Relative to getting injured by barefoot or sandal running easier, yes that may be true. But the severity of injury is key here. I'd rather stub a toe than need an knee replacement. The sandals do last a LONG time vs padded shoes that wear out fast and can start breaking down earlier than people realize, thereby causing them more harm than they realize. They may be injured or close before realizing the padded shoe is dumpster ready. A good sandal used with good form, simply becomes more minimalist and "better" for a less taxing purpose.
Yeah. I agree. If two people, one barefoot and the other in foamy shoes, ran for the same distance in the same bad form, the barefoot runner might get injured faster. But it wouldn't actually happen that way because the barefoot runner would stop after a few feet because their feet would tell them they're doing something wrong.
What do you exaclty mean by "last a logn time" ? I'm asking because I walk 10k everyday and my vibram 5 fingers starts to break after about 3 or 4 months...
@@bruttosporcoecattivo been using Luna Sandals for years. My pair with a sole very similar to a car tire I've been doing everyday use for about 2 years now. Just now starting to show major wear. My running/hiking pair, more flexible and softer sole, has shown significant wear in about half the time of significant use.
@@LiefRunsFar Thanks for your answer. I've bought a pair of Xero sandals and they're great (just for walking on road though). I've been using them for about a month now, and I can tell they're way more resistant than the five fingers.
@@bruttosporcoecattivo the ones in the video are ultra thin. I have a similar pair of shoes, Tadeevo, that I absolutely love when I need shoes instead of my sandals. But I would absolutely only use them for walking, no running or trails.
Started barefoot walking about 6 mos ago as an experiment. I had heard barefoot walking might lessen some chronic lower back and hip pain I had been experiencing for awhile. I've slowly worked my way from walks around the block to a few miles on pavement to a few miles on trails (assisted by luna sandals). I've also begun to add some running to the mix (slowly). My back and hip have shown signs of improvement (I seem to have less need for ibuprofen and my back pain has not interfered with my sleep in months). Be patient with your feet because they do need time to strengthen
After years of barefoot walking, I think I've finally figured out the key to it: the achilles tendon. Look at the way people in conventional shoes walk: the tendon's limp and they're just kind of kicking their foot. Once I realised how weak my own tendons felt, I started consciously retracting them when walking to lift the foot and found all the rest of the movement basically follows from that, and the foot lands smoothly.
@@alexandre2792 I probably should have said, 'contract'. Does that help? I mean bending the ankle back towards the calf. But since I wrote that, I've found better advice on barefoot walking in Emily Splichal's book 'Barefoot Strong'.
I did too much stuff while carrying too much weight for too long while in the Army. The result was stress fractures in both of my shins which eventually lead to full blown compartment syndrome in both lower legs. I couldn't run, walk to fast, or even kick my legs while swimming for years, without a pretty bad flair up of said compartment syndrome. After years of that, I decided to try Vibram five finger shoes. They looked goofy and I didn't like the idea of being "that guy" who wore them, but I fell in love with those shoes and I never again had any problems with my lower legs. I was tired of the goofy look and low quality of the Vibram five fingers, though, so eventually upgraded to Vivobarefoot shoes when I learned about the company. Absolutely zero regrets and I can never understand the people who think that barefoot shoes are a sham and don't actually do anything (or may even hurt you). I feel pretty confident that if you haven't been barefoot since childhood and thus have pretty weak muscles and bones in your lower body, then immediately throw on barefoot shoes and go for a hard run complete with heel striking, then yeah... you're going to discover that those barefoot shoes mysteriously lead to injury. A little bit of common sense goes a long way.
I realize this video is over 2 years old, but I have to comment... Wow! every word of yours is so well said and true! I ran for years, one marathon and many shorter events, occassionally ran barefoot but didn't stick with it because I was so incredibly sore after just one run. Running with big brooks on as recommended by the shoe store expert after video treadmill computer review showed "I needed them". Especially being over 6'. But the foot slapping after heel striking was my most painful and exhausting thing to deal with and I just thought well I'm not a real runner like these incredible ones I had the honor to run near and have my name hundreds of places after theirs. I just have to deal with it. But every time I ran midfoot forefoot first, no heel strike, it was the most relaxing and rewarding feeling. I settled on switching from heel strike to no heel strike during runs and that was good. Now I'm over 15 years older, haven't gone running in years, and I will begin again, gradually mix in barefoot until I can do it full time. Everything(!) you stated was and is true, I knew it then but not like I know it now, and you nailed it all with this video! Magnificent. Thank you. I'm excited to do it all again, but better. May God keep you.
I run around 100k every week (8-12 miles daily) and that’s after 3 ACL surgeries and hip reconstruction. I strongly believe i’m able to do that because i not only LOVE to run, but i also run barefoot (vibrams v-runs), it takes the pressure off my knees and hips and onto my calves and ankles which have become much stronger as a result, but need time to adapt when you’re getting started. If its not a zero drop at least ….i get injured guaranteed. I love your video’s and am going to try making my own sandals in the near future!
You should see the documentary about the Raramuri, the indigenous long distance runners from the high mountains in the northwest of Mexico, and you will find out how they can run for hundreds of miles with some hand made sandals, fabricated with truck tire and leather laces, you will be surprised how easy and inexpensive those HUARACHES are.
I've been treadmill running in shamma warriors all winter 6 milers. Can't wait for warmer weather and take these bad boys outside!! The one thing I have noticed , I've got no foot pains at all ...no blisters and I've only adjusted the straps one time before the first time using them and have never played with the straps at all...I just kinda slide into them and they stay put!! Thanks! Happy trails!!
You're right about our feet providing the feedback we need. I bought my first pair of barefoot shoes (Xero HFS) when I was recovering from a bad case of plantar fasciitis. Initially, I wore them only for walking, which still helped a lot. My feet became a lot stronger and felt better. But when I started trying to run in them, I just pounding the pavement like I had before. This hurt my feet, so I tried to adjust my form. But it ended up being an overcorrection. I was on my toes too much and suffered another injury, though (thankfully) not one that lasted long. I tried again, but I was doing something wrong and it still hurt. It was frustrating. What actually helped was switching to Altra shoes (zero drop, but not minimalist). Initially, I didn't like them. They were forcing me to change my running form. But once I adjusted, I they started to grow on me. After running in these for a while, I felt like I was much lighter on my feet and using more of a midfoot strike. This is exactly what I should have been doing all along. I've gradually been adding in some running in my Xero shoes. But it actually feels good now. So I'm working on increasing my time in these. Great stuff. Thanks for the video.
Awesome video. I started minimalism in January of this year and did a 55 mile hike/walk/run last week in 17 hours with no issues at all with hips/knees/ankles. Just starting to move to the barefoot sandals after using minimalist shoes for 6 months.
Here are 2 tips that will strengthen your feet when you transition. Skipping I really good. Also balancing and doing squats on a foam roller.Great content. As a child I was told I had flat feet - that part I true - and given hard supporting inlay’s. Since a couple of years I’ve solely using barefoot shoes or being barefoot.
