers to take part so that we can build awareness in our industry and play our part to increase the availability of your digital content to people with print disabilities, especially as we are beginning to return to in-house working. I’d been putting it off because the amount of content that I wanted to include seemed to be increasing exponentially with time.Īnyhow, I’ve decided to go for it and I’m hopeful that I’ve selected the most important parts of my recovery, especially for a fellow programmer. My RSI affects my fingers, hands, wrists and forearms so it has had a pretty significant impact on my day-to-day life, which I normally spend programming in python or writing in LaTeX. Nevertheless, I had things to do and deadlines to meet, so I continued typing… Keyboards (down the rabbit hole we go) □Īround 6 months ago, I was sat at my desk when I noticed a slight pain in my hands, I wasn’t quite sure what the pain was or how I had caused it.Equip yourself with the best text editor Spacemacs (vim meets emacs).Try to strengthen your fingers and forearms e.g.Stretch your forearms, fingers, etc multiple times throughout the day.So that you can learn the vim keybindings and get the most out of them.This has definitely been the hardest injury that I have ever had to deal with, so I hope the info in this post can make the process easier for anyone in a similar situation.įor those in a rush, here’s a quick summary of the tips I would give to a fellow RSI sufferer: I’ve decided to start the post with my story and then afterwards go into detail about what I consider the most import aspects of my recovery (or management). I first assumed that the cause of this mysterious pain was the climbing trip I had been on the previous weekend, I was climbing some pretty gnarly routes so I assumed this was plausible □Īs the week progressed, so did the pain, first to my fingers, then wrists and then forearms, as well as generally getting a lot more intense.Īt this point I started to consider that the pain was due to my trackpad and/or keyboard (I was using an Apple magic keyboard and an Apple magic trackpad at the time).ĭon’t use them, unless you actively want to develop RSI!Įventually the pain got so bad that I had to stop working on my computer and I spent my days reading instead (luckily I’m a PhD student so reading is actually a great use of my time).Īfter a few days of not typing the pain would reside, “ great, I’m better, lets get programming”. Unfortunately, this was not the case and within the hour the pain was back with vengeance. ![]() I cycled through this process several times, gradually increasing the resting period. I think there was a little part of me holding on to the idea that it might just magically disappear.Īfter a few weeks of repeating this process and reading endless blogs/forums/articles, I finally accepted that something was definitely wrong.Īll that I could think was “ I’m never going to be able to program again”, which made me pretty sad.įollowing this, I booked an appointment to see my local GP □ and was there by the end of the week.Īfter a quick examination and an X-ray, it was confirmed, the pain was RSI and most likely due to my work station. I then started seeing a physio who provided me with a list of stretches and exercises. ![]()
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