I figured my wrist would get used to my Deck Legend by now, considering previously I was on a Model M, but I noticed the Model M sits an inch higher than the Deck does, and that makes a world of difference when it comes to bending your wrist.
So after a weekend of resting the ball of my wrist on the table, causing immense pain and my CTS to flare up, the gears in my head started to turn and I realized I shouldn't be doing that. So after a few days of adjusting and moving my arm rests/residual height of the chair to finally match the height of the keyboard, I finally got it to where I'm not destroying my wrist.
So, now the problem is, the way my hand is resting on the chair, I can either A: Cut off circulation to my forearm + wrist, or B: cause carpel tunnel spikes.
I haven't found a perfect mediation where I don't feel I'm not slowly destroying my wrist.
So, I wanted to look in to something that might help, and I found this:
http://www.amazon.com/Grifiti-Standard-Keyboards-Mechanical-Materials/dp/B004D8PYE2The problem I see with wrist rests, is I had a gel wrist pad for a while, and it wasn't adding flat support, it was encompassing the wrist, not supporting it, causing it to put pressure on my wrist. Even the slightest amount of pressure on the valley in my wrist will cause my CTS to flare up.
So, I'm wondering what mediation solutions there are for mechanical keyboards. I was thinking about routing out a section in the desk, to allow the keyboard to sit lower in relation to the desk, so that my wrist isn't floating so high off the desk.