STOP PRESS: Recent
release "The Seat of Your Pain may be Your Chair"
- Jenny Pynt M.A.P.A., M.M.P.A.A.
Published by Kangaroo Press - Simon and Schuster, Australia.
"This book will provide reliable, professional guidance to anyone whose back or shoulders or neck protest after sitting. It should be standard equipment for all purchasing officers charged with providing seating for the desk-bound, from managing directors to school students."
"Equipoise balance seat..a brilliant improvement on the
original concept of the kneeling chair" (P.44)
INSPIRATION can come from the most unlikely source. For
Australian psychologist Mr. Greg Usher, it took the form of a two-legged
stool, an essential item of equipment of the Maasai tribesmen of Africa.
As unlikely as it seems, that simple stool has led to
the sophisticated Equipoise, a piece of ergonomic furniture - “not
a chair, not a stool, but a balance seat” - designed by Mr Usher to relieve
spinal pressure and back strain brought on by prolonged periods of sitting
still.
PAIN IN THE BACK
In 1988, Mr Usher, as part of post-graduate studies in psychology, took a 10-day course of meditation which involved sitting in silence for 15 hours a day. The result was aches and pains throughout the body, the worst of which occurred in the back.
Cushions, chairs and low stools failed to bring relief. Then a small stool with half-round legs, a copy of a Maasai stool, was tried and the back pain, disappeared almost immediately.
"Research has shown that the long-term effects of lack of movement and high-compression loading on the spinal discs are two major causes of back pain among workers in sedentary occupations," Mr Usher said. "In addition, our general tendency to sit, or slump, in stationary positions has brought about a gradual deterioration in our posture and balance sense."
The Equipoise, with its axle-mounted seat and kneeling
pad, addresses all three problems. The gentle rocking motion activates
the relevant body cells to provide spinal column nourishment, and distributes
pressure or compression force from the spine to the thighs and lower legs.
For further information, contact:
Greg Usher,
|
Greg Usher - inventor
|