Barefoot is still better. Being connected to the ground is important. Barefoot Sandals are very helpful when you are not sure if the terrain contains glass pieces or thorns.
I always wanted to try sandals. I love the 10 toes I have had for about 10 years now. I have done some bare foot and it is great but I am afraid of glass and stuff so i stopped that. But, I will say my favorite part of barefoot style running is the bumps and twigs that almost massage your feet as you run. Its almost addictive to run over gravel and stuff, to an extent.
(Made an immediate switch to barefoot shoes, walking for an hour and two. No adverse effects whatsoever.) Acccording to Chinese medicine, stretching one's tight/weak calves is a great boost to one's health and can actually cure many ailments. Hence, they have devised a board that one stands on at an angle of up to 45 degrees, and recommend one stands on it for 20 min. a day. In the beginning it's painful but with time, one's calves stretch and it isn't uncomfortable.
We Filipino are used to running with our feet, so this was interesting. Unfortunately, I didn’t follow with that tradition of barefoot as I became a city boy in my early childhood.
lovely breakdown. i really liked the way you explained it. it's so true, your feet will tell you if you're using them wrong! i usually love being barefoot, but have been wearing slippers in the house for the last couple years. i recently switched to wearing water shoes (the kind with very thin soles and stretchy fabric) because i wanted to feel more like i was walking barefoot again (slippers are heavy and clunky and make me walk weird and unstable). My feet hurt randomly in weird spots for a while as i tried to get used to walking on the balls of my feet again (my preferred way of walking). when i notice myself 'stomping', or heel-striking, i would get annoyed at the sound and feeling (no pain, just annoyance) and quickly adjust. if i was balancing wrong on the balls or putting too much pressure on the toes, i would feel tension, almost like a small cramp, and adjust. after less than a week (just wandering around the house, nothing major) i've already figured out how to walk better thanks to all that quick feedback. i feel much more sure-footed and comfortable, and i'm still getting used to it! my feet were slightly achey for the first couple days, but that's since gone way down and i already know they'll continue to feel better the more i relearn how to walk. it's amazing noticing the difference. i walked on the balls of my feet most of my life, but even just a couple years of wearing slippers and shoes, it messed me up. the difference is surreal. i can't help but get conspiratorial when I think about it! our feet connect us to our surroundings in so many ways, thick cushions and soles just deaden your sensitivity to all of that. they communicate so clearly when you let them, and they'll tell you with every step whether you're walking efficiently or not! going to buy some sort of minimalist/barefoot sneaker or sandal very soon and try running again. i used to love running. when i think about it, i think back to being a kid running barefoot and how great it felt. but as an adult, running with shoes, after a couple days something just feels 'wrong' about doing it and i'd stop. i always suspected the shoes were the problem (although they didn't hurt), but it felt overwhelming trying to find the right ones! i've always hated shoes for that reason. shoe after shoe, one's too tight, too squished, too heavy, rubs your ankles, causes blisters, and often you can't predict those problems when you try them on too! so i gave up. can't wait to try minimalist shoes. i'd love to enjoy running again. if you've read this far and are not sure how to get used to barefoot shoes, and you wear house slippers or something inside, try out cheap watershoes around the house first (or just go barefoot). it'll give you time to adjust and learn without overly stressing your feet. once you get more comfortable walking around inside, you can transition to the minimalist shoes outdoors.
Wow, all my questions wrapped in a Sensemaking thought system. Thank you so much for putting all of this together, Peter. I am looking forward to getting some new barefoot insights from my shamma sandals.
thank you for sharing your experience! I just started running , it has been a month and I have knee pain while I walk now. I will definitely try barefoot shoes
I had knee pain 3 years ago to the point it was challenging some days to walk up a flight of stairs. I scratched the padded shoes and bought Reebok run fast pros (road), New Balance Minimus Tr (Trail). The pros aren’t full on barefoot (low stack, ground feel racers) but they definitely got me to run with better form and engaged calf and other parts of leg and knee more. Anyway, I went from previously running 15-20k in padded shoes to starting at 3-6k with theses shoes. My calves were sore after 3-6 at first. Naturally my distance and pace improved over the first 3-4 months. Knees are now fine and 8-12k is easy and not sure 24 hours later. I’m now back up to 15k to half marathon (1h 46 min). One very important thing for me is to make sure I’m enjoying the run and not putting pressure on myself or worrying to much about anything during runs. Wether that be time pace or other things in life. I mean I still record distance/pace but remember than the enjoyment factor is what’s important. Just enjoying the run, what I’m seeing and where I am. I’m 46 and smoke about 15 cigarettes a day. 5k in 23 min 20 secs right now but looking to bring that down to low around 20-21 min. Cause it’s a fun challenge and it’s fun seeing what the body can do. It’s a lot more capable at healing than we are led to believe! Good luck and have fun!
This is the most helpful advice I’ve seen or read in this area, thank you. This vid also helps me realize my new luna sandals are indeed not too small! Toes right on the edge like in your video, so thanks for that too.
One of the best things I've done for myself. Knee issues and ankle issues are almost remedied. I went through a transition of building my muscles and that took about a year and after that it's been great.
I just started barefoot running, using what I was comfortable with in terms of sandals, the EV Trail, and while I easily can do 3 miles, and 6 miles straight running, I discovered a lot of issues doing a hike/run on the Sam Merrill Trail at the Angeles Crest. I have so many questions about technique, and yet there are almost no resources for understanding things such as what blisters in specific areas of your foot can tell you about your stride, or how to do a downhill on a technical trail, to even what is better for form, a strapped sandal like the EV, a Luna Huarache, vs the new style with the toe strap from Shamma. It's tough and probably individualistic, and yet is this such a niche community that no one is putting out their own troubleshooting?
Do you have specific questions? I might be able to provide you with resources that were helpful for me, or maybe even make a video answering a few, one of these days.
These barefoot-type shoes are the best things ever, for senior citizens! As we age, our balance and muscle tone diminishes. When that happens, soon we lose our confidence, and we're tied to canes and walkers. These non-shoes puts our brain back in contact with our feet, and our feet back in contact with our walking surface. It improves our circulation, balance, and confidence. I hadn't felt secure walking on grass in five years before my first pair of 5-fingers. I could walk on grass, I could walk on cobbles. I could jog again. I hadn't done that in ten years. It seems ridiculous for an 80-year-old, nonrunner to buy these sandals, but they do as much good for us oldies, as they do for runners.
Yes this is why I switched to barefoot shoes! I’m not old but I work in a care home and noticed that so many of the residents had feet and balance problems. Most seem to wear uncomfortable shoes all the time. I already had feet issues from wearing too small shoes as a kid. I switched to barefoot shoes and it’s made so much difference already. Hopefully it’ll mean I’ll have less issues later in life.
People are only more likely to hurt themselves while running if they're not used to being barefoot. But if you've been barefoot all your life, one would be more likely to hurt themselves with running shoes. All in all, I'm willing to bet most people are more likely to hurt themselves with running shoes than without, at least after a transition period.
