Repetitive Mris Is Repetitive.
Jun. 11th, 2008 08:10 amYesterday I tried
markgritter's idea for getting me longer stretches of computer time so that novel revisions might be easier for me. Epic FAIL. Uff da. I'm glad he was using engineering-brain on this problem, since he has the data points needed to think about possibilities without driving me nuts. The attempt was worth the epic fail. But wow, was that a lot of no good.
So not a lot of screen-time for me yesterday afternoon/evening, and in fact this morning's PT was still recovering in quality. So I think I'm going to back off the computer for the morning and see how we're doing then.
This could ease up any time now. That'd be fine.
So not a lot of screen-time for me yesterday afternoon/evening, and in fact this morning's PT was still recovering in quality. So I think I'm going to back off the computer for the morning and see how we're doing then.
This could ease up any time now. That'd be fine.
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Date: 2008-06-11 01:40 pm (UTC)Yeah. I'd be okay with that.
I'm sorry that the TV work-around didn't work. Epic fail, however informative, still sucks.
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Date: 2008-06-11 01:42 pm (UTC)Does laptop time, possibly wedged securely in the corner of the couch, work at all? Or is it simply a matter of not being able to look firmly ahead/down long enough to get any work done?
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Date: 2008-06-11 02:23 pm (UTC)That's all. Just bleh.
And moral support.
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Date: 2008-06-11 03:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-11 04:38 pm (UTC)Does the vertigo get better if you don't have to focus with your eyes? E.g. I'm assuming you can touch-type, so perhaps using the laptop lying down (completely flat on your lap or whereever feels most comfortable) without looking at the screen, might help. For drafting, anyway. For revisions, the only possibility I can think of is screen-reading software and a helpful person to enter the edits.
My best wishes for the easing up sooner rather than later.
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Date: 2008-06-11 04:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-11 07:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-12 02:35 am (UTC)But to answer the specific question here: when one's vestibular system is malfunctioning, the visual system is one of the backups one uses to figure out what is upright and what is stable. But part of the oogy nasty feeling comes when one is receiving conflicting signals: that your ears are saying that you're leaning to the side while your eyes are saying that you're sitting straight upright, or your ears are telling you you're moving while your eyes are telling you you're sitting still. The longer I do a particular visual activity, the more the discrepancy gets highlighted, and the worse I feel.
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Date: 2008-06-12 03:54 am (UTC)Sorry for the obtuseness. :/