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 Bookdealers Back <<

Bookdealer's Back - When it comes to backs, books are buggers.

18.10.04.  You probably didn’t notice, but last week was Back Care Awareness Week. I might not have noticed either, had I not been suffering from a severe case of Bookdealer’s Back.

When it comes to backs, books are buggers. In quantity, the "wrong sort of books" can make even a relatively small box intolerably heavy, and difficult to carry any distance. The "wrong sort of books" (in this context) are usually art reference works, engorged with more illustrations than is decent, and printed on paper with the same specific gravity as concrete.

These are the books that invariably do my back in. They lie at the bottom of boxes, waiting for me to lower my guard, forget the rules, and allow myself to be consumed by desire. Without iron discipline I am at their mercy.

There I am in the office; an overweight fifty-something, too stupid and lazy to get up out of his chair and place a (small) pile of books on his desk for cataloguing, lunging at lovelies, which are just out of reach. Got you! Oh f***ing hell!

OK, so I’ve got a back problem and some bad habits, but I’m obviously not alone. According to the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, two-thirds of Britons have suffered some form of back pain over the past year.

The situation seems to be much the same in the USA, where 3.7 million people seek medical care each year for an acute episode of low back pain. A new Ohio University study, costing some $1.5 million, will examine who is most at risk from recurrent back pain and what causes it.

Given the nature of secondhand bookselling, I suspect that our "vocation" harbours a rather greater than average number of back pain sufferers. And given that the vast majority of us are self-employed, with little, if any, health insurance to rely on, the economic consequences of incapacitating back pain can be considerable.

On this occasion I've been out of action, with frequently excruciating back pain, for the best part of ten days. In the past I’ve tended to favour the proactive approach, and have used both the Feldenkrais Method and the Alexander Technique. Alas, I'm not very good at keeping up the exercises.

Last week I tried the Cranial Osteopath that the rest of my family raves about, and think the treatment offered by back2normal sounds interesting.

Anyway, if you’ve bothered to read this far you are probably a fellow sufferer, and I’d like to hear from you. What exacerbates your problem, how do you cope with it, which therapies or techniques work for you?

If I get enough of a responce, I’ll try to put together a back pain resources page.

Mike Goodenough
Editor

 
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