I’m running in Luna sandals, they are by far the best things I’ve ever ran in. I’ve tried expensive cushioned shoes, and Vibram five fingers which are also great but Lunas are the most enjoyable for me. Totally flat and zero drop, they force you to learn perfect form because you’ll pay for it if you don’t. I never even want to wear shoes again after wearing these. They are coincidentally the closest thing to the Huraches the Tarahumara use and are based on them. Now I realise that all the cushioning in shoes is really to cover up bad form by compensating with padding. Some people love their shoes and if it works for them, great. But you can also run in sandals you just may have to learn to run even walk again like I did. Now I realise I’ve been walking with a heel strike my entire life in shoes..because I ‘naturally’ did that in sandals…but you have to relearn to walk landing on your forefoot. I did anyway.
It took almost one year to transition to barefoot shoes in my daily life. I still use conventional sports shoes when I ride a footbike, but I'm pretty sure that at some point, I'll switch there as well :-)
I've found Lems really good for cycling as their soles are thicker than the average barefoot shoe's. I wear Lems Boulder Boots, but their sneaker and shoe soles are similar. Why choose these over any standard shoe with a thick sole? Toe space! And being zero-drop and flexible, they're still better for walking in too.
Unfortunately I have a bit of survivorship bias. Now that I'm devoted to running minimally, I wish I had lots of footage of how I ran before, but it's hard to go back to my old habits.
Great video! -- with one exception. "So when you wear no shoes, you're more likely to get injured, but you're even more likely to stop before you get injured and figure out what you're doing wrong." You made this plain statement multiple times without the very important context of Why. I think that will continue to convince some people that they shouldn't even try going minimal. Maybe for future videos it could go something like this: "A person who grows up being barefoot or in minimalist footwear will suffer far less injuries than someone who grows up wearing traditional footwear. So transitioning to barefoot or minimalist footwear safely will take time and effort, but it has the potential to greatly augment your quality of life."
Eh I dunno. I got injured a lot when I switched to minimalist/barefoot, things like stumbles and stubbed toes and blood blisters. It's been great for long term injury avoidance, but it's definitely not an easy transition for most people. I take the rest of the video to explain the context, so I don't think people will judge that statement on its own. I don't want to give an impression that barefoot is easy and simple, it's not.
I'm sad I didn't pull out my running sandals this summer. i still working on the best lacing technique. I still used vapor gloves but the sandals require me to adjust more to avoid blisters. It takes a bit of figuring out when I haven't used them in a while. The only time I used them o made the mistake of not bringing my other shoes to transition to and I got horrible blisters. I assume my gait needs to change but I may also need to relace them to fit more securely. I may also try some socks with them, but this girl still likes to look cute in her footwear.....
One thing to point out, if you are a "heal striker" runner you are going to have a bad time and blow out your knee in a mile. You have to run on the ball/ toes mostly. IMO If you run on your heals it will catch up with you sooner than later anyhow.
Started barefoot/minimalist running after following Barefoot Ted, from Born to Run, and his company for years. I absolutely love Luna Sandals. Use a stiffer model for walking and a more flexible model for running and hiking. What do you think of the "running/hiking" sandals versus the true minimalist, almost nothing sandals you show in the video? I get all the same sensations you talk about with the Luna Sandals.
@@petertardigrade4485 I've heard Tadeevo shoes, claim to be the most minimalist shoes, and I can feel a little much for comfort on trails. Great shoes for in town.
im a beginner but i feel amazing in barefoot shoes and fell less pain the day after, maybe i pay more attention to technical details when barefooting and that makes a diference in injuries and pain while running..i dont know... but im not back to regular shoes for now.
The only thing that scares me running in my Tevas is pebbles.. and before you laugh at me.. imagine a sharp small pebble going under your heel mid stride.. it takes you down like a stun gun. If you have bad knees like me or are say near a cliff/road, it’s obviously not a great scenario. This was informative though man, I appreciate it.
@Errcyco, you do realize, don't you, that you've just told the world how terrible your form is? Hopefully in the 2 years since you've commented you have begun to listen more to your feet and changed your foot placement. Your 'bad' knees may not have been so bad before they took all the abuse that heavy heel strike running (or even walking) dishes out. Faster cadence, slower pace, playful foot strikes, and your fear of pebbles and knee pains can become a thing of the past, if they haven't already.
I've been using vivo barefoot for a year, but I don't know how( or where) to transition to barefoot. In my country summer city floor is too hot to even think about it, and the streets are too litered.
Great video, my problem is I have slight bunions (that I guess could get worse), and I wear toe separators to compensate for those, but that's the only reason I can run barefoot. Otherwise within 20mins my toe starts taking up too much force from the uneven terrain or just the running in general; I haven't found a work around yet perhaps I need to do more work one my calves, they are very inflexible
Yeah my experience was that calf flexibility seems to really affect how my toes are loaded. Ideally you shouldn't have to push off with your toes at any point in your stride
I think this is pretty legit. I've been a barefoot goer most of the time. But I still run in Altra Olympus. It always feels like running in mud barefoot (not pain). I put on Olympus and run like an antelope. I'm wondering if being barefoot most of the time keeps my running form correct and the shoes aren't actually going to cause problems. I don't get the shin splints anymore. I definitely increased my cadence and that has been massive. Also not landing heel or forefoot near as much.
I really appreciate this video! Including the interviews was a fun, helpful touch. What shoes would you recommend a beginner alternate with wearing the rest of the time as they do short periods of trying the new barefoot sandals? As in a beginner to any minimalist barefoot footwear. I have from TJ Maxx or Ross or something some cheap, simple fabric shoes with I guess rubber soles that appear zero drop and don't seem to crush my feet particularly. Maybe those have been good transition?
@Peter Tardigrade oh! That makes a lot of sense. Thank you! I've been walking barefoot more even on pavement and am starring to crave it! Less foot pain but replaced with a new bit of foot pain that's different and more comfortable as if the feet just adjusting in a healthy way. Moving slowly with being on feet more cause had gotten overly sedentary awhile so am easing into being more active. Just got a job that allows option of being barefoot too!!
First, no. Second, after almost ripping my right big toe nail off when I caught it on a stick while running through the woods on the second day of summer camp in 1984, I will only wear closed toe sandels like Keen H2's. I do go bear foot when I can and am interested in working on wearing bear foot shoes.
I find blisters come when I land with my foot in front of my center of gravity. I think this is partly why I find the "land on your forefoot" advice I received when starting out not particularly helpful. If you only work on your foot position, and not where it is relative to the rest of your body, the mechanics are the same as with heel striking, except you won't have any padding and your thinner metatarsal bones will have to absorb all the force. I got a metatarsal fracture (self diagnosed, not actually positive this was the problem) by landing on my forefoot without making adjustments to where my foot was, relative to my center of mass, as I landed. Stay tuned for the running technique video in which I'll try to explain this.
Thank you for this amazing and inspirating video! I have a question, is this model of running kan relief my disc herniation or I mustr go on with conventional shoes?
