Just a warning for everyone: Take the last part of this video seriously. Don't run in them when you start out. Even if you're about to miss a train and be late for work. I didn't listen and managed to get a stress fracture in my left midfoot. It took about 3 months for the fracture to heal, and another 9 months for the pain to go away. It's only been about two months now that I can walk without pain again.
Woah so that's what happened to me. just happened to start trying to run again and didnt feel like buying running shoes and ended up not being able to do it for a few months. My doctor must have been right about the type of injury but it was a couple months before I got an mri for it and by then I had rehabilitated naturally
@@smallman9787 quite possible. It's unfortunate that you got your mri late, because it actually looked really cool while it was healing ^^' But I'm glad you're doing better now!
Guys I've never had barefoot shoes. Bought some and immediately used them for everyday walking + running (only couple hundred meters, not real jogging or endurance training!! Just as information for you people) and the gym. Nothing really felt different except my feet feeling more blood circulation and a bit hot, also felt more exhausting first 3 days? Something wrong with my shoes or I'm just lucky nothing happened? (I never used running shoes before, I walk around in "normal" Nike sneakers usually)
For me the reason shoes/trainers are more cushioned is because the world we traverse (now) is now largely concrete. I'd happily run around barefoot, no shoes, if we walked on grass/jungle/mud etc, like we used to but we don't. Anytime I wear shoes with a very thin heel (Converse All Star for example) my knees take the brunt and I'm in agony for a while after but when I wear my Nike Pegasus around town I have no such problems and, so far, no issue with my feet becoming pointed either. To be honest I don't like that there is a debate about this because to me it always feels like one or the other is trying to push a product or sell something and at this point (no pun intended) it's mostly the barefoot community. Wear what is comfortable and affordable to you, end of story.
I used to wear all stars. These shoes may have thin soles but they are too stiff and do not allow much bending of the arch which reduces its flexibility. Moreover, they are too narrow. My bunion problems began from youth when I was mostly wearing these shoes. Thin soles should also be flexible. Much better if there is also much toe space.
You cannot heel strike while barefoot. Heel striking is a counternatural walking gait we developed to adapt to our thick heeled shoes. Try a forefoot strike walking/running style: well cushioned even on hard, flat surfaces, and far "springier" and energy efficient than heel striking.
You should try changing the way you walk, walking shouldnt be painful. Like masonthonas2799 said, try a flatter walking style. My walking style changed to be a lot flatter and my posture while walking changed, for the better, to allow for it
@@masonthomas2799so...don't activate your glutes then. Gotcha. People shouldn't tip toe their way through life either. For running/scrimmage shoes, they have a "cushioned heel" to discourage a heel strike. For quick pivoting. You are quoting propaganda if you believe that we would even be using our full core without the heel strike.
What you feel comfortable in is highly correlated with how you walk. Of course, if you don't step lightly, less cushion underneath your foot will make your joints hurt. Barefoot walking is different from cushioned shoe walking.
I as a water park lifeguard for two years I worked barefoot or had minimalist shoes on concrete and in water. In the military I wore boots, both steel toe and ordinary, and I’ve used both thin soled shoes and thick custom sole expensive running shoes. The way I walk wearing any of these is entirely different. I think people need to understand that there isn’t a singular option for all situations and that knowing what you’ll expect out of the day should change how you chose to go into it. Different kinds of foot wear exist for to fill a different roll and to cater to a different need or foot shape, or to accommodate for an issue someone might be having. People that insist that they have the one solution for all problems are just jackasses.
I was thinking the whole time, Show me a steel toe version. also my feet just hurt on concrete. like a lot, I have always landed with the side of my foot or just a light amount of heal from walking bare foot the majority of my childhood. But I would like something more flexible with how my foot is very narrow when I pick it up but very wide when I step down.
@@TheBSishere - for what it's worth: my experience in looking to achieve those same goals, I've found that for casual daily use I do well with a larger shoe. Some of those are able to tighten down enough through lacing to prevent rubbing and blistering if I need to run or go on a longer hike. I also rarely use the stock insole alone - I'm usually replacing that with something that suits my arch better, or at least adding a thin liner on top of the stock one. Hope your search goes well!
Exactly. Used to work in a lumberyard and which I’d have worn steel toed boots a few times. Similarly when it rains I wear rain boots - which aren’t the most comfortable but they keep my feet dry.
What i dont understand : "Why are minimalist shoes being sold for maximalist prices?" As you sort of said, no padding, no exotic materials, just the bare minimals. If prices were more reasonable id reckon more people would switch.
It's always like this. I have the same problem with products that contain parfume like shampoo, soap, washing powder etc. due to allergies. The few who don't have parfume added are always the most expensive. Add less product = add extra price.
@@Nathan_Bookwurm If they cant parfume the product, they have to use better quality stuff in it. Things which don't smell badly. I accept a higher price for non-parfumed products. I choose them simply because I don't like the smell of the parfuned ones. The problem is that non-parfumed things aren’t in every shop. I think they actually have less profit on them!
I can’t speak for the other shoe companies, but Vivo are high priced because of being a regenerative business. They have a great way of doing business which makes sure that everything and everyone on the chain to producing the shoe is paid a good wage, treated with respect and is able to be sustained for many years.
I'm not sure of it but maybe economies of scale are at play here, most of the industry is focused on "standard" shoes so if they make something different it's more expensive.
@@BenVallack I have for quite some time been wearing leather soled shoes with a hard leather heel. I used to have the same mentality as barefoot "minimalist shoe wearers. I was hoping that the fact that its hard and not cushioned, would cause my feet get stronger, and I would put less stress on my joints for longevity of the body. But I have also noticed after longs days of work more often pain and in my legs and feet. The question it brings up for me is if the shoe is compressing less and taking less of that impact for us, that doesn't that mean we actually put more stress on our joints? It could also very well be the fact that dress shoes do not compare to barefoot shoes as they do have a heel and are quite hard.
@@pyotrilyichtchaikovsky3733 I'm not the maker of the video, but I can answer this. Basically, the natural way of running at speed is to land on the forefoot as was said in the video. When we do land on our forefoot, our tendons and muscles (for example, the calf muscle and Achilles tendon) take all the force of the landing. This produces no wear and tear (as long as you do not overuse your tendons and muscles to the point of breakdown), because muscles and tendons are elastic and self-repair. However, if you land on your heel, then your muscles and tendons cannot contribute to taking the force of the landing because you are landing straight onto the bone of your foot. This force is transmitted through your body including your knees and hips. The larger the force, the greater the chances of injury or breakdown with every step. This is why heelstriking causes a higher rate of injury amongst runners. To answer your question - if you do heelstrike while walking/running, then wearing a thinner shoe WILL put stress on your joints. If you feel pain, than this could be the reason. The strength of your feet is only relevant when landing on the forefoot (the ball of the foot), because only there can the muscles of the toe, foot and calf get involved. Dress shoes may make it difficult to walk with more of a forefoot focus because they have a heel and a very solid sole, which limits the flexion of the foot and the involvement of the toes. Hope I helped.
For people living in cities or anywhere where they're walking mostly on hard surfaces, with barefoot shoes just imagine you're living on a mountain-beach and you have to walk with no shoes all day on rocks. First few minutes would feel good, but if you have to travel more you'd quickly get very tired by just WALKING and very soon you'd find yourself using your heel more and more, ending the day very tired and with all joints damaged. But if you have to walk short distances or walk mostly on dirt/grass is totally worth switching to barefoot shoes.
I didn't even know there was a barefoot movement until I accidentally transformed my feet. I was laid off during the pandemic, and became a stay at home partner after, and started going barefoot all day every day. It wasn't until I realized regular shoes didn't fit anymore and I started researching it that I figured out what was going on.
@@shish_taoukwell no. Since barefoot shoes are really bad for your feet. Realistically you should really only wear shoes and go barefoot equally. A balanced fair of both.
@@shish_taouk……barefoot minimalist is all I will wear unless I am hunting and then my dad makes me wear boots. I put them on then feel like I’m clunking around in my boots.
Been doing that for years now though and...what? Does everyone need to have a special plotline lol? Ive never needed any barefoot shoes. Are yall sure you arent just severely susceptible to "you are special" marketing tactics?
@@Tinylittledansonman Your feet are just stuck squished. You are on a video irrelevant to you. That’s you looking for a “plot line” I guess Others have had the problem for a while and they just now are making foot shaped shoes that’s aren’t TOE shoes. So it’s new to you. Not to anyone else
Excellent video. I am elderly and obese. Barefoot walking has significantly helped improve my balance: I can now go up and down steps sequentially instead of one at a time. When I walk, I focus on lifting my rib cage to improve my posture, and on powering each stride from my glutes and hamstrings. I try to glide my foot into contact with the terrain like I’m landing an airplane, so the strike, though affecting the entire sole, is more centered in the midsole region. Where I live, we have very uneven sidewalks, and my feet are now not only stronger but also more sensitive to these defects so they don’t trip me up.
the best thing by far i've seen for improving posture is hanging from a pullup bar, even for less than 4 minutes a day without putting all of your weight on it. also pullup bars are cheap to get.
as a semi-retired disabled US Army Vet of 14 years... i have a normal job but still get a minimal disability payment each month for both feet and nerve damage in my ears (tinnitus)... my feet were pretty much my life from 18-32 years old. doing police work even in the Military you're on your feet when you're not driving a vehicle... folks call it, gumshoe feet, foot patrol feet, nurse's feet, the doctors call it Plantar fasciitis. so for my life i've lived at home in sandals, house shoes, basically barefoot with cold weather warm soft shoes (no socks) and minimal protection when i have to pop outside for a few minutes... but elsewhere? US Army/DOD regulations require athletic shoes and so forth for Physical Training in uniform. of course everybody knows about craptastical DOD issued footwear, dress shoes, combat boots... and how the civilian combat boot companies have been decades more advanced and comfortable and less injurious. so i went civilian boots as soon as i could and never looked back. after getting out of the Army i worked in rounded toe sneakers in factories. today i cook pizzas and wear slip stop shoes with rounded toes. i wore rounded toed Army boots and sneakers to work out in back then. i've got kinda sorta wide foot ball width feet so (with my orthotics) i wear a wide width shoe. so, when i could i went 'barefoot' and never even heard of 'the movement'... but alot of my life basically injured my feet till today... if i don't wear orthotics the damage to my heels and plantar tendons starts back up again and if anybody knows podiatry... unless new surgeries have happened... you dick up your plantar tendons? you're effed. might as well cut that foot off and learn how to use a prosthetic foot. my dad was born flat-footed (archless) and i have 'false arches'... so we both were genetically predisposed for plantar problems. pops wore 'corrective shoes' for years as a child and those forced his feet to grow arches... but of course the 1950's through 60's didn't have MRI and motion capture and foot pressure sensitive diagnostics like we have today... so my pop's 20 year Air Force career ruined his plantars so badly that... he was always in pain, always wearing braces to sleep in... podiatrist visits every few months to double-check his custom orthotics... every once in a while pops could get a steroid shot in his heels to increase healing and reduce damage and pops shopped for shoes like a girl does, always looking for THAT PERFECT PAIR. so, what does the barefoot 'movement' say about plantar damage? i noticed the video guy doesn't have strong ankle support in the pairs he showed off. they're high but they're floppy cloth. how does the barefoot 'movement' answer to ankle damage? rolling? sprains? trust me, ankle damage sucks hot sweaty donkey ballzz! wearing walking/running sneakers in Panama, i've experienced a nigh on inverted foot roll which caused a Class 3 Ankle Sprain with tendon damage, and 3 stress fractured foot bones. and all i was doing was stepping backwards out of a full sized 'cattle truck' Ford Maxi Van and PLOP suddenly i'm on my azz FROM my foot landing in a pavement pothole more than 4" deep. i ended up in a solid, toes to knee bend, fiberglass, full cast for SIX MONTHS! with a US Army full bird Colonel podiatrist doing x-rays and MRI on my leg once a week for the first 2 months. then once a month afterwards and another six months of physical therapy out of the cast. i was wearing slowly lowering versions of a brace still under that doctor's care for that second half a year. i basically spent a year of my life doing office drudge work, gimping around on crutches, wearing my ARMY PT gear and one sneaker, then two sneakers. it was damned embarrassing!
I wear barefoot shoes but dont believe they're best for everyone. Many claims are not evidence based. However plantar fasciitis is pretty much all we talk about. Once you've healed from the acute injury (wearing cushioned and arch support) you can strengthen your foot either with exercises or slowly wearing more barefoot shoes. Because barefoot shoes will allow your feet to move and use muscle they result in less plantar fasciitis in the long term if the transition is done right. This is my experience as well and after having periods of cramping or plantar fasciitis since childhood I no longer get them, and no longer need specialised insoles. Barefoot shoes result in less ankle injuries so there isnt the same need for rigid support. Since there is improved feedback, you literally have improved balance and fewer falls or twists. It's one of their main benefits and why they can be recommended for aging individuals as well as situations like hiking/scrambling.
Look at the wear pattern on his shoes at around 7:13. No different than you'd see on 90% of 'regular' shoes. If the 'minimalist' shoes were actually different, the wear pattern would reflect that. The only advantages I can see: lightweight, lower to the ground. He posted an affiliate link. The whole video was a fluff piece to get you to click the link, and make him a few $.
@@dfunited1 as if you know anything. Don’t spout bull about “wear pattern” from a frame of an edited video. He is selling something, but you have a personal interest in going against him too. If you pretend it’s all fake, you don’t have to think about changing your lifestyle.
I loved this little break down but in fact a lot of the pointy shoe design did not necessarily come from rich people simply hating on poor people, but since many of the ruling class rode horses pointed shoes were MUCH easier to allow you to slip your foot shoe and all into the stirrup so you could ride the horse without falling off the most popular example of this is in cowboy shoes often seen in the midwest the point toe allows ease of slipping into the stirrup its also why they often have flat slippery leather soles to allow them to even more easily slip into the stirrup.
All fashion trends had their beginnings in something practical, that was then adopted by elite class as stylized imitation fashion, without the practical "hey, we need and use this", and then became a status symbol to parade in front of the plebians. I'm sure things like makeup started practically, probably in theatre, was then copied by the wealthy (theatre with costumes and makeup not being accessible to the poor), etc. Case in point, pointed shoes worn by knights, who could afford a separate set of riding shoes and make frequent use of them, well, knighting was for the wealthy, so even wealthy non-knights started wearing them, but without the hardcore practical design aspects, just as a stylized imitation version. In general, "high fashion" is purposely about being impractical, so show off to others how wealthy you are and how little manual labor (or anything else practical for that matter) you need to be doing. Pointy shoes, high heels, make up, long fingernails, fancy dress, fancy hair, delicate any and everything, corsets, heck, even throw foot binding in there, since there's no way you could grow up to adulthood with bound feet without being wealthy and having an army of people looking after all your needs.
@Marius 007 I mean. We can look at recent trends. Look at 4x4 vehicles. I've been an offroad enthusiast my entire life. I'm a farmer. 4x4s and heavy duty trucks are a necessity for my line of work - look how many workhorse vehicles became luxurious family mobiles. Guys running stretched tires on brand new 4x4s. Work boots - there's a huge following online for guys buying work boots for fashion. Pocket knives - tons of folks have $500+ knives they'll never use for a status symbol. I mean they're smaller less impactful things.. but Trends I've seen change in my lifetime. As far as the actual video - I bought minimalist combat boots when I was in the Army. They weren't awful.. but up to that point in my life all I had to compare them to were steel toe pull on work boots. I didn't really notice a substantial improvement in anything. Those boots were crazy comfortable for those long hauls where you're in boots for 48+ hours.
idk what's with your videos. One moment I am watching a man use a treadmill desk and two button keyboards, the next moment I am interested in how I actually walk. Your content is always great, and your point of view on all things ergo and practical is phenomenal. Keep up the great work!
@@BenVallack I also think there is the problem of potentially glorifying poverty if you had no shoes in the past or poor ones today at least in the west it is likely due to poverty.
So i'm one of the wierdos that played barefoot outside as a kid almost exclusively except for sport, and continue to do so today. Heel striking is totally normal. I never had barefoot shoes until I got a corporate job and my feet started to ache in heeled pointy boots. Traded them out after 6 months and I'm so happy. I think the surface you are on is the biggest issue. You walk naturally how you should barefoot. Watch kids who are 1 year in to walk, it's fascinating how well they move. Great video!
@@dawnforlife in the states a lot of people, especially older people, will make comments about you if you're barefoot. i grew up in a small woodsy town and always spent most of my time barefoot and only wore shoes into town and to school. i moved to a small city and even if i'm simply taking out the garbage i have neighbors that point out that i'm barefoot, as if i was unaware. lol. also a lot of old people scolding me for not making my kids wear shoes when we play in the grass. it's weird to me but it's because of these interactions that i've realized that most of america prefers shoes always, at least the older generations do.
@@lettus143 It’s due to health hazards like broken glass and parasites like hookworm. Hookworm got so bad that it effected the population of the American south so bad that it caused a stereotype of them being dumb and lazy which was true bc they were sick from hookworm making them lethargic and such
Yep I grew up barefoot and still do go mostly. We also don’t allow shoe wearing in the house. I encourage my kids not wear shoes outside as much as possible to except when we are in our livestock pens
Being flat of foot and having tried all sorts of shoes with arch supports, even bespoke orthotics, I absolutely love my barefoot shoes. I started in Vibrams with the separated toes for the gym and I just splashed out on Vivobarefoot Balerinas which make me feel as if I want to fly. I'll have to chuck all my other shoes because I just know they're now going to feel like concrete by comparison. Of course, foot exercises also help with this. I can walk far longer and with no blisters and less stress and effort. I even think my arches feel more pronounced. I'll never go back. Just a technical comment, though. As a former radio broadcaster, your edits are ridiculously tight: with truncated word endings, sentences running unnaturally into one another and no time for listeners to keep up with your dialogue because your natural pauses have been cut. Large editing gaps not only mimic natural conversation, they give the brain time to keep up with the myriad changes in topic. I also think that a slightly slower pace would make the important information you are imparting easier to digest.
