Powerneck

Myth ledger

Side-by-side dispatches versus rigid rules

Printed phrases travel quickly online yet offices change daily. Pair each myth with diagrams that summarize how movement often matters more than locking joints.

How illustrators flagged each column

Wheat-colored borders mark widely repeated folklore. Meadow borders show calmer adaptations based on ergonomics textbooks and workshop notes—not personal promises.

90-degree myth

Sitting bolt upright with elbows tight to ribs is marketed as tidy, yet it can limit circulation when held for extended coding.

100-degree tilt option

Researchers often cite a recline between roughly 100 and 110 degrees to share load between vertebrae comfortably.

Another duo: wrists parked on resting edges

Palms welded to palms rests

Leaving weight on urethane wedges can subtly compress wrists while moving mouses sideways.

Hover palms instead

Editors suggest gentle hovering so forearms glide while wrists stay level as you glide along the tabletop.

Questions belong in Reach

Invite colleagues to annotate their own misconceptions; we summarize those responses during periodic reviews without rewriting them into workplace mandates.