I used to enjoy barefoot with everything at the age of 6 (we're poor and shoes are luxurious items) and developed high-end power run and iron skin feels like making me feel indestructible played soccer without injuries (at least i don't do Neymar pussy tricks 😂). Today i maybe needs more time for transition back to barefoot running. Except from normal shoes to zero drop shoes like Altra or Vibram five fingers. You're not gonna believe me if I tell you that I just buy Vibram FF komodo the old model and use it for 50km trail running tomorrow. I thought it was the most idiot decision I have ever made. What I did not expect or understand is what I learned during the running. It seems that the word "muscle memories" that I believe is not exist, turns out it was true. I struggle for the 1st hour running trail when suddenly it starts to get better and well. All the patterns barefoot run early days for 18 years returned to me. But of course, in slow run mode. At least i don't stop since it is a battle of attrition after all. Not bad for 73 minutes transition from shoes to Vibram FF komodo and I finished the run without DNF in 16 hours 42 minutes. I hope my share stories will might help you with this sandal running because I made it with my own DIY without buying it. Thanks 😉👍
My problem with barefoot was not the issues with the bottom of my feet, rather I have stubbed my toe so often that I have night mares which include stubbing my toe.
Do we need to get a pair of barefoot shoes only for running? What about walking and normal life? Why the other marks ( nike, adidas, new balance, asics..balenciaga..) still produce the unhealthy type of shoes with high ankles ?
But I don't wanna be without any shoe, I don't trust the ground of my city, would I have all these benefits if I start directly with the minimalist sandals?
I started running in traditional shoes and got tons of knee and shin pain. I then learned about the barefoot movement and went to barefoot shoes, and yet I STILL after 2 years have shin pain when I run. I've recently switched to full on barefoot (about 2 months ago), hoping that is the key....
Started practicing barefoot running with vibram fivefingers and minimalist shoes. Took me year and half to adjust. Felt great, was able to run 10km until i started having metatarstalgia in left foot. For the past two years I am not able to run/walk in minimalist shoes. If shoe not wide or soft enough, i start feefling pain. Anyone haf similar experience or has good advice how to solve this issue? I dream about running again barefoot and long distances.
I watched your video on how to make barefoot sandals, thanks but there is no way i can make my own! What brand do you recommend for a total barefoot beginner.
Shamma Sandals is great for the most adjustable, durable, customizable sandal. Xero shoes makes slightly cheaper ones, which have really great durability.
Ive started doing barefoot running this summer after having tried zero drop thin running shoes last year. My big question is what am i going to do once winter comes around and it becomes too cold too run completely barefoot. Is it possible to run in snow using barefoot sandals or do i need to go looking for even thinner running shoes.
That’s interesting, thank you. I wear mostly no shoes the most I can ... even at work I am barefoot when it’s possible 😬 ... I don’t like shoes anymore , I have the feeling I can’t breath ... We must have lungs into our feet ! 😀 I would like to give a try to minimal shoes , more to walk than to run in my case ; Actually minimal sandals with free toes , but the sandals you showed us here are having a lace between toes , like flip-flops ... I have room enough between my big toe and second toe ( I love grabbing things on the floor with my feet ; my girlfriend says I have monkey toes 😅... ) , but I really don’t like a lace between toes ... All this to my point : could you please give me some advice or orientation to get such a kind of sandal , if any ? Thank you !
Hello Peter noce ti meet you.very interesting!I'm a beginner barefoot runner I'm trying ti run with vivo barefoot and simil dove finger but my calv are getting hard likes a Stone.What Is tour addice?with altra Torino I run Halh marathon.thx
Go slowly, your calf must become more flexible to run without a heel drop. It's a huge adjustment, and time is the only way. You can gently stretch your calves if you want, but it will still take a few months.
A doctor friend of mine who also runs in the minimalist barefoot stuff says that on recovery days after a long run I should run and more cushion shoes to break it up. and For road marathon he races In racing shoes. Opinions
I think cushion shoes aren't good for recovery, but I'm not a doctor. I think a lot of people recover less than they need to, and if you have to use structured footwear to protect you while you recover, you aren't letting yourself recover enough.
@@petertardigrade4485 working now on seeing if I can run a fast marathon in my five fingers or something similar. Trying to qualify for Boston. These times have gone down since these so-called super shoes. Turning 60 in may so my time standard also goes up. Only perk I get
Do you know any common causes for posterior tibialis pain? I started getting it after a couple weeks of barefoot running and I wonder what running mistake it corresponds to. Thanks for the video, appreciate all the information you put out here!
Relative to getting injured by barefoot or sandal running easier, yes that may be true. But the severity of injury is key here. I'd rather stub a toe than need an knee replacement. The sandals do last a LONG time vs padded shoes that wear out fast and can start breaking down earlier than people realize, thereby causing them more harm than they realize. They may be injured or close before realizing the padded shoe is dumpster ready. A good sandal used with good form, simply becomes more minimalist and "better" for a less taxing purpose.
Yeah. I agree. If two people, one barefoot and the other in foamy shoes, ran for the same distance in the same bad form, the barefoot runner might get injured faster. But it wouldn't actually happen that way because the barefoot runner would stop after a few feet because their feet would tell them they're doing something wrong.
What do you exaclty mean by "last a logn time" ? I'm asking because I walk 10k everyday and my vibram 5 fingers starts to break after about 3 or 4 months...
@@bruttosporcoecattivo been using Luna Sandals for years. My pair with a sole very similar to a car tire I've been doing everyday use for about 2 years now. Just now starting to show major wear. My running/hiking pair, more flexible and softer sole, has shown significant wear in about half the time of significant use.
@@LiefRunsFar Thanks for your answer. I've bought a pair of Xero sandals and they're great (just for walking on road though). I've been using them for about a month now, and I can tell they're way more resistant than the five fingers.
@@bruttosporcoecattivo the ones in the video are ultra thin. I have a similar pair of shoes, Tadeevo, that I absolutely love when I need shoes instead of my sandals. But I would absolutely only use them for walking, no running or trails.
Started barefoot walking about 6 mos ago as an experiment. I had heard barefoot walking might lessen some chronic lower back and hip pain I had been experiencing for awhile. I've slowly worked my way from walks around the block to a few miles on pavement to a few miles on trails (assisted by luna sandals). I've also begun to add some running to the mix (slowly). My back and hip have shown signs of improvement (I seem to have less need for ibuprofen and my back pain has not interfered with my sleep in months). Be patient with your feet because they do need time to strengthen
After years of barefoot walking, I think I've finally figured out the key to it: the achilles tendon. Look at the way people in conventional shoes walk: the tendon's limp and they're just kind of kicking their foot. Once I realised how weak my own tendons felt, I started consciously retracting them when walking to lift the foot and found all the rest of the movement basically follows from that, and the foot lands smoothly.
@@JohnMoseley hello. what do you mean by "retract" ?
@@alexandre2792 I probably should have said, 'contract'. Does that help? I mean bending the ankle back towards the calf. But since I wrote that, I've found better advice on barefoot walking in Emily Splichal's book 'Barefoot Strong'.