I used to have flat flat arches. I'd go to a snowboard shop show them my feet and ask for insoles and they would immediately point me to the flattest sole. I've been minimalist barefoot for 3 years now. Last time I went to buy new insoles the bootfitter looked at my feet and thought I was a mid or high soler! You will develop an arch from it.
I've never worn barefoot shoes but I grew up wearing converse and other skate shoes because anything that wasn't a flat sole felt really weird to me. I didn't really know anything about the difference between heel striking and walking normally until this video, but it totally aligns with my experience. When I had to get some more supportive shoes for work recently I had to basically learn to heel strike more often. Edit: I was never claiming that shoes with flatter soles are like barefoot shoes, or that Converse are in any way inherently more ergonomic (they've killed my feet before too, their build quality sucks since the Nike acquistion, and they've killed my feet before too). I'm simply sharing my experience.
OMGG!! I've had the exact same experience. the flat, dense padding of converse and vans makes for a more natural stride in my opinion. i always liked those shoes because digging my heel first into the ground as i walk just felt extremely strange to me, even if i felt """faster"""", almost as if i was generating more power with each step.
you have to have a deeper understanding here and there are many resources,books and research that could help you. The whole muscle-tendon system of feet and legs changes dramatically after switching to barefoot or barefoot shoes. This does not occur in one day and it requires much and specific exercises to make a smooth transition and to avoid injuries. You see, mechanotrunsduction results in our tendons and muscles getting shorter over time, so transitioning to a zero elevated heel could put much tension at the back, hips and could stress the body. After the transition is completed, which takes a different amount of time and effort for each individual, the whole gait pattern changes, the alignment of spine changes, the weight is distributed evenly, toes get more range of movement, arch muscle is activated, nervous system of foot's sole is stimulated and blood supply on feet is regained to the fullest.
I swapped to barefoot shoes for a few years and my feet are a lot stronger and better. The problem is that I needed to switch back after a couple of years because I had some knee pain. As you said a toe strike walk is awkward and sub-optimal so as much as I would try, I always switched back to having a heel strike walk. I always toe strike when I run and now I have my barefoot shoes for running, snow, hiking, and play, but for work I'll wear some shoes with a cushion because I don't want to damage myself because I walk on those ultra hard surfaces for about 8 hours a day. I work on my feet, so I'm standing on it that long. Although I'm pro-barefoot shoes, they will always be bad if you're standing on tile and concrete for 8 hours a day. I would like just wide toe box shoes with a little padding so I can use them at work.
Altra make cushioned foot-shaped trainers. Also, all Birkenstock are wide toe box and zero drop, but they do come with their cork sole. You can take that out in some models.
I'd like wide toe box cushioned shoes with arch support for standing for long periods. They're either only trainers, which not everywhere allows, don't have cushioning and support, or you can only get a wider toe box in wide shoes. I don't have wide feet, so they are to loose everywhere else. I just need a wider toe box due to tailor's bunions caused by a combination of genetics and wearing regular shoes (women's shoes look nice, but are mean to feet).
Let me know if you find a cushioned wide toe box- I work on my feet on concrete and I take shoes to change at lunch- toe squeeze and bottom of the feet happy, or happy toes and ball of the foot/ heel pain. If Alta made a thicker cushioned one, that would be awesome.
I’m a runner who transitioned to barefoot shoes (the old five fingers). Thank you for stressing the need to slowly transition, many tried to swap over without an adjustment period, only to end up injured. I have now settled on a brand called Altra which is zero drop with a wide toe box. They have padding, it’s hard running ultra bush marathons without some padding. I have no problems with knees or hips, it just seems very natural now.
Personally I prefer Topos as they give a slightly better feel on the forefoot. They also last longer!! Each to their own. My VFF’s are still going strong after 2000+ miles. I just can’t wear them out !!!
When I switched to Altra, my pantar faciitis went away and my little toe that was curling in and causing pain straightened out. On smooth surfaces without any gravel or rocks, I prefer barefoot running, but most courses I need the Altras.
Also 6 years into barefoot shoes, cheers. Has been a change for the better in almost every way (the expense and style rarity being the few cons). Worth it for me.
A few years ago my husband and I started running but I had the hardest time with it- half a mile in I'd have terrible knee pain and shin splints. I bought fancy high cushioned running shoes, but that just made it worse. Then my husband started talking about barefoot shoes- I thought he was crazy 😂 But eventually I tried them and loved them! Since switching to barefoot shoes my pain went away completely and I can actually run! It was a slow transition/process but it was definitely worth it! *Edit- A lot of people have suggested that it was my overall level of fitness and not the shoes that make the difference. Recently I've tried cushioned running shoes of the regular variety and with a wider toe box. The knee and shin pain came back pretty quickly. And no, I didn't go into wearing the cushioned shoes hoping they'd fail. I had high hopes particularly for the wide toe box shoes- I thought they could be good for longer runs. But they weren't and I just can't wear them. If cushioned, running shoes work for you then great! But barefoot running shoes genuinely do work best for me. Just because I greatly abridged my barefoot journey for the UA-cam comments section doesn't mean it wasn't a careful, well thought out, well researched opinion. Best of luck picking your own running shoes!
I`ve had a lot of issues with my knee after an accident, but found that using "flat" soled shoes helped a lot, it makes you walk more naturally, at kleast for me (:
And have you tried normal old style flat running shoes? I don't like any of those new shoes that look like they stuck a slab of styrofoam underneath them. Flat sneakers work great for me. Barefoot shoes only seem like another extreme on the scale of shoe types. There can be too little and too much cushioning.
@@sabir1208 Well that too. I am all for walking. People think running is better but it's not. Walk the same distance and you burn the same amount of calories. And you'll actually be able to enjoy your surroundings. And you can do it until you're 100 years old.
I've not been wearing barefoot shoes for too long but I've noticed an increase already in my resilience when walking. The transition has been easy for me as I've never worn tight shoes. I have been a tad concerned about the heel striking on concrete surfaces when walking a lot, but I noticed very quickly that my body was adjusting the way it walked in the same way that it would whenever I walk around without shoes on - which is all the time at home and around the garden. I honestly think everyone should embrace barefoot shoes, especially when running!
If you're heel striking you need to work on your hips they're too tight which is not letting you place feet down gently, ankles need work too, lots of stretching and yoga and you'll see your foot goes down nice and light
One thing not mentioned here, is I found I really appreciate the tactile feeling of using a minimalist shoe. We have a lot of feeling in our feet, but regular shoes is as if you had thick mittens on your hands all the time. There is a portion of sidewalk near my house that has brick for a while on either end of a bus stop, and I usually veer over to it because I can feel the individual bricks under my feet. If tree roots push up ridges in sidewalk, you feel that and your feet also mold around it vs just see-sawing over the pivot. I feel much more connected and less likely to twist my ankle. I appreciate the comments about heel striking when walking. If I'm doing a ton of fast walking on concrete, I do find it easier to use slightly thicker soles and be looser with the heel striking, but still feel like I can easily adjust the gait for comfort. Or if I'm suddenly walking over bumpy grass, it makes sense to go a bit more forefoot at that point.
Hiking barefoot really made me aware that our feet are sensory organs. It was so cool to feel the differences in moisture and temperature, soft vs hard, etc. All the stuff we would miss with shoes on.
Oh man, I sure would appreciate all those times I stepped on huge, pointed upwards shards of broken glass bottles and nails on the street so much more, if my shoe soles were like 3 mm thick.
@@Даниил-н8н I mean obviously if you're constantly stepping on broken bottles and nails, you need more protection, but not everyone is in that situation. Just because people in certain factory or construction jobs need steel toe boots doesn't mean everyone else is being reckless not wearing those boots all the time.
Bare everywhere, I've found a few distinct gaits have popped up: Comfiest ground walk (grass, moss): Heel strike, very efficient, somewhat fast, good for a long walk taking minimal energy Rough ground walk: Middle/flat strike for a wider surface taking the grit, noticeably more knee/quad engagement to slow/absorb the impact (like a mini squat) Slippy/muddy/incline/decline walk: Forefoot with active toe spreading and clawing, you can get so much grip by digging into the ground and clasping it, applying weight just on forefoot let's you sink deeper. Having toes spread in all directions reduces slip too as some toes are always against the slip grain Running: Virtually always forefoot, the rougher the ground the more knee bending/mini squatting to absorb impact, mid footing where really bad, but the speed of forefoot is mad It's so cool how they do it themselves, free those dogs
Worked in hospitality for 13 years, on my feet all the time, I can tell you now, barefoot shoes would kill your posture on hard surfaces over long periods of time. Shifting around weight constantly and such on hard surfaces requires the padding in conventional modern shoes. Each type of shoe has its purpose though. Some of the people i used to do fencing with, loved barefoot shoes for it (wooden bouncy floors and grass surfaces). Hiking though, I always felt boots and shoes were a hit or miss, but recently transitioned to a very expensive pair of lowa boots and I have never felt more comfortable in a shoe. Big topic you should mention are socks, they make a world of difference and many people forget to talk about it or not realise how important they are. Looser fitting boots ( to accommodate your feet's natural swelling during strenuous walking) and wool socks make a world of difference in boots for hiking and general wear.
Exactly this. Long distance walking or continuous standing ruins my hip or ankle but when on grass this so rarely causes an issue compared to in a city
I did years of foot heavy jobs. Fedex driver, Mover, dock worker on hard concrete and ceramic flooring. Football, on basically compressed rock with the presences of grass. Hard cleated shoes on that shit or frozen ground is the most brutal feeling in my life. Blisters the size or golf balls with no time to stop will kill your soul. All that to say this. Flat shoes are just better. Toes space is better. Football cleats, American style or what I call soccer just suck. Honesty, I like Barefoot shoes the most but a good pair of boots are fantastic. I have some Sorels with the wools lining and they are heaven though they are a tad big and have a heel. You cannot beat a good pair of those besides the fact they are winter boots.
Unless I'm going somewhere more rugged, I kind of went with a different option with moccasins that have a thicker sole because I'm not wearing something very flexible when in rougher areas and I like to have some cushioning in the shoe.
The new Maury thing is spot on. I switched to barefoot and minimalist running in 2009, and ended up with a stress fracture in my foot because I did way too much way too soon. Went to the doc, got orthotics, rested, got healthy, transitioned gradually, ran a marathon pain free in my silly toe shoes (FiveFingers). I haven’t worn a “normal” shoe since 2009, and I’m never going back.
I have Leguano’s shoes and when I went in the store and asked for info, that was in Germany and she said I could try them out and there was different underground like wood, stones and so on and she even said try it on the street. She also told me that I should build up the time onweer the shoes. Because my body needs readjust to it. I walk at home and in my garden always barefoot except in winter. Like on beaches I love barefooted. We do flyball a dogsport and it has happened I forgot to put on my shoes. It’s a good middle ground of my husbandtelling me to wear shoes and being my own. I’m raised on walking running barefoot till age 7, than had to wear shoes for school and moving to the city. So every opportunity was no shoes if possible.
Im having Leguano’s barefoot shoes, but got the advice to build up the time of wearing them. Because although I’m walking barefoot in my home and garden on the beach or grass places when at a flyball tournament she still advices to build up. So my body could readjusted. Because for the rest I still wear regular shoes. I have what they call ballet feet I did ballet for some years as a hobby but still did it long days training.
I'm planning on running a marathon in about 8 months. I'm playing with the idea of switching to barefoots but I'm a bit in doubt if I'll have enough time to get used to it and be ready for such a long distance (also given I rarely run but rather go skating / cycling etc.). How long did it take you to be able to run a marathon on them? Probably the safer bet is to be a pair to wear casually and get used to "normal" walking on these types of shoes first.
I love my barefoot shoes! But I also love my "normal" cushioned shoes. When I want to have a cozy hike, comfortable day at work, small walk or such, I go for the barefoot shoes, since it feels more like, yeah, barefoot, it makes me think about my steps, etc etc. But for example for running I choose my cushioned running shoes, because of its features and the firm ground, or for biking I also wear harder soled shoes, because it feels too awkward to have the feet curl around the pedals 😅 I think, it's like choosing a tool: what do you want to do? Choose the right option to achieve the goal, and neither one is the ultimate answer for everything.
It depends on the type of running you do. There is actual evidence that suggests long distance running is better with “minimal shoes” (more like barefoot) for foot and leg health.
As an engineer, I can say this video is the finest, most accurate one I've ever seen about minimalist footwear. In layman's terms it's this simple: When your feet land, the force upon contact with the ground MUST go somewhere. The biggest misconception out there is that shoe padding will somehow magically absorb and make this force disappear. This is completely WRONG. When that foam is compressed, it simply sends the force back up through your legs, with the hips, lower back, and even your neck paying the price. If you're obese, like most of us are to some degree, the best thing you can do for your feet and joints is lose weight and thereby reducing the landing force. Again, this is an EXCELLENT video.
Correct... but, as a fellow engineer, you forgot about impulse. That's what padding reduces and the whole point of airbags and other padding based protection. The force still gets applied but your muscles and legaments can learn to deal with it. A reduced impulse can have huge effects when done right.
First, pointed shoes come from horse riding. After the invention of stirrups the pointed shoe with a high heel became popular because it was easier to get your foot into the stirrups and hold position while riding. It started with knights and went into the noble classes from there.
When I was a kid, I got a pair of moccasins I wore regularly for 10 years- they were the kind with no rubber or plastic, a sole made of the same hide as the rest, and a little bit of cushion in the sole. They were super flexible and light, but gave me enough protection to walk on rocky or hot surfaces. To me, those will always be the best shoes I've ever had. I will forever be searching for a new identical pair. I could feel the ground and use my feet as if I was barefoot, but my feet were still protected and cushioned. I walked and ran on a wide variety of surfaces from asphalt to grass, climbed trees, hiked in the desert and mountain forests, went to school, and rode horses bareback in those moccasins. The one and only flaw was the deerhide laces were not as effective as they could have been.
if youre ok with saving up for them and are willing to do the leather maintenance to make them last a decade or two, catskill moccasins does custom fits of this type of shoe with whatever design you want (of course the price goes up the more stuff you add or if you want taller boots instead of shoes, but idk ur preferences) and they have a good reputation. I suggest taking a look through the websites finished projects and individual component pricing to see if they actually offer the options you want and if the pricing for that is worth it to you
@@nootshoo3993 Oh, thank you! I've been wanting to do this for many years, and can't find anywhere in Canada. Will check that out. I had real mukluks when I was a preteen, but forget about getting real ones now. No seal skin allowed. And before you say anything, yeah they are cute. So are all the other animals, but I sill eat meat and wear leather.
I used barefoot shoes a while ago and the only issue I had with them was when the surface I was running on got really hot. They have much less insulation than "normal" shoes and it was really painful to run with them on hot surfaces. Other than that they're fantastic, and this video is an excellent portrayal of how going barefoot is a transition to something different (and probably healthier) rather than just bring outright better.
Yeah the ones I had were cheap knock-offs lol, they fell apart after a single season. I'm sure any of the Vivo's would be better than what I had, thanks for the recommendation!
Switching to barefoot shoes has kind of changed my life, or at least my life as it relates to my foot health and walking. My foot structure shifted, my pain went away, and my chronic ingrown toenails became far less frequent. Everyone on both sides of my family have horribly shaped feet and I don’t want to end up like that as I see how much pain it causes them. I love my barefoot shoes so much and I can never go back, but I fully understand that they’re not for everyone.
I also have a chronic ingrown toe, and family history of it. A change in shoes has made a world of difference, even if it's mostly just that I don't much wear hard dress shoes anymore. But also more minimal and wide-toed shoes were an unsurprising but not widely available help
I had a procedure done as a teen to permanently cut the far inside root of the nail to prevent ingrowns. It was a game changer for me because I was constantly digging and mutilating my toes to dig out the nail that was biting into the skin too much, I wouldn't just leave them be. I couldn't recommend it more to at least look into it and see if it something you'd consider. It was just handled by my primary care Dr at the time though nowadays they would probably send you to a foot dr.
Barefoot shoes didn’t do that. You got rid of poor shoes which is what helped. But you started using barefoot shoes and have convinced yourself it was the barefoot shoes that did it
Reality of ingrown toenails is that once they have started, they always come back messed up. The wrong shoe will push your nails into your toes, but they're not a cause according to my podiatrist. Some people are prone genetically, some people aren't. He has kids as young as 7 coming in for nail removals. I had the roots on both my big toes killed to simply avoid having to go to the doctor every year or two and get them yoinked off, the week or two of recovery and not being able to wear shoes at all sucks. They do the root killing with some kind of acid basically, that was the only part I had to look away for, it's kind of shocking how easily your toenails come off when they lift it up and tug. Toenails are mostly aesthetic anyway, especially since we wear shoes.
Switching to barefoot shoes has been the most rewarding thing for my comfort when it comes to my feet. I feel like I just have so much control and sensation awareness when I walk in them. I am just able to react more to my environment as a result.
