Apr 24th, 2008
Walking Wrong
Theres a really good article in New York Magazine which explains how we’re ruining our feet by wearing shoes. It’s very interesting and I’d recommend reading all of it, but here’s an excerpt to get you going:
Try this test: Take off your shoe, and put it on a tabletop. Chances are the toe tip on your shoes will bend slightly upward, so that it doesn’t touch the table’s surface. This is known as “toe spring,” and it’s a design feature built into nearly every shoe. Of course, your bare toes don’t curl upward; in fact, they’re built to grip the earth and help you balance. The purpose of toe spring, then, is to create a subtle rocker effect that allows your foot to roll into the next step. This is necessary because the shoe, by its nature, won’t allow your foot to work in the way it wants to. Normally your foot would roll very flexibly through each step, from the heel through the outside of your foot, then through the arch, before your toes give you a powerful propulsive push forward into the next step. But shoes aren’t designed to be very flexible. Sure, you can take a typical shoe in your hands and bend it in the middle, but that bend doesn’t fall where your foot wants to bend; in fact, if you bent your foot in that same place, your foot would snap in half. So to compensate for this lack of flexibility, shoes are built with toe springs to help rock you forward. You only need this help, of course, because you’re wearing shoes.












Biking with no shoes is the new brakeless
That was really interesting, long, but interesting.
croc of shit
good find
my feet and ankles feel terrible after reading that.
Recently while ridin a pool i decided to ride without shoes because my feet were wet and i had plastic pedals and it was tons of fun. Im going to try ridin shoeless, dosnt one pro skater ride shoeless? Try it!
i totally knew i was on the right track with this shit.
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