I did too much stuff while carrying too much weight for too long while in the Army. The result was stress fractures in both of my shins which eventually lead to full blown compartment syndrome in both lower legs. I couldn't run, walk to fast, or even kick my legs while swimming for years, without a pretty bad flair up of said compartment syndrome. After years of that, I decided to try Vibram five finger shoes. They looked goofy and I didn't like the idea of being "that guy" who wore them, but I fell in love with those shoes and I never again had any problems with my lower legs. I was tired of the goofy look and low quality of the Vibram five fingers, though, so eventually upgraded to Vivobarefoot shoes when I learned about the company. Absolutely zero regrets and I can never understand the people who think that barefoot shoes are a sham and don't actually do anything (or may even hurt you). I feel pretty confident that if you haven't been barefoot since childhood and thus have pretty weak muscles and bones in your lower body, then immediately throw on barefoot shoes and go for a hard run complete with heel striking, then yeah... you're going to discover that those barefoot shoes mysteriously lead to injury. A little bit of common sense goes a long way.
I realize this video is over 2 years old, but I have to comment... Wow! every word of yours is so well said and true! I ran for years, one marathon and many shorter events, occassionally ran barefoot but didn't stick with it because I was so incredibly sore after just one run. Running with big brooks on as recommended by the shoe store expert after video treadmill computer review showed "I needed them". Especially being over 6'. But the foot slapping after heel striking was my most painful and exhausting thing to deal with and I just thought well I'm not a real runner like these incredible ones I had the honor to run near and have my name hundreds of places after theirs. I just have to deal with it. But every time I ran midfoot forefoot first, no heel strike, it was the most relaxing and rewarding feeling. I settled on switching from heel strike to no heel strike during runs and that was good. Now I'm over 15 years older, haven't gone running in years, and I will begin again, gradually mix in barefoot until I can do it full time. Everything(!) you stated was and is true, I knew it then but not like I know it now, and you nailed it all with this video! Magnificent. Thank you. I'm excited to do it all again, but better. May God keep you.
No more knee pains, fatigued feet, ankle pains, foot odors, no more holes in socks, and no more costly orthopedics since going barefoot. 😊🌎✨
I run around 100k every week (8-12 miles daily) and that’s after 3 ACL surgeries and hip reconstruction. I strongly believe i’m able to do that because i not only LOVE to run, but i also run barefoot (vibrams v-runs), it takes the pressure off my knees and hips and onto my calves and ankles which have become much stronger as a result, but need time to adapt when you’re getting started. If its not a zero drop at least ….i get injured guaranteed. I love your video’s and am going to try making my own sandals in the near future!
Just asking how did you get the acl and hip injury like did the barefoot shoes cause that?
You should see the documentary about the Raramuri, the indigenous long distance runners from the high mountains in the northwest of Mexico, and you will find out how they can run for hundreds of miles with some hand made sandals, fabricated with truck tire and leather laces, you will be surprised how easy and inexpensive those HUARACHES are.
@@duranduran5422 Right! This is the culture described in 'Born To Run', mentioned in the video here.
I've been treadmill running in shamma warriors all winter 6 milers.
Can't wait for warmer weather and take these bad boys outside!!
The one thing I have noticed , I've got no foot pains at all ...no blisters and I've only adjusted the straps one time before the first time using them and have never played with the straps at all...I just kinda slide into them and they stay put!!
Thanks! Happy trails!!
You're right about our feet providing the feedback we need. I bought my first pair of barefoot shoes (Xero HFS) when I was recovering from a bad case of plantar fasciitis. Initially, I wore them only for walking, which still helped a lot. My feet became a lot stronger and felt better. But when I started trying to run in them, I just pounding the pavement like I had before. This hurt my feet, so I tried to adjust my form. But it ended up being an overcorrection. I was on my toes too much and suffered another injury, though (thankfully) not one that lasted long. I tried again, but I was doing something wrong and it still hurt. It was frustrating.
What actually helped was switching to Altra shoes (zero drop, but not minimalist). Initially, I didn't like them. They were forcing me to change my running form. But once I adjusted, I they started to grow on me. After running in these for a while, I felt like I was much lighter on my feet and using more of a midfoot strike. This is exactly what I should have been doing all along. I've gradually been adding in some running in my Xero shoes. But it actually feels good now. So I'm working on increasing my time in these. Great stuff. Thanks for the video.
Try trail running. Sandal runs aren’t the best on pavement..
Awesome video.
I started minimalism in January of this year and did a 55 mile hike/walk/run last week in 17 hours with no issues at all with hips/knees/ankles. Just starting to move to the barefoot sandals after using minimalist shoes for 6 months.
Here are 2 tips that will strengthen your feet when you transition. Skipping I really good. Also balancing and doing squats on a foam roller.Great content. As a child I was told I had flat feet - that part I true - and given hard supporting inlay’s. Since a couple of years I’ve solely using barefoot shoes or being barefoot.
Barefoot is still better. Being connected to the ground is important. Barefoot Sandals are very helpful when you are not sure if the terrain contains glass pieces or thorns.
Love to see true perfectionist like yourself. You have Deep knowledge of your craft! Thanks for making these videos!
I always wanted to try sandals. I love the 10 toes I have had for about 10 years now. I have done some bare foot and it is great but I am afraid of glass and stuff so i stopped that. But, I will say my favorite part of barefoot style running is the bumps and twigs that almost massage your feet as you run. Its almost addictive to run over gravel and stuff, to an extent.
(Made an immediate switch to barefoot shoes, walking for an hour and two. No adverse effects whatsoever.)
Acccording to Chinese medicine, stretching one's tight/weak calves is a great boost to one's health and can actually cure many ailments. Hence, they have devised a board that one stands on at an angle of up to 45 degrees, and recommend one stands on it for 20 min. a day. In the beginning it's painful but with time, one's calves stretch and it isn't uncomfortable.
We Filipino are used to running with our feet, so this was interesting. Unfortunately, I didn’t follow with that tradition of barefoot as I became a city boy in my early childhood.
