The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
Recovery & winscalm-wolf-559

Turning our junk room into a recovery workspace — anybody else been through this?

My wife was rear-ended pretty badly about eight months ago by a delivery van that blew through a red light. The injuries were serious enough that she's been out of work ever since — we're talking multiple surgeries, a lot of PT, and more waiting room hours than I care to count.

The good news — and I genuinely want to share this because we needed good news so badly — is that her employer has been incredible. When she finally felt ready to dip her toes back in, they didn't hesitate to approve a part-time remote arrangement while she keeps healing. It honestly made me tear up a little when she told me.

So now I'm on a mission to build her a real workspace at home. We had this back bedroom that became the family dumping ground over the years — old fitness equipment we swore we'd use, boxes of stuff from her mom's house we never sorted through, holiday decorations in garbage bags. You know the room. Every house has this room.

Clearing it out was actually kind of therapeutic, if I'm being honest. But now I'm deep in the rabbit hole of trying to find a desk and chair setup that won't aggravate her back and neck injuries. Ergonomic anything is not cheap, and I'm trying to figure out what's actually worth the money versus what's just marketing.

Has anyone else built out a home workspace for a spouse or partner recovering from accident injuries? What did you prioritize? What do you wish you'd done differently? Any specific gear that made a real difference for someone with back or neck issues? I'll take all the advice I can get.

10replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

10 replies

  • 18
    bright-wolf-487

    I went through almost the exact same thing after my accident two years ago. My partner converted our spare room for me and the single best purchase was a chair with proper lumbar support and adjustable armrests — not one of those 'ergonomic' chairs that's really just a gaming chair with a higher price tag. We ended up going to an actual office furniture store so I could sit in them in person rather than guessing online. Took a couple of hours but so worth it. Also, a monitor arm to bring the screen to eye level was a game changer for my neck.

    • 19
      candid-lynx-993

      This honestly made me a little emotional reading it. The fact that you're spending your weekend hauling junk out of a storage room and researching chairs just so she can have something that feels normal again — that's love, man. I hope she knows how lucky she is. Wishing her a smooth recovery.

    • 10
      warm-dove-743

      Skip the big-box furniture stores for the chair. Seriously. Look for used commercial office chairs from liquidators or office closeout sales — brands that real offices buy for actual workdays, not the stuff designed to look good in a catalog photo. You can sometimes find a genuinely excellent chair for a fraction of retail because a company downsized or went remote. Check Facebook Marketplace and local liquidation sites before you drop full price anywhere.

  • 7
    cool-crow-071

    As someone who works in rehab, I'd really encourage you to ask her physical therapist for specific recommendations before you buy anything. PT's often know exactly what positioning is going to cause flare-ups for a particular injury type, and they sometimes have contacts for adaptive equipment that insurance will actually cover as part of recovery. Don't sleep on that conversation — it could save you a lot of money and a lot of trial and error.

    • 17
      silent-stoat-840

      Quick question — has the at-fault driver's insurance been involved in covering any of this? Because adaptive equipment and home workspace modifications related to a documented injury can sometimes be part of a claim, especially if her doctor puts in writing that working from home is medically necessary during recovery. Just something worth not letting slip through the cracks while you're in the middle of everything else.

  • 13
    clear-raven-618

    Eight months out from serious surgeries and already cleared to work part-time remotely — that's genuinely a win worth celebrating even if it doesn't feel like it yet. A lot of people in her situation are still months away from that milestone. You're further along than it probably feels like from the inside.

    • 0
      calm-driver989

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 14
    wise-owl-579

    The previous comment raises a fair point. Expenses related to accommodating a recovery — including equipment needed because someone can't return to a normal workplace setting — can sometimes factor into a personal injury claim under lost quality of life or accommodation costs, depending on the circumstances. I'd mention it to whoever is handling the case if there's an active claim. Not legal advice, just worth a conversation.

  • 14
    warm-stoat-936

    If you haven't already, keep every receipt from the room conversion — chair, desk, monitor, whatever you buy. Even small things. If there's an open claim or you're still in negotiations, documented out-of-pocket costs related to the injury can sometimes be included. At minimum it gives your attorney something concrete to work with. Doesn't hurt to have the paper trail.

    • 6
      tired-optimist485

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.