DaveC426913
Gold Member
2025 Award
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- TL;DR
- Because of my monitor
Just realized after all this time why my neck is so sore at work.
I use a secondary monitor that sits behind my lappie (not to the side, that just makes it worse).
The secondary monitor is not too high. The top of the monitor is horizontal to my eye and I look down at the centre of the screen at about a 10 degree angle.
Yet I find myself constantly and unconsciously craning my neck to look at it. Like, my head is pointing above the screen and I suddenly realize i'm looking down my nose at it.
I just realized it's because of my bi-/tri-focals! The screen is barely 18 inches away, which is medium/close range, not long range. If I look directly at the screen, I strain to read it because I'm looking through the long range focus.
This explains my eye strain too (I tend to close one eye and squint when I'm having trouble reading, so I look like a pirate.)
So now I'm propping my glasses up on my nose with a folded piece of paper. This allos my neck/head to relax while my vision passes through the medium/close range of my glasses.
I use a secondary monitor that sits behind my lappie (not to the side, that just makes it worse).
The secondary monitor is not too high. The top of the monitor is horizontal to my eye and I look down at the centre of the screen at about a 10 degree angle.
Yet I find myself constantly and unconsciously craning my neck to look at it. Like, my head is pointing above the screen and I suddenly realize i'm looking down my nose at it.
I just realized it's because of my bi-/tri-focals! The screen is barely 18 inches away, which is medium/close range, not long range. If I look directly at the screen, I strain to read it because I'm looking through the long range focus.
This explains my eye strain too (I tend to close one eye and squint when I'm having trouble reading, so I look like a pirate.)
So now I'm propping my glasses up on my nose with a folded piece of paper. This allos my neck/head to relax while my vision passes through the medium/close range of my glasses.