City boy go back to nature and have fun jaja
lovely breakdown. i really liked the way you explained it. it's so true, your feet will tell you if you're using them wrong! i usually love being barefoot, but have been wearing slippers in the house for the last couple years. i recently switched to wearing water shoes (the kind with very thin soles and stretchy fabric) because i wanted to feel more like i was walking barefoot again (slippers are heavy and clunky and make me walk weird and unstable). My feet hurt randomly in weird spots for a while as i tried to get used to walking on the balls of my feet again (my preferred way of walking). when i notice myself 'stomping', or heel-striking, i would get annoyed at the sound and feeling (no pain, just annoyance) and quickly adjust. if i was balancing wrong on the balls or putting too much pressure on the toes, i would feel tension, almost like a small cramp, and adjust. after less than a week (just wandering around the house, nothing major) i've already figured out how to walk better thanks to all that quick feedback. i feel much more sure-footed and comfortable, and i'm still getting used to it! my feet were slightly achey for the first couple days, but that's since gone way down and i already know they'll continue to feel better the more i relearn how to walk.
it's amazing noticing the difference. i walked on the balls of my feet most of my life, but even just a couple years of wearing slippers and shoes, it messed me up. the difference is surreal. i can't help but get conspiratorial when I think about it! our feet connect us to our surroundings in so many ways, thick cushions and soles just deaden your sensitivity to all of that. they communicate so clearly when you let them, and they'll tell you with every step whether you're walking efficiently or not!
going to buy some sort of minimalist/barefoot sneaker or sandal very soon and try running again. i used to love running. when i think about it, i think back to being a kid running barefoot and how great it felt. but as an adult, running with shoes, after a couple days something just feels 'wrong' about doing it and i'd stop. i always suspected the shoes were the problem (although they didn't hurt), but it felt overwhelming trying to find the right ones! i've always hated shoes for that reason. shoe after shoe, one's too tight, too squished, too heavy, rubs your ankles, causes blisters, and often you can't predict those problems when you try them on too! so i gave up.
can't wait to try minimalist shoes. i'd love to enjoy running again. if you've read this far and are not sure how to get used to barefoot shoes, and you wear house slippers or something inside, try out cheap watershoes around the house first (or just go barefoot). it'll give you time to adjust and learn without overly stressing your feet. once you get more comfortable walking around inside, you can transition to the minimalist shoes outdoors.
this was a super informative video! thank you.
i'll certainly give it a go, with barefoot running!
just like when i was a kid
Wow, all my questions wrapped in a Sensemaking thought system. Thank you so much for putting all of this together, Peter. I am looking forward to getting some new barefoot insights from my shamma sandals.
Great video. I also had issue with blisters and now I know why. Thank you.
thank you for sharing your experience! I just started running , it has been a month and I have knee pain while I walk now. I will definitely try barefoot shoes
I had knee pain 3 years ago to the point it was challenging some days to walk up a flight of stairs.
I scratched the padded shoes and bought Reebok run fast pros (road), New Balance Minimus Tr (Trail).
The pros aren’t full on barefoot (low stack, ground feel racers) but they definitely got me to run with better form and engaged calf and other parts of leg and knee more.
Anyway, I went from previously running 15-20k in padded shoes to starting at 3-6k with theses shoes.
My calves were sore after 3-6 at first. Naturally my distance and pace improved over the first 3-4 months.
Knees are now fine and 8-12k is easy and not sure 24 hours later.
I’m now back up to 15k to half marathon (1h 46 min).
One very important thing for me is to make sure I’m enjoying the run and not putting pressure on myself or worrying to much about anything during runs. Wether that be time pace or other things in life. I mean I still record distance/pace but remember than the enjoyment factor is what’s important.
Just enjoying the run, what I’m seeing and where I am.
I’m 46 and smoke about 15 cigarettes a day.
5k in 23 min 20 secs right now but looking to bring that down to low around 20-21 min. Cause it’s a fun challenge and it’s fun seeing what the body can do.
It’s a lot more capable at healing than we are led to believe!
Good luck and have fun!
Mira que bien puniendo practica lo que hacen los raramuris
This is the most helpful advice I’ve seen or read in this area, thank you. This vid also helps me realize my new luna sandals are indeed not too small! Toes right on the edge like in your video, so thanks for that too.
very well put togeter and informative!
Thank you for this, this is great information and I cant wait to try barefoot running!
Thank you for spreading this message!
Not running as much but currently on my second week for barefoot shoes with normal day to day life.
good stuff! been barefoot running for years never looked back
One of the best things I've done for myself. Knee issues and ankle issues are almost remedied. I went through a transition of building my muscles and that took about a year and after that it's been great.
Great video Thankyou. I’ve been a Vibram 5 wearer for 12 years. Always wondered about these sandals.
I just started barefoot running, using what I was comfortable with in terms of sandals, the EV Trail, and while I easily can do 3 miles, and 6 miles straight running, I discovered a lot of issues doing a hike/run on the Sam Merrill Trail at the Angeles Crest. I have so many questions about technique, and yet there are almost no resources for understanding things such as what blisters in specific areas of your foot can tell you about your stride, or how to do a downhill on a technical trail, to even what is better for form, a strapped sandal like the EV, a Luna Huarache, vs the new style with the toe strap from Shamma. It's tough and probably individualistic, and yet is this such a niche community that no one is putting out their own troubleshooting?
Do you have specific questions? I might be able to provide you with resources that were helpful for me, or maybe even make a video answering a few, one of these days.
These barefoot-type shoes are the best things ever, for senior citizens! As we age, our balance and muscle tone diminishes. When that happens, soon we lose our confidence, and we're tied to canes and walkers. These non-shoes puts our brain back in contact with our feet, and our feet back in contact with our walking surface. It improves our circulation, balance, and confidence. I hadn't felt secure walking on grass in five years before my first pair of 5-fingers. I could walk on grass, I could walk on cobbles. I could jog again. I hadn't done that in ten years. It seems ridiculous for an 80-year-old, nonrunner to buy these sandals, but they do as much good for us oldies, as they do for runners.
Yes this is why I switched to barefoot shoes! I’m not old but I work in a care home and noticed that so many of the residents had feet and balance problems. Most seem to wear uncomfortable shoes all the time. I already had feet issues from wearing too small shoes as a kid. I switched to barefoot shoes and it’s made so much difference already. Hopefully it’ll mean I’ll have less issues later in life.
I miss that runners high! Looking fwd to getting there in my journey..
This is fantastic! Thanks so much for making this and sharing your experience.
People are only more likely to hurt themselves while running if they're not used to being barefoot. But if you've been barefoot all your life, one would be more likely to hurt themselves with running shoes. All in all, I'm willing to bet most people are more likely to hurt themselves with running shoes than without, at least after a transition period.
Thanks Peter, great video. I am looking forward to your video on homemade running sandals.
Aqua shoes are a great first step (pun intended) into this new/old concept of foot care.
The strenght is in the form .
I’m running in Luna sandals, they are by far the best things I’ve ever ran in. I’ve tried expensive cushioned shoes, and Vibram five fingers which are also great but Lunas are the most enjoyable for me. Totally flat and zero drop, they force you to learn perfect form because you’ll pay for it if you don’t. I never even want to wear shoes again after wearing these. They are coincidentally the closest thing to the Huraches the Tarahumara use and are based on them. Now I realise that all the cushioning in shoes is really to cover up bad form by compensating with padding. Some people love their shoes and if it works for them, great. But you can also run in sandals you just may have to learn to run even walk again like I did. Now I realise I’ve been walking with a heel strike my entire life in shoes..because I ‘naturally’ did that in sandals…but you have to relearn to walk landing on your forefoot. I did anyway.
Can you recommend any videos that teach the proper technique?