This is also what I noted. Feeling the ground, angles, and edges is great for knowing what the ground is doing and can reduce injury risk. Plus less heel on the shoe means less of a fulcrum if you do take an awkward step with less strain on ligaments and tendons, thus less likely to injure.
I hike barefoot. I'm pretty comfortable heel striking while walking but on treacherous terrain or at speed I basically walk on my tip toes. It varies tremendously how my foot strikes. Temperature, firmness, and energy levels are all paramount for deciding how I strike the ground. But when I slip on shoes I don't think about anything like that and just go back to my basal, which is heel striking. Glad you made thisvideo because it's good to see a relatively unbiased study. Bless you in all your endeavors.
You hike barefoot or with barefoot shoes? Unfortunately I'd be worried about stepping on sharp glass walking on some of the more frequented trails around here.
@@connorperrett9559 barefoot. I just watch where I step. But I do get a few sharp sticks and briars every now and again. It still hurts. But you just take it out and carry on. Whenit gets stuck is a different issue.
@@ghostswordsman8024 I usually carry sandals with me when I'm mushroom hunting if I go off the path into treacherous terrain. But they don't do well on the long term.
@@dontworry4945 Don't forget to tell people that the more a foot is exercised on different surfaces it becomes conditioned. The skin on the heel, ball and toes will thicken naturally and nerves will become desensitised.
I have a naturally wide feet and started sport, that have a lot of tip toeing in ti, so they got even wider. As a woman it's even harder to find shoes that are not to tight for me, and I also value a good look. So I ordered barefoot shoes for summer to try it out. It was the best idea ever, they are my favourite and now I got 2 more pairs for fall. I actually got some insoles for foot pain (that is not barefoot shoes related), and barefoot shoes are the only ones that the insoles fit in. So I have a bit of padding there actually. But I hope we will have both of the worlds some day, especially the wide toebox should be a standard.
As someone with a really long second toe (naturally pointy feet) I have had a lot of difficulty finding barefoot style shoes that fit my feet. I could always go up a few sizes I suppose but I would much prefer to find a brand that has a more "foot shaped" shoe that isn't made for only a few foot shapes. I gather that a foot changes shape when the toes have the opportunity to spread, but I don't believe that will make my big toe significantly longer or my second toe significantly shorter. Thanks guys!
No idea how long your toe is, but as far as I understand barefoot shoes like vivos should leave plenty of space for your toes. When I tried vivos recommended for my foot size I had a huge amount of space(not sure if that's the case for all brands), so I feel like if I had a long second toe it wouldn't be a problem. So if you are choosing barefoot shoes where your toes touch the end of the shoe, you are potentially getting a size too small. But don't quote me on this, that's just my observation from trying the vivo brand.
@@hornet-h3v I was born with feet like this. (Just like my great grandma.) I actually had surgery to shorten the toe because I couldn't handle the extreme pain. Best thing EVER.
This! My big toe nails are not flat, they are a bit upwards so my vivos gave me a corn under my right toe nail from the shoe being so flat over the toe nails. Most barefoot shoes leave room on the sides and front, but I never found one that left room at the top 😩
Great info. Been using barefoot style footwear for almost two years now. I have found that focusing more on where you land in relation to the rest of your body is more important than which part of your foot you land on. Not over striding seems to play a big role in efficiency of gait as well as reduction of injury.
Agreed. The most important thing is to land under the hip and not to pverstride. Simple ques instead of trying to decipher the mechanics of the foot and gait cycle, I find are helpful
YES, walking barefoot in bad terrain most of my life, you can land on your blade, heel, ball, etc but its strength and flexibility on your ankles that helps.
Makes sense. Locking your knee before the heel strike is possibly more efficient, but it's a bad move if you're walking on rough or hazardous ground and need to adjust your weight quickly. If you don't overstride, you probably won't lock your knee.
@@TBButtSmoothy Personally I can't/don't heelstrike at all when barefoot. If you place your foot on something hard or sharp there's no way to adjust and pivot the weight compared to striking with the front of the foot where I can easily re-adjust if I step on something unintentionally
Love this video. An accident at 60, lead to a BK amputation. Over a short period of time I had my Prosthetist’s take the heel rise out of my prosthetic foot. I soon learned that walking bare foot or with flat - no shoes, my gait, legs and hips were much better. Moccasins and a recent purchase of bare foot shoes have been a game changer. I get lectured often about my choice, but it’s my choice. In May I will be 73, I am high activity and so happy my body lead me to bare foot. Always wondered about the up tilt on (especially athletic shoes). Even as a teen I was more comfortable in flat profile active ware. Soccer comes to mind. Ha!
Aasics for a short period had a very thin soled casual everyday shoe. It wasn't an athletic shoe or a wrestling shoe. I got one pair on clearance and it was amazing. Until I wore them out and realized that Aasics phased them out and were no longer making them. Crushed me because for the first time I had finally found a VERY comfortable shoe versus your standard sneaker.
The exact same thing happened to me with a pair of NB. Outside clearance. I have mortins neuroma, and I could only wear those shoes without it blowing up. My son looked at the shoes and noticed details I never would have. I've been wearing Barefoot shoes ever since and have avoided surgery. I swear, barefoot shoes saved my life.
I loved this, and I also think that it's worth adding that most natural environments are full of hills, therefore forcing you to walk more on the ends of your feet. Flatland enviroments also tend to have mounds and overall rugged terrain that requires more careful footing to traverse quickly and effectively, so I'd say that it's more efficient than heel striking myself, going by what's natural. Just thought I'd add my two cents there✌️👍
Added to this is that in uneven (natural) terrain you typically shorten your stride significantly and that makes a toe strike much more ergonomic. The way we walk with long strides on flat surfaces naturally makes the heel the lowest part of the foot and the part that touches down first.
I wore barefoot for a few years, then switched to full leather soled, handmade boots - the kind that mold to the arch. They allow me to stand on hard surfaces for 16 straight hours. Every step feels like a foot massage when I add a cork insole with a metatarsal bump. I'll never go back to barefoot. It's also interesting that the boots are actually quite hard on the bottom - there's no cushion more than the rubber of the outsole. (look up JK, Nicks, Franks, Drew's, etc.)
absolutely 👍🏼 before my job made steel toe shoes mandatory I was wearing barefoot shoes to work and I could stand for HOURS 12 hr shifts were a breeze. Now with steel toe my hip and lower back starts to ache 🫠
Most retail footwear doesn't actually have any heel lift, despite what these people claim (a few mm at most). Most retail footwear is actually closer to barefoot shoes than these people admit. The major difference is the thickness of the soles. Now you can see what an actual heel lift does, it doesn't match up with the "barefoot" marketing, does it?
The primary reason I'm interested in barefoot shoes is because of multiple ankle sprains I've had in traditional shoes over many years. My ankle ligaments are so stretched and loose that I can easily roll my ankle with shoes that have a lot of padding or if they are stiff like hiking boots. Barefoot shoes keep my feet closer to the ground and reduce the risk of rolling an ankle simply due to the physics and geometry of the shoe.
I really appreciate this video. I have been running around barefoot since I was a little kid. I HATED wearing shoes so when I heard about the barefoot shoe movement I was pretty excited. It was always so weird about people saying that once you move to barefoot you were supposed to never walk/run on your heel because that clearly never made sense. to me
When I watch informative videos, I speed them up. You, my sir, brought me back to normal speed. Way to have a completely information packed and decently long video! This was awesome!
I would have no problem with switching if the industry wasn't charging $150-300 for "barefoot" shoes. Talk about ruling class, what kind of price gouging BS is this?
I’m about 3 years in and wear a thin insole when I know I’m going to be speed walking on concrete all day at work. I think the zero drop and toe spread are the most important elements. Prolonged intuition and being able to feel changes in surfaces seem to be a beneficial aspect of barefoot shoes. Great video and great information.
That makes sense. I've always preferred to go barefoot, and when I did have to wear shoes I would opt for flat, thin-soled shoes, but when I started working in a warehouse store (miles and miles of walking on solid concrete) I had to switch to shoes with more support. Still hated them, but sadly we're really not built for standing and walking on such hard surfaces all day.
I tried barefoot shoes and followed all the guidance as to how to slowly integrate them and ended up with plantar faciatis from the increased tension on the plantar fascia. I now have to hike with arch support. Really not for everyone. With the exception of the wide toe box, it's so true that our balance, gait etc is far better with splayed toes.
Absolutely. At the end of the day, there’s two extremes here- barefoot walking and incredibly padded shoes. Find your balance. I’m sick of this ‘do this! Do that!’
If you have access to a gym with a sled, try integrating pushing the sled into your workouts. That is supposed to help with foot strength, which should help with plantar fasciitis.
When I first started wearing barefoot shoes, I did a lot of research into the pros and cons. I eventually decided I didn't care though because the way barefoot shoes made me feel was reason enough. It's like going from having cinder blocks on your feet to nothingness. I also love being able to feel the ground beneath my feet. The transition was difficult when it came to the calf soreness but never once could i imagine going back to traditional shoes and I still can't. I understand everyone is going to have different experiences but for me, personally, barefoot shoes are a total no-brainer!
You got any recommendations? I'm looking to get into it considering I spend most of my time with no shoes but it's not really socially acceptable and my job requires a protective shoe
For about 8 years I've been using a longboard to get to work. I'm only standing and balancing on my left foot using the right leg to push. When I got my first barefoot shoes it took some time to get used to them but only for my right foot. My right foot hurt a lot when I used them too much but my left foot never was a problem since it had the necessary muscles from balancing on the board. Problem is that I can't really use my barefoot shoes on the board but I love them so much that I switched to a bike ^^
I tinkered with this and switched years ago. I duct taped the soles of my old classic runners to see where the action was. Decided to literally just go barefoot based on what I saw. All heel strikes. Increased speed, endurance, knee problems disappeared And I just plain enjoyed the experience of running that much more due to the new tactile feedback. I ended up going with Merrill trail glove shoe. Best move ever.
I agree. I put on Vapor Gloves back in 2018 and practically never took them off. Much improved running form and speed, patellar tendinitis a thing of the past. And they relatively cheap although not very durable. Love em.
My two pair of Merrell Trail Gloves brutally fell apart from week one. Horrible glue job in China. Fabric frayed to pieces. Horrible manufactured shoe. They did not care either. The shoe store did nothing either. Five Fingers by Vibram is just as bad. Looking at Luna, Earth Runner and Shamma. Very caring folks.
I am over 60 years old with a lot of pain in my joints due to Osteoarthritis. I have it in my feet as well so with Hallux rigidus in my feet I couldn' fit in any normal shoes anymore. I started to wear barefoot shoes which was a relief. About a year after the operation on my feet I could've used normal shoes again but it felt awful. That was 4 years ago and I haven't been wearing normal shoes ever since. Often people ask me about my barefoot shoes and I can only praise them. For me (and this is a personal opinion) they changed so much to the better. My pain is reduced all over (even my back is better), I am more agile and I am able to walk for hours with my dog again. I always used to have cold feet. Not any more even if I wear my thinnest barefoot shoes in winter because the feet are not confined to a small space and since they move around in the shoes they are warm. The shape of my feet has changed. They look wider and the toes aren't pressed against each other anymore. And the soles of my feet are very resilient against gravel, stones etc. For me barefoot shoes are a live changer. PS: My soles are mainly worn out under my forefoot so I guess I am a "forefoot striker" 🦶🏻 •‿•
For me I work outside and have an extremely active job. I use to cry after work every day because my feet would hurt so bad. I tried so many different styles of shoes and finally tried bear foot. And I get barely any pain in my feet anymore. Any pain that I have is bearable. I'll never change shoes.
I'm looking forward to trying them. I've been wearing Docs for decades for the orthopedic benefit, but since 2020, have hardly gone out in winter; in summer, I wear reef sandals, so practically barefoot. Hoping the transition will be smooooth.
I grew up going without shoes as much as possible and still usually go barefoot at home, or wear just a simple flipflop when weather allows and I've noticed i have a very different gait than many, with my feet rolling straight forward rather than the outward angles i see many sneaker wearers using (at times 45 degrees or more!) I also seem to walk much more lightly than many people expect and i am 100% sure it is related. One other thing i would like to mention is that for much of history shoes were made very differently than modern ones, and more in line with the concepts used in the barefoot shoes- very flexible leather or fabric that moves with the foot, rather like a thick sock and a leather sole that flexes and molds to the terrain rather than the stiff padded box of modern shoes. If anyone is interested i would recommend checking out some of the very nice videos on the differences in historical shoe making by Nicole Rudolph
Fellow flip-flop fan here! lmao I've had multiple people curse at me whenever I arrive in a room because they can't hear me coming unless I'm wearing unusually noisy shoes (like heels or brand new running shoes with those squeaky soles. Never considered the connection between spending most of my time barefoot/in flip-flops and having a light step, but there might be one.
Haha, I'm really glad I read a comment in its entirety before replying, because as soon as I started reading yours I immediately wanted to recommend Nicole Rudolph's channel! Her videos making historic footwear as well as the ones on the evolution of footwear fashion and construction techniques I think would be really interesting to anyone who found this video intriguing.
I never wear shoes at home unless necessary, and I have been told several times by the people downstairs that they can tell who is walking above them by the noise we make. Despite being heavier than anyone else by at least 100 pounds, they tell me I am the quietist one.
This is by far the best scientific explainer video about the matter around use of vivo and the the link to the basic principles of our lifestyle, walking, and running.
The main reason I got intrigued by this topic at all was that I've always noticed myself doing things differently when walking on socks in the house or when walking in shoes outside: Walking is the same. But the second I'd 'hop' around or sprint as a kid I'd run heelstrike in shoes but toes-first when on socks or barefoot. So a part of my brain always prefers doing one or the other depending on what I'm wearing.
A note on toes widening out - I have been in barefoot shoes for about 2 years, and my feet actually expanded to where I needed to get a half size bigger shoe. My toes have spread wider too.
Super interesting video! I often hear people warn about calf muscle pain when first switching to barefoot shoes. I actually never experienced that. I started wearing barefoot shoes about 6 years ago, and at the time knew very little about them. Nobody told me to be careful and give my calf muscles time to adapt. I just put them on, was amazed at how much better my feet were feeling in them compared to traditional shoes, and pretty much switched from one day to the next. I had zero issues with it, even though my calves are pretty tight and stretching them is really difficult for me. So this actually might not be an issue for everyone when switching to barefoot shoes!
Get a "half dome foam roller" for easy calf stretching (from the teachings of biomechanist Katy Bowman... check her books). Also look up the "gravity drop" exercise by legendary therapist Pete Egoscue - another good one.
I've been obsessed with keeping my keep bare since I was born (literally, I grew up being regailed about all the times as a toddler I'd just rip off my shoes, throw them, then take off running). This has carried into my adulthood, and I've always had a toe-first walk. I also have stupidly wide feet that most shoes don't accommodate for. I'm glad you made this video to talk about how barefoot walking changes our bodies. I've always been a bit wary of my walk, as I've always been told that I'm "doing it wrong", but that also seemed very counter intuitive to me because we obviously didn't evolve WITH shoes, and bodies are usually such delicately tuned machines that when we change the slightest thing, we can throw everything out of whack... and don't shoes change our bodies? I actually wrote an essay in middle school about how shoe-wearing is a big conspiracy, and I started it as a sort of silly-extreme argument to make an essay about. I honestly didn't think I'd find much to support my argument, but I started with a book that a local librarian helped me find, and that book had a lot of the points you've made here (I wish I could remember the title, but all I recall is that it's pro-barefoot lifestyle, and has an entire chapter about how crocs and flip-flops are huge indicators on how badly fast fashion has screwed our environment). This book planted the seeds of, "So, I'm not wrong to strive for a barefoot lifestyle?", but outside of that middle school experience back at the cusp of the millennium, I really haven't seen much talk about it. Thanks for validating the way my body has simply been for my whole life, and thanks for letting others know that maybe we need to rethink our relationship with shoes.
During the pandemic I had nothing better to do, so trained for marathon. Got my ACL torn in the progress. Specialists explained, that my leg muscles grew unevenly, upper part being weak, while lower grew too much. That put stress on my ligamemts till they eventually gave up. As a recovery effort I tried barefoot shoes. First for walking, than started running. For me, the progress felt very real. And the upper muscles were aching (meaning they started working). Year later I finally finished my first marathon. So I think I owe this to barefoot shoes and my trauma was mostly due standard cushioned running shoes. The problem I have with them - every pair I tried was bad quality, expensive, absurdly long shipping and they seems to have some kink with shoe laces? Vivobarefoots I've owned have some weird lacing mechanism and wayyyy too long shoe laces. Now I have Feelgrounds with normal mechanism, but still wayyyyy too long shoe laces. Still in search for a decent brand which could make simple shoes 😄
@@UpSideDownABCD for Feelgrounds maybe an option to cut. Maybe even easier buying separate shoe laces 🙂for Vivobarefoot, they had some custom mechanism and cannot be trimmed or changed
I really like xero shoes. Or if you want to get really nerdy, look up Anya's Reviews, she's reviewed just about every barefoot shoe on the market, in depth, and has a lot of resources on how to find a great fit.
