by Baxter
Bare Feet by Michele Macartney-Filgate |
I just returned from a five-day trip to Jelapa, Mexico, where I spent the vast majority of my walking time barefoot. I explored the beaches, the cobblestone town, and the dusty dirt trails leading inland, and my feet were in heaven. I was amazed at how quickly I acclimated to being barefoot, and delighted in the adaptability of those two pals of mine as they maneuvered over uneven surfaces efficiently and without any complaints. So it has been an interesting transition back to Oakland and to shoes and boots for urban living. Of course, I am fortunate to practice and teach yoga every day, so I get to spend a decent amount of time barefoot, but not out on the paths and trails as I did in Mexico.
The day after my return, I presented a workshop on healthy feet. In my preparations for the day, I encountered again and again foot-related problems that were directly attributable to shoes! A few months back we talked about one of those conditions, bunions, which certainly are strongly influenced by the shoes we wear. But I came across others, such as toe deformities, including claw toes and hammer toes, which are often a result of high-heeled shoes, and Morton’s neuroma, a painful swelling of the nerve that goes between your third and fourth metatarsal bones in the midfoot, also worsened by shoes too tight in the box.
In addition to this, I came across some interesting facts about human vs. other animal feet. From the Trail Guide of the Body came a fascinating comparison. Mammals such as cats and dogs are called digitigrades, as they actually walk on their toes or phalanges, whereas hoofed animals like horses, called unguligrades, are actually walking on the tips of their toes all the time. We humble humans are classed plantigrades, meaning we walk on the soles of our feet, although some dancers and rock climbers are known to imitate our other mammalian relatives on occasion!
And I am not certain which source proffered this opinion, but I read that it that plantar fascitis or heel spurs can result from shoe wearing by weakening the intrinsic muscles of the feet (those that arise and insert within the foot) such that the force of our weight is transmitted to the plantar fascia, a thin yet tough sheet of connective tissue that spans the sole of the foot, from the heel bone to the base of the toes. Once asked to take on such a big load, the plantar fascia often protests by becoming inflamed, especially where it attaches to the calcaneus bone, or heel bone, which can eventually lead to the formation of a calcified spur of new bone growing out into the fascia…owww!
If we step back from all this news about feet gone bad for a moment and consider the primary functions of our feet, I immediately think of two. First, my feet have to provide stability for me to be able to stand upright like when I am in line at the bank. And, second, my feet have to allow for mobility when I am in movement. So, stability and mobility, all delivered in one package, is called a foot. Yoga, via being practiced in bare feet and involving both stationary or static poses as well as dynamic movement between poses, is a great way to help your feet fulfill their dual role.
Some of us tend to have feet that are a bit stiffer, possibly with a higher arch, which are better suited for stability. Others of us tend to have more pliable, mobile feet, which adapt nicely to changing surfaces as we move about and are in motion. And there can be a nice mix of qualities in some feet. But feet that are very loose and mobile can even go to the extreme of having a collapse of the arches, especially the medial arch, which runs along the inside edge of the foot. For these people there is a unique way to practice standing poses that can help strengthen the intrinsic muscles, as well as those arising above the ankle but inserting on the foot called extrinsic muscles. Keeping your heel grounded as well as the ball of your foot, with a focus on the big and little toe side of your feet, try lifting the toes (not the ball!) of each foot off the floor as you explore the standing poses, starting with Mountain pose, and even working your way eventually to Tree Pose and Warrior 3! If you can do this regularly in your home practice and stay with it for months or longer, you may find that you have re-established your medial arch! Then of course you will need to relearn how to lower your toes without loosing your newfound springy arches. Sounds worth the journey to me.
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Do you have a Facebook page? I'm loving your articles!
Yoga with Gaileee
Thanks, Yoga with Gaileee. Baxter has a Facebook page called Baxter Bell Yoga. And Baxter and I both have personal Facebook pages under our full names. —Nina
Thank you for the arch building suggestion! And for the images of going barefoot in Mexico – a mini-vacation for me too.
Enjoyed your article. Agree about the benefits of walking barefoot…especially in the sand. .
Warrior and balance postures with upward flexed toes are great preventive techniques but
arch is already collapsed you might include more hip openers like lunges, pigeon, and
full splits.
Tight inward hip rotation and weak or strained inner thighs cause the medial arch to roll inward and flatten. Bunions and hammer toes may follow the inward rotation. Women more than men
are prone to these problems. High arches also susceptive to medial arch collapse.
Chair posture on tippy toes also recommended.
Misalignment in the lower lumbar also contributes to foot problems. And here
we get to the issue of core stability. The graceful gait of the Mexican natives
might result less from walking barefoot and more from being properly centered
and aligned.
Ultimately it's not the shoes your wearing that cause foot problems
but the way you're wearing your shoes.
Thanks for a great article Baxter – I, too, have become fascinated by the feet and what they offer us (http://wp.me/p2beDL-k).
One of the amazing things about the design of our feet is how they transition from mobility to rigidity with each step we take (assuming all goes well).
When a practitioner steps forward, the force of impact creates calcaneal eversion and subtalar joint pronation, unlocking the midtarsal joint and causing the arch of the foot to collapse. It's an ingenuous braking maneuver and it also initiates a similarly mind-blowing sequence of events elsewhere.
That initial heel strike causes joint movements in all three planes throughout the body and those movements trigger muscles to eccentrically lengthen and concentrically contract as the body searches for stability and economy/ease.
And not only is our foot asked to get squishy, moments later it's asked to get rigid! When the calcaneus inverts and the subtalar joint supinates – which will happen as our mass and momentum carries the back leg past the (former) front leg if we were walking – the midtarsal joint now locks up and is ready to push us along… Pretty awesome.
On the plantar fascitis front, in addition to wearing shoes, we might be at risk from sitting in chairs a lot.
All that time with our feet dorsiflexed, and our hip flexors tight, glutes and abdomen proprioceptively turned off, etc. Then all of a sudden we're upright walking, the foot hits the ground and its looking for upstairs in the rest of the body for help in decelerating our mass and momentum but nobody's responding so the plantar fascia acts as an emergency brake
From that standpoint, the origin of a person's plantar fascitis (and obviously there is no single way a person acquires it) may actually be somewhere other than the foot… It'd be a fun journey to track down the influences.
I think it's also interesting to consider whether walking barefoot on a diversity of surfaces would make a person less susceptible to some of the foot-related conditions you've highlighted. So thanks for that exercise, too.
All in all, I appreciate the questions your post has raised Baxter and hope it stimulates more people to contemplate the mysteries of our body's amazing design…
Warm regards, Al Bingham
I always tend to walk on my heels haha! Such an interesting topic!