It took almost one year to transition to barefoot shoes in my daily life. I still use conventional sports shoes when I ride a footbike, but I'm pretty sure that at some point, I'll switch there as well :-)
I've found Lems really good for cycling as their soles are thicker than the average barefoot shoe's. I wear Lems Boulder Boots, but their sneaker and shoe soles are similar. Why choose these over any standard shoe with a thick sole? Toe space! And being zero-drop and flexible, they're still better for walking in too.
@@JohnMoseley thanks a lot for the advice! I'll consider Lems as my next sports shoe 👍
@@RandomSadBoomer No problem! Hope you find something that works well for you!
I think your close, but it is so connected to each individual.
I would love to see an entire video comprised solely of footage of how you used to run.
Unfortunately I have a bit of survivorship bias. Now that I'm devoted to running minimally, I wish I had lots of footage of how I ran before, but it's hard to go back to my old habits.
Great video! -- with one exception. "So when you wear no shoes, you're more likely to get injured, but you're even more likely to stop before you get injured and figure out what you're doing wrong." You made this plain statement multiple times without the very important context of Why. I think that will continue to convince some people that they shouldn't even try going minimal.
Maybe for future videos it could go something like this: "A person who grows up being barefoot or in minimalist footwear will suffer far less injuries than someone who grows up wearing traditional footwear. So transitioning to barefoot or minimalist footwear safely will take time and effort, but it has the potential to greatly augment your quality of life."
Eh I dunno. I got injured a lot when I switched to minimalist/barefoot, things like stumbles and stubbed toes and blood blisters. It's been great for long term injury avoidance, but it's definitely not an easy transition for most people. I take the rest of the video to explain the context, so I don't think people will judge that statement on its own. I don't want to give an impression that barefoot is easy and simple, it's not.
I make my own. Ooohhh glorious sensation❤
Great video! I will go slow and use the info my body gives me - cheers sir!
Great video. I liked the interviews. Also, staying tuned for sandal making!
Great video and very informative, I am looking forward to your video on making the sandals.
I'm sad I didn't pull out my running sandals this summer. i still working on the best lacing technique. I still used vapor gloves but the sandals require me to adjust more to avoid blisters. It takes a bit of figuring out when I haven't used them in a while. The only time I used them o made the mistake of not bringing my other shoes to transition to and I got horrible blisters. I assume my gait needs to change but I may also need to relace them to fit more securely. I may also try some socks with them, but this girl still likes to look cute in her footwear.....
One thing to point out, if you are a "heal striker" runner you are going to have a bad time and blow out your knee in a mile. You have to run on the ball/ toes mostly. IMO If you run on your heals it will catch up with you sooner than later anyhow.
I wish I could wear them here in Paris, it’s cold and it’s boots season. When I travel to Thailand next month, I’ll wear them.
I thought this was well done and helpful. Thank you!
Great video. Thank you for your effort.
Hi
Thank you for the session! You mentioned a template for the side peice and I can't see it. 😊
Started barefoot/minimalist running after following Barefoot Ted, from Born to Run, and his company for years. I absolutely love Luna Sandals. Use a stiffer model for walking and a more flexible model for running and hiking. What do you think of the "running/hiking" sandals versus the true minimalist, almost nothing sandals you show in the video? I get all the same sensations you talk about with the Luna Sandals.
I would say just do what works for you, but definitely try full barefoot. After that, the thinner sandals make more sense
@@petertardigrade4485 I've heard Tadeevo shoes, claim to be the most minimalist shoes, and I can feel a little much for comfort on trails. Great shoes for in town.
Awesome video-Too much common sense-Thank you
Very nicely presented! Good one
Great info thanks!!
Great video. Thanks!!!
im a beginner but i feel amazing in barefoot shoes and fell less pain the day after, maybe i pay more attention to technical details when barefooting and that makes a diference in injuries and pain while running..i dont know... but im not back to regular shoes for now.
The only thing that scares me running in my Tevas is pebbles.. and before you laugh at me.. imagine a sharp small pebble going under your heel mid stride.. it takes you down like a stun gun.
If you have bad knees like me or are say near a cliff/road, it’s obviously not a great scenario.
This was informative though man, I appreciate it.
@Errcyco, you do realize, don't you, that you've just told the world how terrible your form is? Hopefully in the 2 years since you've commented you have begun to listen more to your feet and changed your foot placement. Your 'bad' knees may not have been so bad before they took all the abuse that heavy heel strike running (or even walking) dishes out. Faster cadence, slower pace, playful foot strikes, and your fear of pebbles and knee pains can become a thing of the past, if they haven't already.
I've been using vivo barefoot for a year, but I don't know how( or where) to transition to barefoot. In my country summer city floor is too hot to even think about it, and the streets are too litered.
Andrew Folts just released a great vid about transitioning: th-cam.com/video/oUUdYgHvv70/w-d-xo.html
Great video, my problem is I have slight bunions (that I guess could get worse), and I wear toe separators to compensate for those, but that's the only reason I can run barefoot. Otherwise within 20mins my toe starts taking up too much force from the uneven terrain or just the running in general; I haven't found a work around yet perhaps I need to do more work one my calves, they are very inflexible
Yeah my experience was that calf flexibility seems to really affect how my toes are loaded. Ideally you shouldn't have to push off with your toes at any point in your stride
@@petertardigrade4485 do you have any ultimate calf bullet proofing advice? Other than running forever lol 🤪
@@J.A.Seyforth check out the 2nd video in "more information" section of description.
awesome- thank you so much...
I got a pair of five finger from Vibram. I love their motto: “You are the technology”.
Glorious.
Nice post. 👍
Great video-- so informative and inspirational!
researching sandals....is that a tardigrades hanging in the background?
I think this is pretty legit. I've been a barefoot goer most of the time. But I still run in Altra Olympus. It always feels like running in mud barefoot (not pain). I put on Olympus and run like an antelope. I'm wondering if being barefoot most of the time keeps my running form correct and the shoes aren't actually going to cause problems. I don't get the shin splints anymore. I definitely increased my cadence and that has been massive. Also not landing heel or forefoot near as much.
Excellent video!
Such amazing information
I really appreciate this video! Including the interviews was a fun, helpful touch. What shoes would you recommend a beginner alternate with wearing the rest of the time as they do short periods of trying the new barefoot sandals? As in a beginner to any minimalist barefoot footwear. I have from TJ Maxx or Ross or something some cheap, simple fabric shoes with I guess rubber soles that appear zero drop and don't seem to crush my feet particularly. Maybe those have been good transition?
You should stick to whatever shoes you are already used to, and gradually increase the % of time in sandals or barefoot.
@Peter Tardigrade oh! That makes a lot of sense. Thank you! I've been walking barefoot more even on pavement and am starring to crave it! Less foot pain but replaced with a new bit of foot pain that's different and more comfortable as if the feet just adjusting in a healthy way. Moving slowly with being on feet more cause had gotten overly sedentary awhile so am easing into being more active. Just got a job that allows option of being barefoot too!!