Thank you, you have made a few things make sense. I have solely worn barefoots for about 6 month's. I walk comfortably and easily, but slightly differently on every surface. You are right, i have adapted. I love them. I tried to wear my old hiking boots that i used to love with a really thick sole and narrowish fore front. I felt really unstable and felt my ankles were at risk on unstable ground. And my toes felt soo cramped. I wont wear them again. Barefoots have fixed my hip problem too. I wear them all day at work, plus dog walking and bush walking. I look at 'normal' shoes now and think 'ouch...' and 'yuk'. So, great explanations.😊
I have done a mix of barefoot walking and wearing conventional shoes my whole life. I used to spend entire summers running around barefoot. It was never intentional for the sake of my health like much of the barefoot movement over the last couple of decades emphasizes. I was just a wild child, even into my teens. Something I've noticed is that I have different striking patterns when walking in different footwear. In "normal shoes," I heel-to-toe roll or step down flat. When I'm in minimal shoes I do a mix of the ball of my foot and midsole. When I'm barefoot, I strike with the ball of my foot which requires me to step with a gate that is more like reaching forward with my legs. My weight almost exclusively sits in the ball of my foot while walking barefoot. When I'm barefoot, depending on my walking speed, I will do this sort of toe to mid-foot roll where I strike with the ball of my foot, let the weight shift to mid-foot, then back into the heel as I step. Side notes, I've noticed that I am significantly quieter when navigating hardwood floors compared to almost everyone I've ever known. (I'm neurodivergent and loud walking sounds annoy me. So I have a hard time not hyper-focusing on how loud people are when they walk.) I'm also a parkour athlete and do a lot of jumping. I'm known for having strong legs and great landings. Growing up, I played basketball and was always told I had naturally excellent footwork. IDK if those last two relate to how I've walked my whole life or if they are correlated at all, but I just thought they were interesting observations in this context.
Your description of different foot striking patterns is the exact same for me. Although I'm not neurodivergent, I do get bothered by people stomping around. I grew up on hardwood floors and naturally adapted my gait-just seems rude and actually inefficient not to.
I hate when people stomp around like that. I've always walked very quietly, but occasionally I'll stomp around just so people know I'm there and don't run into me. I scare people all the time with how quietly I approach.
I'm autistic and people very rarely hear me approaching, I just walk that quietly on most surfaces. I haven't paid attention to how I walk though and shoe wise I wear whatever is comfortable for me for the time being. Sometimes I prefer very supportive and built up shoes like Timberland or similar, other times I may prefer Crocs or Birkenstock type slippers, and now for a while I've been wearing my Converse a fair bit. All down to how my feet feels at the time and what type of sensory input I can handle
Been wearing barefoot shoes for over 6 years after being told the way I was walking was leading to my knee hip and back problems. It has been a game changer.
I have never used barefoot shoes but 20 years ago I switched to barefoot running on a treadmill and when I am running outside I am wearing sport shoes with an extremely flat sole profile. This switch was initially (the first 6 months) difficult and painful (especially for my calves) but on the long run avoiding heel striking has made a huge positive difference for me. I never experienced again pain in my joints (especially my knees) and my foot stability has improved massively what helped me to prevent the frequent injuries which I had with conventional sport shoes. When I am walking I am still a heel striker but not longer so hard then before. A negative side-effect was that my feet size increased so that many shoes didn't fit longer after a few years.
I have always been a lover of walking barefoot. About 13 years ago I became a yoga teacher and since the job allowed for it, I started to wear shoes less and less. My toes definitely splay out, the front of my foot becoming slightly wider. Because of the practice of yoga as well though; There's a lot of balancing and finding stability through a conscious awareness of the way your feet splay, etc. My feet were definitely stronger! During COVID my studio closed though, and I started walking more (with normal tekkies) as well as wearing slippers a lot (it was a rough time!). My feet changed again, and it was not good. Before COVID, I merrily had theories about the way my feet changed, but it became an accidental experiment as I realised how my feet had changed and set out to consciously strengthen them again. Barefeet RULE! (Have not worn the shoes, although I love a thin soled shoe)
Walking barefoot leaves you at risk to parasites…. Hookworms enter the soles of your feet and work their way to your intestines and eventually to your brain
I recall in a book I read a while ago that foot striking was described in two ways besides heel to toe. The first was on the pads of the foot, per usual, the second was from the outside of the foot, rolling forward to pad of the foot. It is not as drastic as you might think, and basically constitutes what you were doing at (6:06) It has a very similar effect to rolling, but it carries less momentum and reduces your impact. It's also great for running in boots, or flat footed shoes. Another thing he to keep in mind, is that when you walk barefoot you usually keep your weight centered rather than throwing it forwards, to avoid stepping on sharp things, you also reduce impact.
Thank you for this, very nuanced. There were two types of creators i was watching, and their opinions clearly were on oposite ends. One claiming heal striking was more efficient, while the other believed forefoot was more efficient. Though forefoot does have much more "health" benefits, it was pretty great when I heard you mention it does look weird if you try to fully walk using that. So the part where you mentioned that the heel still plays a role was comforting to hear as I attempt to inprove my walking ability.
As someone who recently transitioned to barefoot shoes, when completely barefoot I have always landed on the front. When using shoes and walking for exercise, the heel strike seems to happen more naturally. Of course,I also transition to light bouncy front landing steps now that I have better leg spring. Before I would do really hard heel landing speedwalks which wrecked my knees if prolonged.
Thanks for this video 👍👍 I first learned about barefootshoes 3 months ago, after walking barefoot for about 9/10 months out of the year for a little over 4 years now. I'm not really a hiker, so what I walk most on is hard surfaces. (I do always have a pair of flipflops with me, in case I need to use a public restroom, visit a petrolstation etc.) I'm now looking at barefootshoes for those 2/3 months a year I can't walk barefoot (for long periods) because of the low temperatures (in dry weather I switch to flipflops if it's getting close to freezing, in wet weather around 12°C). I do my best to avoid any heelstrike, but about 50 years of walking on regular shoes isn't that easy to shake. 😉 But as I literally hear a healstrike in my head, it's quickly corrected. I'm now experimenting with landing mainly on the front of my foot (what did you call that 🤔), because that's how in my opinion you get the maximum out of the natural shockabsorption of your feet. But without any further adjustments that shortens my strides. I've tried several adjustments - the people in my neighbourhood must think I started working for the Ministry of Silly Walks 😂 . So it's still an ongoing process and I love it. ❤
@ZZZP-SchoolNL I tore my meniscus in my right knee TKD sparing a couple of decades and to attempt to heal without surgery and while the swelling went down I walked backwards around our circular neighborhood every day. I had neighbors come out and ask me what I was doing. Still makes me smile! No surgery but 20 years later injured same knee doing a race called the Bolder Boulder. Lots of hiking steps, walks w loved ones, runs, and time outdoors in between.
@@chopwood2995 I hope you can recover from your latest injury without surgery as well. Much better for your overall health. And much more fun for the neighbourhood 😆 (Great story, thanks for sharing 🤗)
Barefoot running godfather Barefoot Ken Bob teaches landing on the whole foot at once, and bending the knees a lot - more than you think. He describes the knees as our body's natural shock absorbers. He actually takes people straight over to gravel when teaching them for the first time, so they understand how light they should move, and how much they should bend their knees. He also invites people to imagine they are sneaking up on someone from behind, again to illustrate proper lightness and knee bending.
While I'm not quite a barefoot/barefoot shoe person, I used to do all of my gym exercise barefoot. It has always been great. Also, I always thought the "pointy" shoe style to be kind of ugly first and foremost, but to know they're also not that good either makes me feel very validated. Thanks!
If your foot muscles are conditioned for barefoot walking (meaning walking with no shoes) wearing a shoe that protects the sole of your foot will allow you to walk faster than you would barefoot because it’s protected from laceration, being forced to walk slower actually protects the tendons and ligaments and small underdeveloped muscles in your foot from injury when first conditioning, basically if your going to go barefoot, before you buy a pair of barefoot shoes train yourself to be able to walk a few miles while completely barefoot, it will force your movement to be correct before you move fast while in a barefoot shoe, overuse injuries happen much easier when your feet aren’t trained, remember they are small muscles that you have probably never worked out and they build slower than you might want, stick with it
One thing that's really important in the long term is that we train our feet to be used to getting squished together in shoes that are usually not wide enough. That means most people don't really notice anymore when their shoes are too tight. In a lot of cases that leads to bunions on one or both sides of your feet. Also, when we get older, we don't notice when we need shoes one or even two sizes bigger. Feet get bigger during your life. So longterm that means, I have a LOT of older (and someone not so old) patients that have actual injuries from their shoes - e.g. blisters or other kinds of wounds that get infected - which doesn't sound like much but imagine being diabetic and not noticing these wounds (since your nerve endings are dead), keeping on wearing these too tight shoes and then those infections getting really serious. Like amputations serious. And there are LOADS of people like that. The right shoes might not be a cure all but it might this problem a lot less common.
Thanks, fascinating video. One thing you don’t mention but that has occurred to me might be important (having been experimenting with barefoot shoes for the last few years) is that any shoe, even barefoot ones, reduce the sensory input you get from the *skin* on the sole of your foot. When completely barefoot, you get feedback from your skin as to the substrate you’re walking on a few milliseconds before putting your weight down - at least when walking. Which allows you to adjust foot position, weight distribution etc and so avoid landing heavily or stepping on a sharp stone. For example if you’re walking barefoot on a lawn then you feel the touch of the grass just before your foot touches the actual ground (however hard or soft the latter may be). I find that even in barefoot shoes I sometimes land unexpectedly hard on my heel on uneven ground and I wonder if this lack of feedback from the skin (just before impact) might be the reason.
Barefoot running godfather Barefoot Ken Bob compares learning to walk or run with shoes on to learning to play the piano with earplugs in for this very reason.
I keep hearing that walking barefoot is linked to toe striking, but for me, it's the opposite. When I started to spend my summers mostly barefoot as a teenager, I quickly adapted heel striking in order to avoid injuries. When walking on gravel, twigs or on a mountain trail, I didn't have to pay as much attention if it was my heel that hit a sharp object first. My toes and balls on the other hand were way too sensitive, no matter the calluses I gained. Now I'm almost thirty and apparently, my partner can hear me coming a mile off.
Yes, much of what the barefoot community says is complete BS. A lot of it is based on a study that found that habitually unshod Kenyans mostly forefoot strike. Except that many of the subjects of the study were running a sub-5:00 mile! How the hell are you supposed to heelstrike while running 1:15 laps around a track??
@@imnotlettingyouseemynamehuh interesting. I go barefoot unless it's required to wear shoes or just smart to wear em like boots with ankle support for airsoft. Doing a little testing during my walking I keep my feet mostly perpendicular to the ground rasing my toes slightly mid stride. Landing flat on the ground settling my toes down with everything shortly after impact. For running I lead with my fore foot with it becoming more exaggerated as I get towards sprinting speed. At full sprint the back of my foot doesn't quite touch the ground. Not a runner but do walk and hike a lot barefoot.
I am 55 and suffer chronic lower back pain. A year ago I switched to barefoot shoes - it took me a month to get used to them (carefully) and I naturally adjusted my walking to avoid the pain of the heel strike. I still have chronic back pain but my feet are great. Wide toebox is amazing and I find because of the design of the shoes mean they are better ventilated hence my feet have never overheated since switching. I will never go back to regular shoes, apart from my walking boots on hikes I wear barefoot shoes all the time. Great video and very well explained.
I’m a vintage viewer and switching to barefoot, actually Vibram with all toes separated, full ninja, has transformed my knee health. I can feel how much stronger my feet are and how much more mindful I am when walking. I can’t recommend them enough. I’m a gardener and constantly walking on prickly ground and plant debris, the vibram soles are very effective at protecting me. Thanks for your very thorough exploration of the subject 🙏
I've been in Vibram Five Fingers exclusively since about 2010. What struck me the most about the transition was the way the shape of my foot changed. I went from fallen arches back to the high arches I had when I was younger. Also, my foot became thicker. I also noticed that for the first couple of years, I experienced a noticeable "pins and needles" sensation during my first few steps in the morning as the muscles broke loose and really activated. Over time that subsided. I think the biggest hurdle, and what accounts for much of the injury associated with barefoot shoes, was the muscle atrophy in my feet from wearing conventional footware. The entire shock absorption structure of the foot is disengaged when wearing heel lifted padded shoes. There's a period where the muscles of the feet have to play catchup with the muscle conditioning of the rest of your body and it's pretty easy to injure your feet until that happens. It's made a real difference in my hips and knees and I feel like those joints specifically are aging slow because wear and tear is now more evenly distrubted through my legs.
I did the same. Everything was great, until I started to develop medial knee pain due to the lack of cushion. Switched to Altras. Now I use a lower stack Altra to run in, and a thicker stack Altra to walk in.
I Walk for over 20 years barefoot and I’m slightly amused about the „barefoot shoe trend“… I had never again issues like fungi, smell, cornea, I never hurt my feets that much that I couldn’t walk further and I’m pretty sure most of the glances I earn are in envy ( because my foots are healthy and well shaped ) and in admiration and almost every chat about it starts with „I love to try it but I don’t dare…“
I've been wearing the same moccasins daily for three years. They are wearing through but I don't want to replace them. It's like wearing nothing at all and keeps my feet strong for if I'm playing golf or hiking.
Former furoshiki user here. They worked well because I could move around outdoors the same way I moved indoors. Fit was also better due to the compliance. Stopped using them after post-concussion symptoms made footfalls painful.
@Ben Vallack No worries, I've been getting better. My old first revision pair developed a few holes, and I don't have enough wear on the second to judge durability. It won't have the ankle support you mentioned but that's a plus for me.
10 year trail runner here. I switched to wide toe box 2 years in, it made a massive difference and caused MANY injuries because I switched immediately and never looked back. I had to adjust everything in my form from my joints mostly. My ankles and knees would hit at angles that were "new" to them after years of not having a big toe out balancing where it should be. My tendons would feel like they were always being pulled on at weak points I had never used. Its similar to someone who never trains stabilizers and tries lifting heavy. It took 1 full year of knee and ankle injuries before I began running the way my body should be, without even a shin splint to account for. I can now say that even when I wear closed toe shoes the big toe goes back to its spot after 1 run and stays there. I've grown muscle groups in my calves I didn't even know were there, my feet grew thick meaty muscles connecting under my big toe and My ankle/knee has never been stronger/resilient. Have not had an injury in 5 years(10-15 mile trail runs every other day) and I truly believe its from the stability gained with just my big toe properly being placed for balance. I will say if you smoke a joint before your run in the woods, your gonna be in tune with your body as well.
I run very thin flat shoes on trails (Golden Gate trail run half marathon the last weekend) but thick well cushioned shoes on training runs on concrete pavement in the neighborhood. Concrete is dangerous, people. I injured my foot almost fracture once when the shoes got old and the sole wears out.
I grew up playing outside barefoot a lot and I always end up with massive holes worn into my shoes where the big toe is supposed to be. Wondered if it was a problem or not. Nice to see it can't be tamed lol.
So I started wearing barefoot shoes in 2012, I didnt know why at the time but they seemed to have a calming effect on me, so i've been wearing them ever since. Jump to last year and I was diagnosed with ADHD. I think the proprioceptive feedback from my feet gives my hyperactive brain something additional to focus on, sort of like stimming in a way I guess. So yeah, they can help ADHD in my experience.
@@RogueSecret I'm British, and I'm a qualified nutritionist. I know how to eat in a biologically appropriate fashion. ADHD is a neurodevelopmental disorder, though the effects of an improper diet could mirror some of the traits of ADHD but certainly not all of them.
I trained with someone who taught me about being barefoot and it really makes my life better. I just got some really minimal shoes and it's so much better for me. My feet were in bad shape but as I wear minimal shoes and get barefoot more often, some of my pain issues are going away and my feet are super strong so I can walk on anything like rocks as long as they are not super sharp.
@Karl with a K It has everything to do with shoes IF you spend a majority of time in them. It's like having a cast on or a corset for many hours a day. Muscles will naturally atrophy when they have no room to move around and create stability.
I don't know how I missed this video, but I just ordered a pair with your promo code. The Moonlander keyboard was a massive improvement for my frozen shoulders, so I'm sure these will be fantastic too! I walked around on shoes 7 sizes too big at one point in my life, so getting my body back in order has been a real challenge. Thanks for all of the great information and products!
I got awful ingrown toenails as a teenager, I think I had to have the procedure done where they cut off the edge of your big toe’s nail five different times. I realized that my toes are wider and shorter than average for my shoe size, so I switched to wearing shoes with wider toe boxes and my problems disappeared. I haven’t gotten any barefoot/minimalist shoes yet, but I’m definitely considering making the switch, just because they’re the easiest shoes to find that have very wide toe boxes.
Had the same problem as a teenager. Doctors and my parents didn't even think that it could be caused by tight and narrow shoes. Our society is dumb. 6 procedures due to such and obvious reason. And I as a kid listened to the grown-ups.. Didn't occur to me either. Started wearing wider shoes and no issues. Lesson learned.
Same here dunno what caused it. But I got that same surgery just as many times to the point I would hide the hurt so I wouldn't have to do it again. I go to Hawaii and I got such a different treatment, they let me fall asleep while they did it and they put a ointment on the nail that stopped it from growing there anymore so I have a slightly smaller nail
do you have shoe recommendations ? i have also had this problem since i was a kid, grandma got me the surgery once when the cuts they made got infected and my mom wouldnt take me to the doctor but they still grow like this
@@gargutz I have wide feet and recently tried on a few different walking shoes - Keen shoes and boots seemed to be the widest (but not cheap and not fashion shoes).
