I hate touch-typing.
I guess I never had
the patience to stick it out when I was doing my degree, and this followed through
to my masters, my job as a tenured academic… and now this ghost has come to
haunt me here. It has come at last to the land of PhD, where I am struggling in
my final year writing up the thesis.
But why bring this up
now? Haven’t you managed well enough so far? Why shoot yourself in the foot
now?
Well, frankly, it’s to
do with my wrists. And my neck. Several years back I developed carpal tunnel
syndrome, which I first realised when I was playing video games on my Xbox. And
then it became painfully obvious when I bought my first motorcycle where I could
only ride a few minutes before I lost all feeling in my hands and arms,
especially the left one. And doing all this typing writing up my thesis isn’t
helping either, as the pain became more pronounce the longer I spent time on
it. And did I mention the neck? Do you have any idea how painful it is having
to alternate between looking at the keyboard and looking at the computer
screen? I mean don’t get me wrong, I can type a storm when I look at the
keyboard. Like a demented D.H Lawrence on crack, speed, and steroids. Hoooooh
yes I can type. But only when I look at the keyboard. And only when I hurt my
neck.
The solution (besides
spending a fortune on wrist braces and online massage therapy lessons [which
have helped by the way])? Go ergonomic. But isn’t going ergonomic expensive? You
bet it is. It’s like paying for three seats that the cinema so you wouldn’t
have to rub elbows with the pimply-faced school boy who is much too enraptured with
his first girlfriend than to actually watch the movie. It’s damn expensive. If
I had my way, I would upgrade everything I had to be ergonomic – my chair, my
desk, my screen – everything. But when you’re a struggling PhD student who
doesn’t have a job, well, the options are not exactly what you call endless. So
I decided on an upgrade that would serve me best within my budget – to get an
ergonomic keyboard, as I spend my entire day typing.
So I go out and get me
a beautiful ergonomic keyboard – the Microsoft Ergonomic Keyboard 4000, the BMW
of all ergonomic keyboards. How much did it cost? Well let’s just say the
Internet bill won’t be paid for this month; or the next. But it looks so
beautiful. And drives like a dream. Or so it was in my head. Apparently, one
this that I realised with the split keyboard configuration is that you have to
be able to – that’s right, wait for it – touch-type. Uhuh. Yup. Touch type. I
suddenly realised that I still can’t touch-type for nuts, and this drives me
CRAZY because I need to be able to write down my thoughts at the same speed
they’re racing through my head. It’s like buying a Ferarri and still not know
how to drive a stick.
So what do I do? I
download a typing tutorial software. And I have been practicing on it ever
since. In the space of a day and a half, I have managed raise my skills from 15
words per minute to 20 words per minute. Twenty words a minute? Are you
kidding? Sadly no. Even as I type these words, I begin to type while looking at
the keyboard, am I looking with a vengeance. I am looking like I never looked
before. Touch typing can suck it. For now anyway. I laugh like maniac as my
finger start flying though the keys once again. Like Lawrence on a caffeine
high my soul soars as my fingers become a blur once again. Neck pain be damned
I’m free.
At least until I have
to get the massage ointment and maybe take a painkiller or three.
Moral of the story:
Before you start your PhD, make sure you know how to touch-type.
Comments
Bila dah balik nanti, my Mama says to see an ortho surgeon, get that CTS fixed. Surely your employer can cover the bill. Mama had CTS back in 2001, had a small surgery, 2 weeks of MC and she's as good as new. purrr.....meow!
gee I don't know if the uni covers procedures like this. We don't take insurance like we don in NZ. But good as new after surgery huh? No aftereffects whatsoever?