First, no. Second, after almost ripping my right big toe nail off when I caught it on a stick while running through the woods on the second day of summer camp in 1984, I will only wear closed toe sandels like Keen H2's. I do go bear foot when I can and am interested in working on wearing bear foot shoes.
excellent info! the only issue I have had is blisters on the forefoot... due to having high arch. curently working out how to strike to avoid this
I find blisters come when I land with my foot in front of my center of gravity. I think this is partly why I find the "land on your forefoot" advice I received when starting out not particularly helpful. If you only work on your foot position, and not where it is relative to the rest of your body, the mechanics are the same as with heel striking, except you won't have any padding and your thinner metatarsal bones will have to absorb all the force. I got a metatarsal fracture (self diagnosed, not actually positive this was the problem) by landing on my forefoot without making adjustments to where my foot was, relative to my center of mass, as I landed. Stay tuned for the running technique video in which I'll try to explain this.
@@petertardigrade4485 thanks Peter! that helped
What shoes are in the thumbnail?
And great video! My fiancè and I are ready to make the switch😊
Very interesting video Thanks !!!
Thank you for this amazing and inspirating video!
I have a question, is this model of running kan relief my disc herniation or I mustr go on with conventional shoes?
I used to enjoy barefoot with everything at the age of 6 (we're poor and shoes are luxurious items) and developed high-end power run and iron skin feels like making me feel indestructible played soccer without injuries (at least i don't do Neymar pussy tricks 😂).
Today i maybe needs more time for transition back to barefoot running. Except from normal shoes to zero drop shoes like Altra or Vibram five fingers.
You're not gonna believe me if I tell you that I just buy Vibram FF komodo the old model and use it for 50km trail running tomorrow.
I thought it was the most idiot decision I have ever made. What I did not expect or understand is what I learned during the running. It seems that the word "muscle memories" that I believe is not exist, turns out it was true. I struggle for the 1st hour running trail when suddenly it starts to get better and well. All the patterns barefoot run early days for 18 years returned to me. But of course, in slow run mode. At least i don't stop since it is a battle of attrition after all. Not bad for 73 minutes transition from shoes to Vibram FF komodo and I finished the run without DNF in 16 hours 42 minutes.
I hope my share stories will might help you with this sandal running because I made it with my own DIY without buying it. Thanks 😉👍
My problem with barefoot was not the issues with the bottom of my feet, rather I have stubbed my toe so often that I have night mares which include stubbing my toe.
Do we need to get a pair of barefoot shoes only for running? What about walking and normal life?
Why the other marks ( nike, adidas, new balance, asics..balenciaga..) still produce the unhealthy type of shoes with high ankles ?
Look for Mexican Raramuri runners, these guys are very good at running in huaraches
Yes, the Raramuri people are the authors of this idea. I'm just trying to bring it to my own life.
Will this still work for flat duck feet people 😅
I have noooo arch. However still interested in running sandals
Is it okay to run with barefoot sandals on concrete roads??
Is it possible to run with sandals on asphalt?
what sandals does Randy Kreill show?
But I don't wanna be without any shoe, I don't trust the ground of my city, would I have all these benefits if I start directly with the minimalist sandals?
I started running in traditional shoes and got tons of knee and shin pain. I then learned about the barefoot movement and went to barefoot shoes, and yet I STILL after 2 years have shin pain when I run. I've recently switched to full on barefoot (about 2 months ago), hoping that is the key....
Barefoot feels amazing. You have to try it. It will probably be difficult at first, but once you settle in, it really is great.
Started practicing barefoot running with vibram fivefingers and minimalist shoes. Took me year and half to adjust. Felt great, was able to run 10km until i started having metatarstalgia in left foot. For the past two years I am not able to run/walk in minimalist shoes. If shoe not wide or soft enough, i start feefling pain. Anyone haf similar experience or has good advice how to solve this issue? I dream about running again barefoot and long distances.
I don't give health advice, but I've been helped a lot from Northwest Foot & Ankle. They have a TH-cam channel
What about flatfeet??
may i ask, what is that “foot shaped shoe” on the left at 1:55? would love to be kind to my toes when they need to be covered
Lems Boulder Boot Waterproof
Can someone recommend a good minimalist barefoot shoe/sandal?
Do you live in Oakland? Asking cuz of the shirt.
I watched your video on how to make barefoot sandals, thanks but there is no way i can make my own! What brand do you recommend for a total barefoot beginner.
Shamma Sandals is great for the most adjustable, durable, customizable sandal. Xero shoes makes slightly cheaper ones, which have really great durability.
Xero Shoes has a simple kit where you can make your own barefoot sandals for about $20
Be sure to wear the correct size.
Running barefoot in the mountains, put the Rarramuris in the map😊😊😊
Ive started doing barefoot running this summer after having tried zero drop thin running shoes last year. My big question is what am i going to do once winter comes around and it becomes too cold too run completely barefoot. Is it possible to run in snow using barefoot sandals or do i need to go looking for even thinner running shoes.
That’s interesting, thank you.
I wear mostly no shoes the most I can ... even at work I am barefoot when it’s possible 😬 ...
I don’t like shoes anymore , I have the feeling I can’t breath ...
We must have lungs into our feet ! 😀
I would like to give a try to minimal shoes , more to walk than to run in my case ;
Actually minimal sandals with free toes , but the sandals you showed us here are having a lace between toes , like flip-flops ...
I have room enough between my big toe and second toe ( I love grabbing things on the floor with my feet ; my girlfriend says I have monkey toes 😅... ) , but I really don’t like a lace between toes ...
All this to my point : could you please give me some advice or orientation to get such a kind of sandal , if any ?
Thank you !
You may like the Xero Shoes Z Trek or Z Trail Sandals. No strap between the toes.
@@jshaw6600 Thanks, now we need my wife and I to sort out a retailer in France ! :-)
Why do you hold your hands so low while running?
Hello Peter noce ti meet you.very interesting!I'm a beginner barefoot runner I'm trying ti run with vivo barefoot and simil dove finger but my calv are getting hard likes a Stone.What Is tour addice?with altra Torino I run Halh marathon.thx
Go slowly, your calf must become more flexible to run without a heel drop. It's a huge adjustment, and time is the only way. You can gently stretch your calves if you want, but it will still take a few months.
A doctor friend of mine who also runs in the minimalist barefoot stuff says that on recovery days after a long run I should run and more cushion shoes to break it up. and For road marathon he races In racing shoes. Opinions
I think cushion shoes aren't good for recovery, but I'm not a doctor. I think a lot of people recover less than they need to, and if you have to use structured footwear to protect you while you recover, you aren't letting yourself recover enough.
@@petertardigrade4485 working now on seeing if I can run a fast marathon in my five fingers or something similar. Trying to qualify for Boston. These times have gone down since these so-called super shoes. Turning 60 in may so my time standard also goes up. Only perk I get
Been trying to run barefoot but these aren't available freely in India .
Do you know any common causes for posterior tibialis pain? I started getting it after a couple weeks of barefoot running and I wonder what running mistake it corresponds to.
Thanks for the video, appreciate all the information you put out here!
My resource for dealing with problems has always been Northwest Foot and Ankle. Maybe they have an article for you?