I've been running with a pair if vivobarefoot shoes for about 18 months now, and although I certainly had to ease myself into it to avoid injury, once my feet and calves built a little bit of strength it felt absolutely fantastic. It just feels a whole lot more efficient and I can run longer distances without hitting a wall. I enter this almost zen like flow that I never experienced with traditional cushioned running shoes. If anyone is thinking of transitioning to barefoot running I would definitely recommend doing a couch to 5k program, even if you are already a regular distance runner. Just give your muscles and tendons time to adapt. I can also attest to the quality of vivobarefoot shoes, as that one pair has lasted me 18 months and they're still in great condition. I would be lucky to get a year out of regular cushioned shoes in the past.
Yeah I think people who immediately run in them are weird. I just did farmer walks, going up stairs, walking backwards with the weights. Doing that strengthens the hell outta your toes, ankle, and all those things that normal shoes support. After that I've never had a problem running in them. It doesn't even feel different. I just did this all in grass or my house with no shoes.
And this is exactly why I subscribed!! I got into barefoot runners 5 years ago and did a lot of research, books, articles and lots and lots of videos. But even then I was completely unaware of the heel strike while walking, it's almost as if the people who wrote this stuff wanted to erase heelstrikes from existence.. Thank you for all your hard work and research into this and every topic you touch on. I am very greatful to be a little bit more knowledgeable
My understanding is that heel striking on hard ground is still bad for you, even if you're wearing cushioned shoes. You're just less aware of it, because instead of feeling all the impact in your heels, it's being transferred to your knees, hips, and back.
When I heel strike my knee pain comes back. Maybe heel striking is good for some people but for me switching to a mid to front foot strike made a big difference. Honestly, I think a lot of the stuff depends on your body. We try to make a one-size-fits-all solution but that’s not really how people work. So if heel striking feels better for you then do it.
I've worn barefoot shoes for years at this point and I agree, while walking it's actually hard to avoid heel striking, but a fore or midfoot strike while jogging or running is very nice and natural
Thank you so much for making this! I really appreciate the specifically the citations on the history of why shoes became pointed and also directions to the studies about the efficiency of heel striking in different conditions. I've been walking around on my forefront, and it never felt quite right. I feel like this video just gave me a blueprint to how to heel strike more gently (ie. still maintaining the focus on pushing off the back foot/working the glute rather than reaching ahead of me with my foot and letting my knees take the shock, but now gently landing on the heel instead of awkwardly leaning forward to reach over and land on the ball of my foot). This video is a huge collection of knowledge - really fully spanning from clarifying why barefoot is better and very soberly describing the current discussion/discovery in the barefoot world now. (I guess it's important to remember we're not REALLY the barefoot community. We're the people in industrialized countries who want to be LIKE the real barefooters.) A small note though: I'm not sure your title matches your video! (For instance, what was the REAL reason? Even if it is in there, it's not what I took away.) Also, I think this video is a little too advanced for people just beginning their journey. I wonder if a title like: The Barefoot Community is Too Scared to Admit This. I wonder if it would attract barefooters who've actually put more thought into gait types and who have stronger opinions on this stuff. You know best! I just would love to see this video get as much exposure as possible because it's so good. Excellent video! Thank you for making it! :)
Totally agree with your thoughts. I've had barefoot shoes for only a few months now but one thing I was not yet sold on was zero cushioning when we didn't evolve on concrete, as toe walking felt awkward and inefficient, but heel striking is uncomfortable without cushion. I never considered that you can still heel/flat strike but just do it more gentle. Really good video.
To add my anecdotes: I have been wearing a particular type of zero-drop, wide toe box, minimal cushion shoes for about 8 years. I got used to it after about 6 months. Now? Every time I wear conventional shoes with padding, and a raised heel, my feet are in agony. My I feel like I have no control. No connection to the ground. Like I'm always fighting with the shoe for stability. It's a question of adaptation. It seems like many healthy, able bodied children and adults would benefit from transitioning to zero drop, wide toe box shoes, with minimal support or padding beyond a strong sole. There are certain lines of work that don't agree with this, but most people don't have those kinds of footwear needs.
Several years ago I bought a pair of NB minimus shoes before studying abroad in Italy. I've always loved walking but began walking several miles a day in Italy, eventually jogging and running. While the minimus aren't barefoot, they are not far off, and I can remember how comfortable I got sprinting through the countryside. It was slow progress, but clearly made an impact. Once I got back to the states, I went back to standard shoes, and it was only recently that I remember how much I loved those shoes. Makes me want to go barefoot!
Lovely video! I rarely see someone mention how much of a role different terrain structures really play in "choosing" the most efficient gait. I put "choosing" in quotation marks because it's less of a concious decision and more your body just telling you what feels natural/good and what doesn't. I've been barefoot as much as possible (shoes only at work or when specifically asked to, in vaccination centers for example) for the past 8 years and there are a lot of different ways of walkibg, jogging and running depending on the surface. Soft grass or sand? Sure, midfoot or even heelstrike that in a sprint. Rough grass to pavement? Midfoot to forefoot only and on a gradient. Introduce mid-sized gravel? Probably the most annoying surface to be barefoot on (aside from literal thorns or glass shards) but no problem; but I will shift my weight differently, put my feet further apart and really shift around a lot in general to see what the best next step is. I can even jog on that annoying gravel, but it looks more like when you imagine a cartoon character walking on hot coals due to me shifting my weight with every step.
Going fully barefoot as much as possible is a good idea (inside and outside). You do need to ease yourself into it, but you can easily train and strengthen your feet over time. This will allow you to walk on some pretty sharp stuff (thorns, broken glass, etc). But even better, you will learn to push off with your foot and actually USE it as a muscle group - instead of something you just roll over or land on. It will makes your impacts lighter, and you can start treating minimalist shoes like tools you use when needed - not as something you have to have on you 24/7. It will fix a lot of your foot problems (read: shoe problems) too. As someone who has gone barefoot almost 24/7 for ten years, I think this is the best solution. It's also born out by studies like Shullman's ""Survey In China & India of Feet That Have Never Worn Shoes". If you want to get started with it, google the "Go Barefoot" Discord, and they'll help you out.
Thanks for your video Ben, it's good to see a balanced argument. I've been almost 100% barefoot for over 2 years now and totally agree with your thoughts and advice. After all that time, I have started running further and twinged my achilles tendon. Further evidence that you need a mature thoughtful approach. Even if you're competent in one area you still need to remain fully aware of what your planning and how to prepare for it. I also love that I can run in my work shoes and so my shoes are as versatile as my feet. I'm commenting as I've been wondering if there is a gap in the market. For when I am walking or running on our modern hard ground, if like to retain the wide foot box and zero drop, but get a little more cushion than the current inserts...
as a part of the foot community, (people commonly that have feet (plural for foot)) I like to wear things on my feet, and sometimes I don't wear anything on my feet.
I think barefooting and wearing minimal shoes made my feet flat. I noticed that shoes with a heel gave me knee pain when I was 18, so I did some research online and went down the barefoot rabbit hole. the thing is after 7 years of wearing mostly minimal shoes, my shoe size went from a 14 to a 16. Now there are no minimal shoes in my size, the best I can do short of custom shoes is converse. this could have been partly from me still growing, but my feet do seem flat and I am 2 sizes bigger than my dad who is my height. also the wide toebox can be a problem if you are doing sports where you need to do sharp turns running because your feet will slide around. still, I do enjoy going barefoot, it feels good even on concrete. I used to walk barefoot much more and I could walk on broken glass because I had thick calluses on the bottom of my feet.
I have no experience with barefoot shoes but during covid I basically spent 2 years at home and stopped wearing pointed and constraining shoes. I was 18 found myself at 20 with none of my shoes fitting anymore. I went from a UK 8 to a UK 10 which is over the standard for women's shoes (Im a 6 feet tall girl). I guess we will never know if its the barefoot thing or we were just still growing
Just heard from a podiatrist in Arizona who says feet are naturally wider here from people wearing sandals so often. It's probably not that your feet are flat, but more so that the metatarsal bones have spread out and gotten used to more space. Did your feet get bigger or is that the size they should have always been? 🤔
I walk barefoot always and agree on you about it makes no sense to divide the walk in forefront or heel strike. I simply walk following the path and let my feet do its thing. Even when I go downstairs, I grab the edge of the step with my toes. If the sidewalk is wet, I reduce the stride; if it is hot, my feet know the coldest path. I noticed I don´t walk in straight line anymore and when the terrain is uneven, my feet get more fun.
Historically the toe box of pointed shoes was just as big as the toe box of e.g. a squared shoe. The pointed part started after the toebox, resulting in rather long, pointy shoes which don't press your toes together. Another important thing to consider is that shoes were made from leather which gradually shaped around your food with time, resulting in a perfectly fitting shoe and the sole was made from leather, so it basically behaved like a barefoot shoe's sole. Most modern shoes have neither of those features, but there are still companies making shoes in that style and they are so comfortable and don't look like shit like all those barefoot shoes (sry but I think they're dead ugly)
Yep, I agree. I've stopped wearing heels but am always creative in buying boots/sneakers/ballet flats that have enough space for my toes to wiggle inside but have a normal looking front shape. I always go for leather or stretchy fabrics. Barefoot shoes are just not my aesthetics. And just by doing this, my feet are also shaped with toes wide apart.
If you think barefoot shoes are "ugly" because they're not pointy then perhaps you need to have a think about what kinds of fashion ideas have been ingrained in your mind.
@@martinar.5722 What they're calling "barefoot shoes" are the ones that we see in the video - square toeboxes. Not what I, at any rate initially thought, which is those shoes that have individual pockets for each toes, which do look rather strange.
@@Vousie Nobody said shoes which are not pointy are ugly, there are ample styles of beatiful shoes. I just have not seen a single barefoot shoe style I think pretty, no matter whether they have seperated toes or not. Maybe you could consider not judging people based on a single comment on UA-cam?
Just a warning for everyone: Take the last part of this video seriously. Don't run in them when you start out. Even if you're about to miss a train and be late for work. I didn't listen and managed to get a stress fracture in my left midfoot. It took about 3 months for the fracture to heal, and another 9 months for the pain to go away. It's only been about two months now that I can walk without pain again.
I was fortunately to not be out of commission for months, but I did the same thing, and could barely walk for 3 or 4 days.
@@schweedy1985 that sounds more like soreness than an injury though
Woah so that's what happened to me. just happened to start trying to run again and didnt feel like buying running shoes and ended up not being able to do it for a few months. My doctor must have been right about the type of injury but it was a couple months before I got an mri for it and by then I had rehabilitated naturally
@@smallman9787 quite possible. It's unfortunate that you got your mri late, because it actually looked really cool while it was healing ^^' But I'm glad you're doing better now!
Guys I've never had barefoot shoes. Bought some and immediately used them for everyday walking + running (only couple hundred meters, not real jogging or endurance training!! Just as information for you people) and the gym. Nothing really felt different except my feet feeling more blood circulation and a bit hot, also felt more exhausting first 3 days? Something wrong with my shoes or I'm just lucky nothing happened?
(I never used running shoes before, I walk around in "normal" Nike sneakers usually)
For me the reason shoes/trainers are more cushioned is because the world we traverse (now) is now largely concrete. I'd happily run around barefoot, no shoes, if we walked on grass/jungle/mud etc, like we used to but we don't. Anytime I wear shoes with a very thin heel (Converse All Star for example) my knees take the brunt and I'm in agony for a while after but when I wear my Nike Pegasus around town I have no such problems and, so far, no issue with my feet becoming pointed either. To be honest I don't like that there is a debate about this because to me it always feels like one or the other is trying to push a product or sell something and at this point (no pun intended) it's mostly the barefoot community. Wear what is comfortable and affordable to you, end of story.
I used to wear all stars. These shoes may have thin soles but they are too stiff and do not allow much bending of the arch which reduces its flexibility. Moreover, they are too narrow. My bunion problems began from youth when I was mostly wearing these shoes. Thin soles should also be flexible. Much better if there is also much toe space.
You cannot heel strike while barefoot. Heel striking is a counternatural walking gait we developed to adapt to our thick heeled shoes. Try a forefoot strike walking/running style: well cushioned even on hard, flat surfaces, and far "springier" and energy efficient than heel striking.
You should try changing the way you walk, walking shouldnt be painful. Like masonthonas2799 said, try a flatter walking style. My walking style changed to be a lot flatter and my posture while walking changed, for the better, to allow for it
@@masonthomas2799so...don't activate your glutes then. Gotcha. People shouldn't tip toe their way through life either. For running/scrimmage shoes, they have a "cushioned heel" to discourage a heel strike. For quick pivoting. You are quoting propaganda if you believe that we would even be using our full core without the heel strike.
What you feel comfortable in is highly correlated with how you walk. Of course, if you don't step lightly, less cushion underneath your foot will make your joints hurt. Barefoot walking is different from cushioned shoe walking.
I as a water park lifeguard for two years I worked barefoot or had minimalist shoes on concrete and in water. In the military I wore boots, both steel toe and ordinary, and I’ve used both thin soled shoes and thick custom sole expensive running shoes. The way I walk wearing any of these is entirely different. I think people need to understand that there isn’t a singular option for all situations and that knowing what you’ll expect out of the day should change how you chose to go into it. Different kinds of foot wear exist for to fill a different roll and to cater to a different need or foot shape, or to accommodate for an issue someone might be having. People that insist that they have the one solution for all problems are just jackasses.
I was thinking the whole time, Show me a steel toe version. also my feet just hurt on concrete. like a lot, I have always landed with the side of my foot or just a light amount of heal from walking bare foot the majority of my childhood. But I would like something more flexible with how my foot is very narrow when I pick it up but very wide when I step down.
@@TheBSishere - for what it's worth:
my experience in looking to achieve those same goals, I've found that for casual daily use I do well with a larger shoe. Some of those are able to tighten down enough through lacing to prevent rubbing and blistering if I need to run or go on a longer hike. I also rarely use the stock insole alone - I'm usually replacing that with something that suits my arch better, or at least adding a thin liner on top of the stock one.
Hope your search goes well!
Exactly. Used to work in a lumberyard and which I’d have worn steel toed boots a few times. Similarly when it rains I wear rain boots - which aren’t the most comfortable but they keep my feet dry.
Ya seems like that is so common, one solution for everything.
Please see "there isn't a singular option for all situations" --> Hit the nail on the head, my dude. Thank you for your insight
What i dont understand : "Why are minimalist shoes being sold for maximalist prices?" As you sort of said, no padding, no exotic materials, just the bare minimals. If prices were more reasonable id reckon more people would switch.
I'm switching because I developed plantar fasciitis. My transition is so slow because my budget does not allow otherwise.
It's always like this. I have the same problem with products that contain parfume like shampoo, soap, washing powder etc. due to allergies. The few who don't have parfume added are always the most expensive. Add less product = add extra price.
@@Nathan_Bookwurm
If they cant parfume the product, they have to use better quality stuff in it. Things which don't smell badly.
I accept a higher price for non-parfumed products. I choose them simply because I don't like the smell of the parfuned ones.
The problem is that non-parfumed things aren’t in every shop. I think they actually have less profit on them!
I can’t speak for the other shoe companies, but Vivo are high priced because of being a regenerative business. They have a great way of doing business which makes sure that everything and everyone on the chain to producing the shoe is paid a good wage, treated with respect and is able to be sustained for many years.
I'm not sure of it but maybe economies of scale are at play here, most of the industry is focused on "standard" shoes so if they make something different it's more expensive.
I appreciate how concise and straight to the point you are, while remaining comprehensive and explaining things clearly
Thanks so much!
@@BenVallack I have for quite some time been wearing leather soled shoes with a hard leather heel. I used to have the same mentality as barefoot "minimalist shoe wearers. I was hoping that the fact that its hard and not cushioned, would cause my feet get stronger, and I would put less stress on my joints for longevity of the body. But I have also noticed after longs days of work more often pain and in my legs and feet. The question it brings up for me is if the shoe is compressing less and taking less of that impact for us, that doesn't that mean we actually put more stress on our joints? It could also very well be the fact that dress shoes do not compare to barefoot shoes as they do have a heel and are quite hard.
@@pyotrilyichtchaikovsky3733 I'm not the maker of the video, but I can answer this.
Basically, the natural way of running at speed is to land on the forefoot as was said in the video. When we do land on our forefoot, our tendons and muscles (for example, the calf muscle and Achilles tendon) take all the force of the landing. This produces no wear and tear (as long as you do not overuse your tendons and muscles to the point of breakdown), because muscles and tendons are elastic and self-repair.
However, if you land on your heel, then your muscles and tendons cannot contribute to taking the force of the landing because you are landing straight onto the bone of your foot. This force is transmitted through your body including your knees and hips. The larger the force, the greater the chances of injury or breakdown with every step. This is why heelstriking causes a higher rate of injury amongst runners.
To answer your question - if you do heelstrike while walking/running, then wearing a thinner shoe WILL put stress on your joints. If you feel pain, than this could be the reason. The strength of your feet is only relevant when landing on the forefoot (the ball of the foot), because only there can the muscles of the toe, foot and calf get involved. Dress shoes may make it difficult to walk with more of a forefoot focus because they have a heel and a very solid sole, which limits the flexion of the foot and the involvement of the toes.
Hope I helped.
@@Zephromonia Clear and conscise, makes perfect sense. Thank you
For people living in cities or anywhere where they're walking mostly on hard surfaces, with barefoot shoes just imagine you're living on a mountain-beach and you have to walk with no shoes all day on rocks. First few minutes would feel good, but if you have to travel more you'd quickly get very tired by just WALKING and very soon you'd find yourself using your heel more and more, ending the day very tired and with all joints damaged.
