Electric_Kite wrote:
Eh, I meant it is hard compared to when wearing the 'fivefinger' foot-glove shoes. Before I got them, I didn't realise how awkward my shoes (converse knockoffs) made things.
Since I got my first pair of VFFs, a year and a half ago, that is the *only* shoe I will ever wear. For me, it's definitely about proprioceptive difficulties.
(although I'm also a toe-walker and just today I was reading an article by a doctor who believes that toe walking is due to a visual-vestibular issue and claims to have stopped it in children 100% of the time by having them wear some kind of prismatic glasses for one year. I didn't pursue that any farhter, though, because I figure a. my brain is less plastic than that of a child so it's less likely to change me and b. I'm not troubled by my toe walking and feel no need to change it.)
For me, the big difficulty with "conventional" shoes was that I would fall down at least once per day, often three or four times. Also, when walking, I frequently turned my ankle - not enough to cause injury, but my foot would come down and just roll off to the side so that I was stepping on the outside of my foot instead of the bottom. Since switching to VFFs (the Vibram FiveFinger "glove-like" shoe Electric_Kite was describing, for those reading this who aren't familiar with the product) I have not fallen down once! Not once in a year and a half after falling down while walking EVERY SINGLE DAY OF MY LIFE.
The way I figure it, anyone who wants to hire me is going to have to put up with the shoes. I will never go back to "traditional" shoes. They are like wearing a cast on my feet and I put a pair on once after wearing only VFFs for half a year and I felt like Frankenstein's monster walking in those awful, clumpy things! Plus I only walked about four blocks in them and the next day my whole body hurt so much I couldn't leave the house.
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