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I used to enjoy running and training for races. That was then; this is now. I am finding that as I get older I am more and more stiff and injury-prone. For the past couple of years the injuries have localized in my feet. Both of them. More specifically, the balls of my feet hurt quite a lot, especially running down inclines (we have no real hills where I live). In fact, it hurts me to walk barefoot on any surface; I have to wear shoes of some kind. I also have poor circulation in both legs and feet, and sometimes by the end of the day I have cramps, poor balance, and feet that feel like blocks of wood. The past couple of years have been an endless cycle of injury/rest/very-gradual-return-to-running/re-injury. This last cycle, I managed to work up to 50-ish slow miles a week, but after two weeks of that, my feet complained, loudly. Very frustrating. I have pretty much accepted that I am done with racing. While I may eventually have to give up running, I don't want to until I absolutely have to. I have always been a midfoot striker, and I'm finding this has shifted to forefoot as my calves have grown stiffer. I wonder if I would be more comfortable as a heel-striker. I've never tried to change my gait before. I don't know whether this can be done by sheer force of will, or even if it's a good idea. Thoughts?
I think you can do it, as long as you are willing to be very slow as you transition into the new running style. But how old are you?
This. And you may stay slow.The last "specialist" I saw said "I can't believe I am going to recommend this. But you need to become a heel striker, you will become slow. If not, you have three years left"🙁.
Did you switch to heel striking? Was it hard? Did you injure yourself in the process?
I tried. I ran in Hoka Bondi with orthotics and was runnin 60-90 seconds slower than my normal. Never became a heel striker more of a midfoot striker. I hated every moment of running. It became a chore. I began to hate running for the first time in 30 years. I didn't get injured, just had a mild case of shin splits. But my calves were happy and healthy.Of course I hated being slow and dumped everything and my feet hurt all the time. 🙄
ugh. I'm sorry, for you and for me.
If you're going to become a heel striker, you might need a different shoe. I find that I have trouble heel striking in shoes without some heel. I have a hard time heel striking in hoka.
Wonder if foot shape has something to do with it. Most people progress to flat feet as they age. I am the opposite. I have a "claw foot". (High arches' bunions and corns) I don't pronate well. I run on forefeet and walk on heels. So low heel drop puts me on my heels. My husband wears Hoka for long distances to NOT strike his heels. His feet are normal.
Link?That being said, I have no chronic aches or pains, and I've actually been getting faster over the past couple years