But if you have to walk short distances or walk mostly on dirt/grass is totally worth switching to barefoot shoes.
I didn't even know there was a barefoot movement until I accidentally transformed my feet. I was laid off during the pandemic, and became a stay at home partner after, and started going barefoot all day every day. It wasn't until I realized regular shoes didn't fit anymore and I started researching it that I figured out what was going on.
@@shish_taoukwell no. Since barefoot shoes are really bad for your feet. Realistically you should really only wear shoes and go barefoot equally. A balanced fair of both.
@@shish_taouk……barefoot minimalist is all I will wear unless I am hunting and then my dad makes me wear boots. I put them on then feel like I’m clunking around in my boots.
Been doing that for years now though and...what? Does everyone need to have a special plotline lol? Ive never needed any barefoot shoes. Are yall sure you arent just severely susceptible to "you are special" marketing tactics?
@@zzodysseuszz
Say that to childhood me that spent all day outdoors barefoot….
@@Tinylittledansonman
Your feet are just stuck squished. You are on a video irrelevant to you. That’s you looking for a “plot line” I guess
Others have had the problem for a while and they just now are making foot shaped shoes that’s aren’t TOE shoes. So it’s new to you. Not to anyone else
Excellent video. I am elderly and obese. Barefoot walking has significantly helped improve my balance: I can now go up and down steps sequentially instead of one at a time. When I walk, I focus on lifting my rib cage to improve my posture, and on powering each stride from my glutes and hamstrings. I try to glide my foot into contact with the terrain like I’m landing an airplane, so the strike, though affecting the entire sole, is more centered in the midsole region. Where I live, we have very uneven sidewalks, and my feet are now not only stronger but also more sensitive to these defects so they don’t trip me up.
That’s fantastic!
Good stuff
Sequentially means one at a time.. ? Perhaps you mean simultaneously or you mean multiple steps at a stride.
the best thing by far i've seen for improving posture is hanging from a pullup bar, even for less than 4 minutes a day without putting all of your weight on it. also pullup bars are cheap to get.
@@nephihenry4328 yes. I do that too. It is very painful, and I had to start with a few seconds.
as a semi-retired disabled US Army Vet of 14 years... i have a normal job but still get a minimal disability payment each month for both feet and nerve damage in my ears (tinnitus)... my feet were pretty much my life from 18-32 years old. doing police work even in the Military you're on your feet when you're not driving a vehicle... folks call it, gumshoe feet, foot patrol feet, nurse's feet, the doctors call it Plantar fasciitis.
so for my life i've lived at home in sandals, house shoes, basically barefoot with cold weather warm soft shoes (no socks) and minimal protection when i have to pop outside for a few minutes... but elsewhere? US Army/DOD regulations require athletic shoes and so forth for Physical Training in uniform. of course everybody knows about craptastical DOD issued footwear, dress shoes, combat boots... and how the civilian combat boot companies have been decades more advanced and comfortable and less injurious. so i went civilian boots as soon as i could and never looked back.
after getting out of the Army i worked in rounded toe sneakers in factories. today i cook pizzas and wear slip stop shoes with rounded toes. i wore rounded toed Army boots and sneakers to work out in back then. i've got kinda sorta wide foot ball width feet so (with my orthotics) i wear a wide width shoe.
so, when i could i went 'barefoot' and never even heard of 'the movement'... but alot of my life basically injured my feet till today... if i don't wear orthotics the damage to my heels and plantar tendons starts back up again and if anybody knows podiatry... unless new surgeries have happened... you dick up your plantar tendons? you're effed. might as well cut that foot off and learn how to use a prosthetic foot.
my dad was born flat-footed (archless) and i have 'false arches'... so we both were genetically predisposed for plantar problems. pops wore 'corrective shoes' for years as a child and those forced his feet to grow arches... but of course the 1950's through 60's didn't have MRI and motion capture and foot pressure sensitive diagnostics like we have today... so my pop's 20 year Air Force career ruined his plantars so badly that... he was always in pain, always wearing braces to sleep in... podiatrist visits every few months to double-check his custom orthotics... every once in a while pops could get a steroid shot in his heels to increase healing and reduce damage and pops shopped for shoes like a girl does, always looking for THAT PERFECT PAIR.
so, what does the barefoot 'movement' say about plantar damage?
i noticed the video guy doesn't have strong ankle support in the pairs he showed off. they're high but they're floppy cloth. how does the barefoot 'movement' answer to ankle damage? rolling? sprains?
trust me, ankle damage sucks hot sweaty donkey ballzz! wearing walking/running sneakers in Panama, i've experienced a nigh on inverted foot roll which caused a Class 3 Ankle Sprain with tendon damage, and 3 stress fractured foot bones. and all i was doing was stepping backwards out of a full sized 'cattle truck' Ford Maxi Van and PLOP suddenly i'm on my azz FROM my foot landing in a pavement pothole more than 4" deep. i ended up in a solid, toes to knee bend, fiberglass, full cast for SIX MONTHS! with a US Army full bird Colonel podiatrist doing x-rays and MRI on my leg once a week for the first 2 months. then once a month afterwards and another six months of physical therapy out of the cast. i was wearing slowly lowering versions of a brace still under that doctor's care for that second half a year. i basically spent a year of my life doing office drudge work, gimping around on crutches, wearing my ARMY PT gear and one sneaker, then two sneakers. it was damned embarrassing!
Similar here.
I personally found that wearing barefoot shoes completely eliminated the odd ankle roll id have once in a while, since they're so low to the ground.
I wear barefoot shoes but dont believe they're best for everyone. Many claims are not evidence based. However plantar fasciitis is pretty much all we talk about. Once you've healed from the acute injury (wearing cushioned and arch support) you can strengthen your foot either with exercises or slowly wearing more barefoot shoes. Because barefoot shoes will allow your feet to move and use muscle they result in less plantar fasciitis in the long term if the transition is done right. This is my experience as well and after having periods of cramping or plantar fasciitis since childhood I no longer get them, and no longer need specialised insoles.
Barefoot shoes result in less ankle injuries so there isnt the same need for rigid support. Since there is improved feedback, you literally have improved balance and fewer falls or twists. It's one of their main benefits and why they can be recommended for aging individuals as well as situations like hiking/scrambling.
Look at the wear pattern on his shoes at around 7:13. No different than you'd see on 90% of 'regular' shoes. If the 'minimalist' shoes were actually different, the wear pattern would reflect that. The only advantages I can see: lightweight, lower to the ground.
He posted an affiliate link. The whole video was a fluff piece to get you to click the link, and make him a few $.
@@dfunited1 as if you know anything. Don’t spout bull about “wear pattern” from a frame of an edited video. He is selling something, but you have a personal interest in going against him too. If you pretend it’s all fake, you don’t have to think about changing your lifestyle.
I loved this little break down but in fact a lot of the pointy shoe design did not necessarily come from rich people simply hating on poor people, but since many of the ruling class rode horses pointed shoes were MUCH easier to allow you to slip your foot shoe and all into the stirrup so you could ride the horse without falling off the most popular example of this is in cowboy shoes often seen in the midwest the point toe allows ease of slipping into the stirrup its also why they often have flat slippery leather soles to allow them to even more easily slip into the stirrup.
Also the social class element is probably the reason behind it becoming a fashion
@@HkFinn83 You mean conspicuous consumption?
All fashion trends had their beginnings in something practical, that was then adopted by elite class as stylized imitation fashion, without the practical "hey, we need and use this", and then became a status symbol to parade in front of the plebians. I'm sure things like makeup started practically, probably in theatre, was then copied by the wealthy (theatre with costumes and makeup not being accessible to the poor), etc. Case in point, pointed shoes worn by knights, who could afford a separate set of riding shoes and make frequent use of them, well, knighting was for the wealthy, so even wealthy non-knights started wearing them, but without the hardcore practical design aspects, just as a stylized imitation version. In general, "high fashion" is purposely about being impractical, so show off to others how wealthy you are and how little manual labor (or anything else practical for that matter) you need to be doing. Pointy shoes, high heels, make up, long fingernails, fancy dress, fancy hair, delicate any and everything, corsets, heck, even throw foot binding in there, since there's no way you could grow up to adulthood with bound feet without being wealthy and having an army of people looking after all your needs.
The pointed cowboy boots also allows more of them to stand around a campfire.
@Marius 007 I mean. We can look at recent trends. Look at 4x4 vehicles. I've been an offroad enthusiast my entire life. I'm a farmer. 4x4s and heavy duty trucks are a necessity for my line of work - look how many workhorse vehicles became luxurious family mobiles. Guys running stretched tires on brand new 4x4s.
Work boots - there's a huge following online for guys buying work boots for fashion.
Pocket knives - tons of folks have $500+ knives they'll never use for a status symbol.
I mean they're smaller less impactful things.. but Trends I've seen change in my lifetime.
As far as the actual video - I bought minimalist combat boots when I was in the Army. They weren't awful.. but up to that point in my life all I had to compare them to were steel toe pull on work boots. I didn't really notice a substantial improvement in anything. Those boots were crazy comfortable for those long hauls where you're in boots for 48+ hours.
idk what's with your videos. One moment I am watching a man use a treadmill desk and two button keyboards, the next moment I am interested in how I actually walk. Your content is always great, and your point of view on all things ergo and practical is phenomenal. Keep up the great work!
Thanks so much!
Ben the salesman :)
@@lucy-h please, do not insult Ben like that.
@@BenVallack I also think there is the problem of potentially glorifying poverty if you had no shoes in the past or poor ones today at least in the west it is likely due to poverty.
So i'm one of the wierdos that played barefoot outside as a kid almost exclusively except for sport, and continue to do so today. Heel striking is totally normal. I never had barefoot shoes until I got a corporate job and my feet started to ache in heeled pointy boots. Traded them out after 6 months and I'm so happy. I think the surface you are on is the biggest issue. You walk naturally how you should barefoot. Watch kids who are 1 year in to walk, it's fascinating how well they move.
Great video!
You are not weird! In Asia, most kids play barefoot outdoors! 😊
@@dawnforlife And in Australia.
@@dawnforlife in the states a lot of people, especially older people, will make comments about you if you're barefoot. i grew up in a small woodsy town and always spent most of my time barefoot and only wore shoes into town and to school. i moved to a small city and even if i'm simply taking out the garbage i have neighbors that point out that i'm barefoot, as if i was unaware. lol. also a lot of old people scolding me for not making my kids wear shoes when we play in the grass. it's weird to me but it's because of these interactions that i've realized that most of america prefers shoes always, at least the older generations do.
@@lettus143 It’s due to health hazards like broken glass and parasites like hookworm. Hookworm got so bad that it effected the population of the American south so bad that it caused a stereotype of them being dumb and lazy which was true bc they were sick from hookworm making them lethargic and such
Yep I grew up barefoot and still do go mostly. We also don’t allow shoe wearing in the house. I encourage my kids not wear shoes outside as much as possible to except when we are in our livestock pens
Being flat of foot and having tried all sorts of shoes with arch supports, even bespoke orthotics, I absolutely love my barefoot shoes. I started in Vibrams with the separated toes for the gym and I just splashed out on Vivobarefoot Balerinas which make me feel as if I want to fly. I'll have to chuck all my other shoes because I just know they're now going to feel like concrete by comparison. Of course, foot exercises also help with this. I can walk far longer and with no blisters and less stress and effort. I even think my arches feel more pronounced. I'll never go back.
Just a technical comment, though. As a former radio broadcaster, your edits are ridiculously tight: with truncated word endings, sentences running unnaturally into one another and no time for listeners to keep up with your dialogue because your natural pauses have been cut. Large editing gaps not only mimic natural conversation, they give the brain time to keep up with the myriad changes in topic. I also think that a slightly slower pace would make the important information you are imparting easier to digest.
Unpleasant to listen to this "speedtalk" like presentation!!!
@@ronkoloz7136play the vid at a slower speed
I don't work in audio/video and I noticed the strange editing too, it felt like I was being bombarded with information!
I used to have flat flat arches. I'd go to a snowboard shop show them my feet and ask for insoles and they would immediately point me to the flattest sole. I've been minimalist barefoot for 3 years now. Last time I went to buy new insoles the bootfitter looked at my feet and thought I was a mid or high soler! You will develop an arch from it.
I loved the quick editing!!
I've never worn barefoot shoes but I grew up wearing converse and other skate shoes because anything that wasn't a flat sole felt really weird to me. I didn't really know anything about the difference between heel striking and walking normally until this video, but it totally aligns with my experience. When I had to get some more supportive shoes for work recently I had to basically learn to heel strike more often.
Edit: I was never claiming that shoes with flatter soles are like barefoot shoes, or that Converse are in any way inherently more ergonomic (they've killed my feet before too, their build quality sucks since the Nike acquistion, and they've killed my feet before too). I'm simply sharing my experience.
OMGG!! I've had the exact same experience. the flat, dense padding of converse and vans makes for a more natural stride in my opinion. i always liked those shoes because digging my heel first into the ground as i walk just felt extremely strange to me, even if i felt """faster"""", almost as if i was generating more power with each step.
I have wide feet, so wear skate shoes or Xero for mountain biking and barefoot shoes for everything else except snowboarding and winter work/hiking.
don't heel strike omg even with padding it'll destroy your foot health.
you have to have a deeper understanding here and there are many resources,books and research that could help you. The whole muscle-tendon system of feet and legs changes dramatically after switching to barefoot or barefoot shoes. This does not occur in one day and it requires much and specific exercises to make a smooth transition and to avoid injuries. You see, mechanotrunsduction results in our tendons and muscles getting shorter over time, so transitioning to a zero elevated heel could put much tension at the back, hips and could stress the body. After the transition is completed, which takes a different amount of time and effort for each individual, the whole gait pattern changes, the alignment of spine changes, the weight is distributed evenly, toes get more range of movement, arch muscle is activated, nervous system of foot's sole is stimulated and blood supply on feet is regained to the fullest.
converse aren't skate shoes and they are way to narrow in my personal opinion but vans, etnies and DC shoes are all really comfortable.
I swapped to barefoot shoes for a few years and my feet are a lot stronger and better. The problem is that I needed to switch back after a couple of years because I had some knee pain. As you said a toe strike walk is awkward and sub-optimal so as much as I would try, I always switched back to having a heel strike walk. I always toe strike when I run and now I have my barefoot shoes for running, snow, hiking, and play, but for work I'll wear some shoes with a cushion because I don't want to damage myself because I walk on those ultra hard surfaces for about 8 hours a day. I work on my feet, so I'm standing on it that long. Although I'm pro-barefoot shoes, they will always be bad if you're standing on tile and concrete for 8 hours a day.
I would like just wide toe box shoes with a little padding so I can use them at work.
Altra make cushioned foot-shaped trainers.
Also, all Birkenstock are wide toe box and zero drop, but they do come with their cork sole. You can take that out in some models.
I'd like wide toe box cushioned shoes with arch support for standing for long periods. They're either only trainers, which not everywhere allows, don't have cushioning and support, or you can only get a wider toe box in wide shoes. I don't have wide feet, so they are to loose everywhere else. I just need a wider toe box due to tailor's bunions caused by a combination of genetics and wearing regular shoes (women's shoes look nice, but are mean to feet).
How do you walk on downward sloped ground?
Let me know if you find a cushioned wide toe box- I work on my feet on concrete and I take shoes to change at lunch- toe squeeze and bottom of the feet happy, or happy toes and ball of the foot/ heel pain. If Alta made a thicker cushioned one, that would be awesome.
@@afreespirit5444 Certainly not on the heels.
I’m a runner who transitioned to barefoot shoes (the old five fingers). Thank you for stressing the need to slowly transition, many tried to swap over without an adjustment period, only to end up injured. I have now settled on a brand called Altra which is zero drop with a wide toe box. They have padding, it’s hard running ultra bush marathons without some padding. I have no problems with knees or hips, it just seems very natural now.
I love Altra! which shoes are your favorite?
All those "minimalist" shoes are commercial BS, got fully barefoot
Personally I prefer Topos as they give a slightly better feel on the forefoot. They also last longer!! Each to their own. My VFF’s are still going strong after 2000+ miles. I just can’t wear them out !!!
When I switched to Altra, my pantar faciitis went away and my little toe that was curling in and causing pain straightened out. On smooth surfaces without any gravel or rocks, I prefer barefoot running, but most courses I need the Altras.
Why don't you just go barefoot?
Also 6 years into barefoot shoes, cheers. Has been a change for the better in almost every way (the expense and style rarity being the few cons). Worth it for me.
Did ur toes become wider again?
A few years ago my husband and I started running but I had the hardest time with it- half a mile in I'd have terrible knee pain and shin splints. I bought fancy high cushioned running shoes, but that just made it worse. Then my husband started talking about barefoot shoes- I thought he was crazy 😂 But eventually I tried them and loved them! Since switching to barefoot shoes my pain went away completely and I can actually run! It was a slow transition/process but it was definitely worth it!
*Edit- A lot of people have suggested that it was my overall level of fitness and not the shoes that make the difference. Recently I've tried cushioned running shoes of the regular variety and with a wider toe box. The knee and shin pain came back pretty quickly. And no, I didn't go into wearing the cushioned shoes hoping they'd fail. I had high hopes particularly for the wide toe box shoes- I thought they could be good for longer runs. But they weren't and I just can't wear them. If cushioned, running shoes work for you then great! But barefoot running shoes genuinely do work best for me. Just because I greatly abridged my barefoot journey for the UA-cam comments section doesn't mean it wasn't a careful, well thought out, well researched opinion. Best of luck picking your own running shoes!
