Eidorian said:I've used the kneeling chairs before. My friend had one for his Bondi Blue iMac. I had no hopes that it'd be a good chair but it was surprisingly comfortable. I just don't have any extremely prolonged sitting experience in one.
The balls are fine for someone with a healthy back who doesn't need support, or for sitting sessions of 15 minutes or less. Not fine with preexisting back problems.... not at all, at all.bbarnhart said:Some people here at work use large, inflatable exercise balls to sit on. It guarentees that you sit up straight else you'll roll off.
A sports physio I was using recommended a ball, but only after remedial work had been done. They're very good for strengthening the back muscles, which can be useful depending on how your back is affected. Don't think they're suitable for you though iGary. Or for aboutthat's suggestion - get one of those brown removal coats and a clipboard and say you're taking them for maintenance 😉CanadaRAM said:The balls are fine for someone with a healthy back who doesn't need support, or for sitting sessions of 15 minutes or less. Not fine with preexisting back problems.... not at all, at all.
Nickygoat said:A sports physio I was using recommended a ball, but only after remedial work had been done. They're very good for strengthening the back muscles, which can be useful depending on how your back is affected. Don't think they're suitable for you though iGary. Or for aboutthat's suggestion - get one of those brown removal coats and a clipboard and say you're taking them for maintenance 😉