I`ve had a lot of issues with my knee after an accident, but found that using "flat" soled shoes helped a lot, it makes you walk more naturally, at kleast for me (:
And have you tried normal old style flat running shoes? I don't like any of those new shoes that look like they stuck a slab of styrofoam underneath them. Flat sneakers work great for me. Barefoot shoes only seem like another extreme on the scale of shoe types. There can be too little and too much cushioning.
Ever think you felt that way because it's an unnatural activity? Walking is fine and great exercise, all jogging does is destroy your joints
@@sabir1208 Well that too. I am all for walking. People think running is better but it's not. Walk the same distance and you burn the same amount of calories. And you'll actually be able to enjoy your surroundings. And you can do it until you're 100 years old.
@Mola Diver I know! Walking keeps me very lean, as soon as I learned to drive, I gained weight lol
I've not been wearing barefoot shoes for too long but I've noticed an increase already in my resilience when walking. The transition has been easy for me as I've never worn tight shoes. I have been a tad concerned about the heel striking on concrete surfaces when walking a lot, but I noticed very quickly that my body was adjusting the way it walked in the same way that it would whenever I walk around without shoes on - which is all the time at home and around the garden. I honestly think everyone should embrace barefoot shoes, especially when running!
If you're heel striking you need to work on your hips they're too tight which is not letting you place feet down gently, ankles need work too, lots of stretching and yoga and you'll see your foot goes down nice and light
One thing not mentioned here, is I found I really appreciate the tactile feeling of using a minimalist shoe. We have a lot of feeling in our feet, but regular shoes is as if you had thick mittens on your hands all the time. There is a portion of sidewalk near my house that has brick for a while on either end of a bus stop, and I usually veer over to it because I can feel the individual bricks under my feet. If tree roots push up ridges in sidewalk, you feel that and your feet also mold around it vs just see-sawing over the pivot. I feel much more connected and less likely to twist my ankle.
I appreciate the comments about heel striking when walking. If I'm doing a ton of fast walking on concrete, I do find it easier to use slightly thicker soles and be looser with the heel striking, but still feel like I can easily adjust the gait for comfort. Or if I'm suddenly walking over bumpy grass, it makes sense to go a bit more forefoot at that point.
Hiking barefoot really made me aware that our feet are sensory organs. It was so cool to feel the differences in moisture and temperature, soft vs hard, etc. All the stuff we would miss with shoes on.
Blah, blah, blah... "wearing mittens on your feet". BS. Work on your running.
Oh man, I sure would appreciate all those times I stepped on huge, pointed upwards shards of broken glass bottles and nails on the street so much more, if my shoe soles were like 3 mm thick.
@@Даниил-н8н I mean obviously if you're constantly stepping on broken bottles and nails, you need more protection, but not everyone is in that situation. Just because people in certain factory or construction jobs need steel toe boots doesn't mean everyone else is being reckless not wearing those boots all the time.
@@Rpodnee feet aren't organs
Bare everywhere, I've found a few distinct gaits have popped up:
Comfiest ground walk (grass, moss):
Heel strike, very efficient, somewhat fast, good for a long walk taking minimal energy
Rough ground walk:
Middle/flat strike for a wider surface taking the grit, noticeably more knee/quad engagement to slow/absorb the impact (like a mini squat)
Slippy/muddy/incline/decline walk:
Forefoot with active toe spreading and clawing, you can get so much grip by digging into the ground and clasping it, applying weight just on forefoot let's you sink deeper. Having toes spread in all directions reduces slip too as some toes are always against the slip grain
Running:
Virtually always forefoot, the rougher the ground the more knee bending/mini squatting to absorb impact, mid footing where really bad, but the speed of forefoot is mad
It's so cool how they do it themselves, free those dogs
Worked in hospitality for 13 years, on my feet all the time, I can tell you now, barefoot shoes would kill your posture on hard surfaces over long periods of time. Shifting around weight constantly and such on hard surfaces requires the padding in conventional modern shoes. Each type of shoe has its purpose though. Some of the people i used to do fencing with, loved barefoot shoes for it (wooden bouncy floors and grass surfaces). Hiking though, I always felt boots and shoes were a hit or miss, but recently transitioned to a very expensive pair of lowa boots and I have never felt more comfortable in a shoe. Big topic you should mention are socks, they make a world of difference and many people forget to talk about it or not realise how important they are. Looser fitting boots ( to accommodate your feet's natural swelling during strenuous walking) and wool socks make a world of difference in boots for hiking and general wear.
Exactly this. Long distance walking or continuous standing ruins my hip or ankle but when on grass this so rarely causes an issue compared to in a city
I did years of foot heavy jobs. Fedex driver, Mover, dock worker on hard concrete and ceramic flooring. Football, on basically compressed rock with the presences of grass. Hard cleated shoes on that shit or frozen ground is the most brutal feeling in my life. Blisters the size or golf balls with no time to stop will kill your soul. All that to say this. Flat shoes are just better. Toes space is better. Football cleats, American style or what I call soccer just suck. Honesty, I like Barefoot shoes the most but a good pair of boots are fantastic. I have some Sorels with the wools lining and they are heaven though they are a tad big and have a heel. You cannot beat a good pair of those besides the fact they are winter boots.
its not better, theres just not yet barefoot shoes for that kind of thing yet@@ddroz23
Unless I'm going somewhere more rugged, I kind of went with a different option with moccasins that have a thicker sole because I'm not wearing something very flexible when in rougher areas and I like to have some cushioning in the shoe.
Good comment. So basically you are upfront saying that your employers provided unsafe work environments. True that.
The new Maury thing is spot on. I switched to barefoot and minimalist running in 2009, and ended up with a stress fracture in my foot because I did way too much way too soon. Went to the doc, got orthotics, rested, got healthy, transitioned gradually, ran a marathon pain free in my silly toe shoes (FiveFingers). I haven’t worn a “normal” shoe since 2009, and I’m never going back.
I have Leguano’s shoes and when I went in the store and asked for info, that was in Germany and she said I could try them out and there was different underground like wood, stones and so on and she even said try it on the street. She also told me that I should build up the time onweer the shoes. Because my body needs readjust to it. I walk at home and in my garden always barefoot except in winter. Like on beaches I love barefooted. We do flyball a dogsport and it has happened I forgot to put on my shoes. It’s a good middle ground of my husbandtelling me to wear shoes and being my own. I’m raised on walking running barefoot till age 7, than had to wear shoes for school and moving to the city. So every opportunity was no shoes if possible.
Im having Leguano’s barefoot shoes, but got the advice to build up the time of wearing them. Because although I’m walking barefoot in my home and garden on the beach or grass places when at a flyball tournament she still advices to build up. So my body could readjusted. Because for the rest I still wear regular shoes. I have what they call ballet feet I did ballet for some years as a hobby but still did it long days training.
2009, I thought this barefoot trend was a new thing.
I'm planning on running a marathon in about 8 months. I'm playing with the idea of switching to barefoots but I'm a bit in doubt if I'll have enough time to get used to it and be ready for such a long distance (also given I rarely run but rather go skating / cycling etc.).
How long did it take you to be able to run a marathon on them?
Probably the safer bet is to be a pair to wear casually and get used to "normal" walking on these types of shoes first.
@@HL-777- Bruh this shit been around since the early 2000s.... you must be a kid.
I love my barefoot shoes! But I also love my "normal" cushioned shoes. When I want to have a cozy hike, comfortable day at work, small walk or such, I go for the barefoot shoes, since it feels more like, yeah, barefoot, it makes me think about my steps, etc etc. But for example for running I choose my cushioned running shoes, because of its features and the firm ground, or for biking I also wear harder soled shoes, because it feels too awkward to have the feet curl around the pedals 😅 I think, it's like choosing a tool: what do you want to do? Choose the right option to achieve the goal, and neither one is the ultimate answer for everything.
Riding barefoot is great for strengthening legs and feet.
It depends on the type of running you do. There is actual evidence that suggests long distance running is better with “minimal shoes” (more like barefoot) for foot and leg health.
@Karl with a K who gaf abt IQ though, lol
@Karl with a K i smell bullshit 🤣🤣you’re out of touch w reality😂😂😂
@Karl with a K literally ebverything you said is wrong
As an engineer, I can say this video is the finest, most accurate one I've ever seen about minimalist footwear. In layman's terms it's this simple: When your feet land, the force upon contact with the ground MUST go somewhere. The biggest misconception out there is that shoe padding will somehow magically absorb and make this force disappear. This is completely WRONG. When that foam is compressed, it simply sends the force back up through your legs, with the hips, lower back, and even your neck paying the price. If you're obese, like most of us are to some degree, the best thing you can do for your feet and joints is lose weight and thereby reducing the landing force. Again, this is an EXCELLENT video.
Thanks! (PS check out the rest of my channel!)
@@BenVallackSunscribed. Very good stuff sir.
Correct... but, as a fellow engineer, you forgot about impulse. That's what padding reduces and the whole point of airbags and other padding based protection. The force still gets applied but your muscles and legaments can learn to deal with it.
A reduced impulse can have huge effects when done right.
Is this an argument as to why airbags dont work?
Obese to some degree? Americans smh…
First, pointed shoes come from horse riding. After the invention of stirrups the pointed shoe with a high heel became popular because it was easier to get your foot into the stirrups and hold position while riding. It started with knights and went into the noble classes from there.
And second?
A very weird and not altogether accurate rewriting of history there! 😀
@@MusTheFan And second, I do not understand this subculture at all and think it's weird.
@@Lynnefromlyn How so?
@@PenumbranWolf sounds like a personal problem to me
When I was a kid, I got a pair of moccasins I wore regularly for 10 years- they were the kind with no rubber or plastic, a sole made of the same hide as the rest, and a little bit of cushion in the sole. They were super flexible and light, but gave me enough protection to walk on rocky or hot surfaces. To me, those will always be the best shoes I've ever had. I will forever be searching for a new identical pair. I could feel the ground and use my feet as if I was barefoot, but my feet were still protected and cushioned. I walked and ran on a wide variety of surfaces from asphalt to grass, climbed trees, hiked in the desert and mountain forests, went to school, and rode horses bareback in those moccasins. The one and only flaw was the deerhide laces were not as effective as they could have been.
if youre ok with saving up for them and are willing to do the leather maintenance to make them last a decade or two, catskill moccasins does custom fits of this type of shoe with whatever design you want (of course the price goes up the more stuff you add or if you want taller boots instead of shoes, but idk ur preferences) and they have a good reputation.
I suggest taking a look through the websites finished projects and individual component pricing to see if they actually offer the options you want and if the pricing for that is worth it to you
@@nootshoo3993 Oh, thank you! I've been wanting to do this for many years, and can't find anywhere in Canada. Will check that out. I had real mukluks when I was a preteen, but forget about getting real ones now. No seal skin allowed. And before you say anything, yeah they are cute. So are all the other animals, but I sill eat meat and wear leather.
I used barefoot shoes a while ago and the only issue I had with them was when the surface I was running on got really hot. They have much less insulation than "normal" shoes and it was really painful to run with them on hot surfaces.
Other than that they're fantastic, and this video is an excellent portrayal of how going barefoot is a transition to something different (and probably healthier) rather than just bring outright better.
Vivo do sell some really thin insoles that come included in some of their shoes, the cork one might be good for your case?
Yeah the ones I had were cheap knock-offs lol, they fell apart after a single season. I'm sure any of the Vivo's would be better than what I had, thanks for the recommendation!
How I solve this was to cut out sole shaped space blanket reflective material and place it underneath the shoe-liner.
@@hamster2845 Ooh what a smart idea.
@@infinitenayc9910 For hot surfaces you would put the reflective side down, for cold, you would put the reflective side up.
I changed - a couple of months ago - to barefoot shoes and I got plantar fasciitis. I went back to pointy shoes.
Switching to barefoot shoes has kind of changed my life, or at least my life as it relates to my foot health and walking. My foot structure shifted, my pain went away, and my chronic ingrown toenails became far less frequent. Everyone on both sides of my family have horribly shaped feet and I don’t want to end up like that as I see how much pain it causes them. I love my barefoot shoes so much and I can never go back, but I fully understand that they’re not for everyone.
I also have a chronic ingrown toe, and family history of it. A change in shoes has made a world of difference, even if it's mostly just that I don't much wear hard dress shoes anymore. But also more minimal and wide-toed shoes were an unsurprising but not widely available help
I had a procedure done as a teen to permanently cut the far inside root of the nail to prevent ingrowns. It was a game changer for me because I was constantly digging and mutilating my toes to dig out the nail that was biting into the skin too much, I wouldn't just leave them be. I couldn't recommend it more to at least look into it and see if it something you'd consider. It was just handled by my primary care Dr at the time though nowadays they would probably send you to a foot dr.
Barefoot shoes didn’t do that. You got rid of poor shoes which is what helped. But you started using barefoot shoes and have convinced yourself it was the barefoot shoes that did it
@@zzodysseuszz The point is that switching to a different shoe is what helped. The 3rd option is go completely barefoot which many are fine doing
Reality of ingrown toenails is that once they have started, they always come back messed up. The wrong shoe will push your nails into your toes, but they're not a cause according to my podiatrist. Some people are prone genetically, some people aren't. He has kids as young as 7 coming in for nail removals. I had the roots on both my big toes killed to simply avoid having to go to the doctor every year or two and get them yoinked off, the week or two of recovery and not being able to wear shoes at all sucks. They do the root killing with some kind of acid basically, that was the only part I had to look away for, it's kind of shocking how easily your toenails come off when they lift it up and tug. Toenails are mostly aesthetic anyway, especially since we wear shoes.
Switching to barefoot shoes has been the most rewarding thing for my comfort when it comes to my feet. I feel like I just have so much control and sensation awareness when I walk in them. I am just able to react more to my environment as a result.
This is also what I noted.
Feeling the ground, angles, and edges is great for knowing what the ground is doing and can reduce injury risk.
Plus less heel on the shoe means less of a fulcrum if you do take an awkward step with less strain on ligaments and tendons, thus less likely to injure.
when was that useful?
@Karl with a K nice troll
I hike barefoot. I'm pretty comfortable heel striking while walking but on treacherous terrain or at speed I basically walk on my tip toes. It varies tremendously how my foot strikes. Temperature, firmness, and energy levels are all paramount for deciding how I strike the ground. But when I slip on shoes I don't think about anything like that and just go back to my basal, which is heel striking.
Glad you made thisvideo because it's good to see a relatively unbiased study.
Bless you in all your endeavors.
You hike barefoot or with barefoot shoes? Unfortunately I'd be worried about stepping on sharp glass walking on some of the more frequented trails around here.
Yea how dp you hike barefoot? I always thought about it but i would be worried about steppinf on something sharp
@@connorperrett9559 barefoot. I just watch where I step. But I do get a few sharp sticks and briars every now and again. It still hurts. But you just take it out and carry on.
Whenit gets stuck is a different issue.
@@ghostswordsman8024 I usually carry sandals with me when I'm mushroom hunting if I go off the path into treacherous terrain. But they don't do well on the long term.
@@dontworry4945 Don't forget to tell people that the more a foot is exercised on different surfaces it becomes conditioned. The skin on the heel, ball and toes will thicken naturally and nerves will become desensitised.
I have a naturally wide feet and started sport, that have a lot of tip toeing in ti, so they got even wider. As a woman it's even harder to find shoes that are not to tight for me, and I also value a good look. So I ordered barefoot shoes for summer to try it out. It was the best idea ever, they are my favourite and now I got 2 more pairs for fall. I actually got some insoles for foot pain (that is not barefoot shoes related), and barefoot shoes are the only ones that the insoles fit in. So I have a bit of padding there actually. But I hope we will have both of the worlds some day, especially the wide toebox should be a standard.
As someone with a really long second toe (naturally pointy feet) I have had a lot of difficulty finding barefoot style shoes that fit my feet. I could always go up a few sizes I suppose but I would much prefer to find a brand that has a more "foot shaped" shoe that isn't made for only a few foot shapes. I gather that a foot changes shape when the toes have the opportunity to spread, but I don't believe that will make my big toe significantly longer or my second toe significantly shorter. Thanks guys!
No idea how long your toe is, but as far as I understand barefoot shoes like vivos should leave plenty of space for your toes. When I tried vivos recommended for my foot size I had a huge amount of space(not sure if that's the case for all brands), so I feel like if I had a long second toe it wouldn't be a problem. So if you are choosing barefoot shoes where your toes touch the end of the shoe, you are potentially getting a size too small. But don't quote me on this, that's just my observation from trying the vivo brand.
Naot
@@hornet-h3v I was born with feet like this. (Just like my great grandma.) I actually had surgery to shorten the toe because I couldn't handle the extreme pain. Best thing EVER.
Well you can't mass manufacture things that fit individuals...
This! My big toe nails are not flat, they are a bit upwards so my vivos gave me a corn under my right toe nail from the shoe being so flat over the toe nails. Most barefoot shoes leave room on the sides and front, but I never found one that left room at the top 😩
Great info. Been using barefoot style footwear for almost two years now. I have found that focusing more on where you land in relation to the rest of your body is more important than which part of your foot you land on. Not over striding seems to play a big role in efficiency of gait as well as reduction of injury.
Agreed. The most important thing is to land under the hip and not to pverstride. Simple ques instead of trying to decipher the mechanics of the foot and gait cycle, I find are helpful
YES, walking barefoot in bad terrain most of my life, you can land on your blade, heel, ball, etc but its strength and flexibility on your ankles that helps.
Makes sense. Locking your knee before the heel strike is possibly more efficient, but it's a bad move if you're walking on rough or hazardous ground and need to adjust your weight quickly. If you don't overstride, you probably won't lock your knee.
@@TBButtSmoothy Personally I can't/don't heelstrike at all when barefoot. If you place your foot on something hard or sharp there's no way to adjust and pivot the weight compared to striking with the front of the foot where I can easily re-adjust if I step on something unintentionally
Love this video. An accident at 60, lead to a BK amputation. Over a short period of time I had my Prosthetist’s take the heel rise out of my prosthetic foot. I soon learned that walking bare foot or with flat - no shoes, my gait, legs and hips were much better. Moccasins and a recent purchase of bare foot shoes have been a game changer. I get lectured often about my choice, but it’s my choice. In May I will be 73, I am high activity and so happy my body lead me to bare foot. Always wondered about the up tilt on (especially athletic shoes). Even as a teen I was more comfortable in flat profile active ware. Soccer comes to mind. Ha!
I don’t have a big foot but I have a very square wide foot pointy toe boxes are the bane of my shoe shopping experience
Aasics for a short period had a very thin soled casual everyday shoe. It wasn't an athletic shoe or a wrestling shoe. I got one pair on clearance and it was amazing. Until I wore them out and realized that Aasics phased them out and were no longer making them. Crushed me because for the first time I had finally found a VERY comfortable shoe versus your standard sneaker.
The exact same thing happened to me with a pair of NB. Outside clearance. I have mortins neuroma, and I could only wear those shoes without it blowing up. My son looked at the shoes and noticed details I never would have. I've been wearing Barefoot shoes ever since and have avoided surgery. I swear, barefoot shoes saved my life.
If you still have them you could find a cobbler and get them repaired
If you do find another shoe that good for you, buy multiples since they too can be discontinued.
I loved this, and I also think that it's worth adding that most natural environments are full of hills, therefore forcing you to walk more on the ends of your feet. Flatland enviroments also tend to have mounds and overall rugged terrain that requires more careful footing to traverse quickly and effectively, so I'd say that it's more efficient than heel striking myself, going by what's natural. Just thought I'd add my two cents there✌️👍
Added to this is that in uneven (natural) terrain you typically shorten your stride significantly and that makes a toe strike much more ergonomic. The way we walk with long strides on flat surfaces naturally makes the heel the lowest part of the foot and the part that touches down first.
Good point!
I wore barefoot for a few years, then switched to full leather soled, handmade boots - the kind that mold to the arch. They allow me to stand on hard surfaces for 16 straight hours. Every step feels like a foot massage when I add a cork insole with a metatarsal bump. I'll never go back to barefoot. It's also interesting that the boots are actually quite hard on the bottom - there's no cushion more than the rubber of the outsole. (look up JK, Nicks, Franks, Drew's, etc.)
Ooh, I’ve been wondering about leather soles. Thank you
absolutely 👍🏼 before my job made steel toe shoes mandatory I was wearing barefoot shoes to work and I could stand for HOURS 12 hr shifts were a breeze. Now with steel toe my hip and lower back starts to ache 🫠
@@jasminemora6869 yes me too!!! Exactly. Hate company shoes. I put the insole on thee wrong side to compensate for height slightly
Most retail footwear doesn't actually have any heel lift, despite what these people claim (a few mm at most). Most retail footwear is actually closer to barefoot shoes than these people admit. The major difference is the thickness of the soles. Now you can see what an actual heel lift does, it doesn't match up with the "barefoot" marketing, does it?
@@averyj.steele1074 this is not accurate. The vast majority of footwear has a heel to toe drop.
The primary reason I'm interested in barefoot shoes is because of multiple ankle sprains I've had in traditional shoes over many years. My ankle ligaments are so stretched and loose that I can easily roll my ankle with shoes that have a lot of padding or if they are stiff like hiking boots. Barefoot shoes keep my feet closer to the ground and reduce the risk of rolling an ankle simply due to the physics and geometry of the shoe.
I really appreciate this video. I have been running around barefoot since I was a little kid. I HATED wearing shoes so when I heard about the barefoot shoe movement I was pretty excited. It was always so weird about people saying that once you move to barefoot you were supposed to never walk/run on your heel because that clearly never made sense. to me
When I watch informative videos, I speed them up. You, my sir, brought me back to normal speed. Way to have a completely information packed and decently long video! This was awesome!
Hehe! I knew there’d be someone out there that appreciated the pace!
I would have no problem with switching if the industry wasn't charging $150-300 for "barefoot" shoes. Talk about ruling class, what kind of price gouging BS is this?
Just a result of supply and demand I think. Just need more people buying them so they can start producing more and competitors bring the cost down.
They are 50-150 right about now. Regular shoes are going for 150-600
Regular shoes: $150-600? 😂😂😂. U need a reality check boi
@@kizarumelon2477 not everyone shops Walmart for crap. Go look at Lowa, or Danner or bellview. Get out of the ghetto... boi
If you choose a different brand, you can get a pair of barefoot shoes for less than £30. I wouldn't purchase this brand out of principle.
I'm gonna use this as an animation reference. Animation is important, down to the feet.
I’m about 3 years in and wear a thin insole when I know I’m going to be speed walking on concrete all day at work. I think the zero drop and toe spread are the most important elements. Prolonged intuition and being able to feel changes in surfaces seem to be a beneficial aspect of barefoot shoes. Great video and great information.
That makes sense. I've always preferred to go barefoot, and when I did have to wear shoes I would opt for flat, thin-soled shoes, but when I started working in a warehouse store (miles and miles of walking on solid concrete) I had to switch to shoes with more support. Still hated them, but sadly we're really not built for standing and walking on such hard surfaces all day.
I tried barefoot shoes and followed all the guidance as to how to slowly integrate them and ended up with plantar faciatis from the increased tension on the plantar fascia. I now have to hike with arch support. Really not for everyone. With the exception of the wide toe box, it's so true that our balance, gait etc is far better with splayed toes.
Absolutely. At the end of the day, there’s two extremes here- barefoot walking and incredibly padded shoes. Find your balance. I’m sick of this ‘do this! Do that!’
You may look for some broad toe box boots like Keens or Corcoran jump boots (Munson Army last). Then you can have the wide toe box with some support.
If you have access to a gym with a sled, try integrating pushing the sled into your workouts. That is supposed to help with foot strength, which should help with plantar fasciitis.
@Paul Skalla Yeah, there are lots more brands now that have a wide toe box. I'm currently using Topo boots in the summer & Altberg in winter.
When I first started wearing barefoot shoes, I did a lot of research into the pros and cons. I eventually decided I didn't care though because the way barefoot shoes made me feel was reason enough. It's like going from having cinder blocks on your feet to nothingness. I also love being able to feel the ground beneath my feet.
The transition was difficult when it came to the calf soreness but never once could i imagine going back to traditional shoes and I still can't.
I understand everyone is going to have different experiences but for me, personally, barefoot shoes are a total no-brainer!
Same here
You got any recommendations? I'm looking to get into it considering I spend most of my time with no shoes but it's not really socially acceptable and my job requires a protective shoe
For about 8 years I've been using a longboard to get to work. I'm only standing and balancing on my left foot using the right leg to push. When I got my first barefoot shoes it took some time to get used to them but only for my right foot. My right foot hurt a lot when I used them too much but my left foot never was a problem since it had the necessary muscles from balancing on the board.
Problem is that I can't really use my barefoot shoes on the board but I love them so much that I switched to a bike ^^
I tinkered with this and switched years ago.
I duct taped the soles of my old classic runners to see where the action was. Decided to literally just go barefoot based on what I saw. All heel strikes.
Increased speed, endurance, knee problems disappeared
And I just plain enjoyed the experience of running that much more due to the new tactile feedback. I ended up going with Merrill trail glove shoe. Best move ever.
A D V E R T I S M E N T
@@brentschmogbert lmaoo
I agree. I put on Vapor Gloves back in 2018 and practically never took them off. Much improved running form and speed, patellar tendinitis a thing of the past. And they relatively cheap although not very durable. Love em.
My two pair of Merrell Trail Gloves brutally fell apart from week one. Horrible glue job in China. Fabric frayed to pieces. Horrible manufactured shoe. They did not care either. The shoe store did nothing either. Five Fingers by Vibram is just as bad. Looking at Luna, Earth Runner and Shamma. Very caring folks.
I am over 60 years old with a lot of pain in my joints due to Osteoarthritis. I have it in my feet as well so with Hallux rigidus in my feet I couldn' fit in any normal shoes anymore.
I started to wear barefoot shoes which was a relief. About a year after the operation on my feet I could've used normal shoes again but it felt awful.
That was 4 years ago and I haven't been wearing normal shoes ever since.
Often people ask me about my barefoot shoes and I can only praise them. For me (and this is a personal opinion) they changed so much to the better. My pain is reduced all over (even my back is better), I am more agile and I am able to walk for hours with my dog again.
I always used to have cold feet. Not any more even if I wear my thinnest barefoot shoes in winter because the feet are not confined to a small space and since they move around in the shoes they are warm.
The shape of my feet has changed. They look wider and the toes aren't pressed against each other anymore. And the soles of my feet are very resilient against gravel, stones etc.
For me barefoot shoes are a live changer.
PS: My soles are mainly worn out under my forefoot so I guess I am a "forefoot striker" 🦶🏻 •‿•
For me I work outside and have an extremely active job. I use to cry after work every day because my feet would hurt so bad. I tried so many different styles of shoes and finally tried bear foot. And I get barely any pain in my feet anymore. Any pain that I have is bearable. I'll never change shoes.
Any recommendations?
@@sez9660 Saguaro. Good quality and affordable. I don't know whether you get them in your country.
I'm looking forward to trying them. I've been wearing Docs for decades for the orthopedic benefit, but since 2020, have hardly gone out in winter; in summer, I wear reef sandals, so practically barefoot. Hoping the transition will be smooooth.
@@sez9660 Yes Saguaro. Apart from one pair (Freiluftkind) mine are all from Saguaro.
I grew up going without shoes as much as possible and still usually go barefoot at home, or wear just a simple flipflop when weather allows and I've noticed i have a very different gait than many, with my feet rolling straight forward rather than the outward angles i see many sneaker wearers using (at times 45 degrees or more!) I also seem to walk much more lightly than many people expect and i am 100% sure it is related.
One other thing i would like to mention is that for much of history shoes were made very differently than modern ones, and more in line with the concepts used in the barefoot shoes- very flexible leather or fabric that moves with the foot, rather like a thick sock and a leather sole that flexes and molds to the terrain rather than the stiff padded box of modern shoes. If anyone is interested i would recommend checking out some of the very nice videos on the differences in historical shoe making by Nicole Rudolph
what gets me is why people even wear shoes at home period lol
Fellow flip-flop fan here! lmao I've had multiple people curse at me whenever I arrive in a room because they can't hear me coming unless I'm wearing unusually noisy shoes (like heels or brand new running shoes with those squeaky soles. Never considered the connection between spending most of my time barefoot/in flip-flops and having a light step, but there might be one.
@Maria Ah Same! I'm very tall and wear swishy nylon pants at work and I'm still always startling folks who didn't hear me coming!
Haha, I'm really glad I read a comment in its entirety before replying, because as soon as I started reading yours I immediately wanted to recommend Nicole Rudolph's channel! Her videos making historic footwear as well as the ones on the evolution of footwear fashion and construction techniques I think would be really interesting to anyone who found this video intriguing.
I never wear shoes at home unless necessary, and I have been told several times by the people downstairs that they can tell who is walking above them by the noise we make. Despite being heavier than anyone else by at least 100 pounds, they tell me I am the quietist one.
This is by far the best scientific explainer video about the matter around use of vivo and the the link to the basic principles of our lifestyle, walking, and running.
The main reason I got intrigued by this topic at all was that I've always noticed myself doing things differently when walking on socks in the house or when walking in shoes outside: Walking is the same. But the second I'd 'hop' around or sprint as a kid I'd run heelstrike in shoes but toes-first when on socks or barefoot. So a part of my brain always prefers doing one or the other depending on what I'm wearing.
A note on toes widening out - I have been in barefoot shoes for about 2 years, and my feet actually expanded to where I needed to get a half size bigger shoe. My toes have spread wider too.
Super interesting video! I often hear people warn about calf muscle pain when first switching to barefoot shoes. I actually never experienced that. I started wearing barefoot shoes about 6 years ago, and at the time knew very little about them. Nobody told me to be careful and give my calf muscles time to adapt. I just put them on, was amazed at how much better my feet were feeling in them compared to traditional shoes, and pretty much switched from one day to the next. I had zero issues with it, even though my calves are pretty tight and stretching them is really difficult for me. So this actually might not be an issue for everyone when switching to barefoot shoes!
Get a "half dome foam roller" for easy calf stretching (from the teachings of biomechanist Katy Bowman... check her books).
Also look up the "gravity drop" exercise by legendary therapist Pete Egoscue - another good one.
I've been obsessed with keeping my keep bare since I was born (literally, I grew up being regailed about all the times as a toddler I'd just rip off my shoes, throw them, then take off running). This has carried into my adulthood, and I've always had a toe-first walk. I also have stupidly wide feet that most shoes don't accommodate for.
I'm glad you made this video to talk about how barefoot walking changes our bodies. I've always been a bit wary of my walk, as I've always been told that I'm "doing it wrong", but that also seemed very counter intuitive to me because we obviously didn't evolve WITH shoes, and bodies are usually such delicately tuned machines that when we change the slightest thing, we can throw everything out of whack... and don't shoes change our bodies?
I actually wrote an essay in middle school about how shoe-wearing is a big conspiracy, and I started it as a sort of silly-extreme argument to make an essay about. I honestly didn't think I'd find much to support my argument, but I started with a book that a local librarian helped me find, and that book had a lot of the points you've made here (I wish I could remember the title, but all I recall is that it's pro-barefoot lifestyle, and has an entire chapter about how crocs and flip-flops are huge indicators on how badly fast fashion has screwed our environment). This book planted the seeds of, "So, I'm not wrong to strive for a barefoot lifestyle?", but outside of that middle school experience back at the cusp of the millennium, I really haven't seen much talk about it.
Thanks for validating the way my body has simply been for my whole life, and thanks for letting others know that maybe we need to rethink our relationship with shoes.
During the pandemic I had nothing better to do, so trained for marathon. Got my ACL torn in the progress. Specialists explained, that my leg muscles grew unevenly, upper part being weak, while lower grew too much. That put stress on my ligamemts till they eventually gave up.
As a recovery effort I tried barefoot shoes. First for walking, than started running. For me, the progress felt very real. And the upper muscles were aching (meaning they started working). Year later I finally finished my first marathon. So I think I owe this to barefoot shoes and my trauma was mostly due standard cushioned running shoes.
The problem I have with them - every pair I tried was bad quality, expensive, absurdly long shipping and they seems to have some kink with shoe laces? Vivobarefoots I've owned have some weird lacing mechanism and wayyyy too long shoe laces. Now I have Feelgrounds with normal mechanism, but still wayyyyy too long shoe laces. Still in search for a decent brand which could make simple shoes 😄
Haven't tried their runners, but I really like Lems boots.
As for the shoe laces, couldn't you just cut them off if they're too long? :)
@@UpSideDownABCD for Feelgrounds maybe an option to cut. Maybe even easier buying separate shoe laces 🙂for Vivobarefoot, they had some custom mechanism and cannot be trimmed or changed
"Joe nimble" running shoes
I really like xero shoes. Or if you want to get really nerdy, look up Anya's Reviews, she's reviewed just about every barefoot shoe on the market, in depth, and has a lot of resources on how to find a great fit.
Thank you, you have made a few things make sense. I have solely worn barefoots for about 6 month's. I walk comfortably and easily, but slightly differently on every surface. You are right, i have adapted. I love them. I tried to wear my old hiking boots that i used to love with a really thick sole and narrowish fore front. I felt really unstable and felt my ankles were at risk on unstable ground. And my toes felt soo cramped. I wont wear them again. Barefoots have fixed my hip problem too. I wear them all day at work, plus dog walking and bush walking. I look at 'normal' shoes now and think 'ouch...' and 'yuk'. So, great explanations.😊
I have done a mix of barefoot walking and wearing conventional shoes my whole life. I used to spend entire summers running around barefoot. It was never intentional for the sake of my health like much of the barefoot movement over the last couple of decades emphasizes. I was just a wild child, even into my teens.
Something I've noticed is that I have different striking patterns when walking in different footwear. In "normal shoes," I heel-to-toe roll or step down flat. When I'm in minimal shoes I do a mix of the ball of my foot and midsole. When I'm barefoot, I strike with the ball of my foot which requires me to step with a gate that is more like reaching forward with my legs. My weight almost exclusively sits in the ball of my foot while walking barefoot.
When I'm barefoot, depending on my walking speed, I will do this sort of toe to mid-foot roll where I strike with the ball of my foot, let the weight shift to mid-foot, then back into the heel as I step.
Side notes, I've noticed that I am significantly quieter when navigating hardwood floors compared to almost everyone I've ever known. (I'm neurodivergent and loud walking sounds annoy me. So I have a hard time not hyper-focusing on how loud people are when they walk.) I'm also a parkour athlete and do a lot of jumping. I'm known for having strong legs and great landings. Growing up, I played basketball and was always told I had naturally excellent footwork. IDK if those last two relate to how I've walked my whole life or if they are correlated at all, but I just thought they were interesting observations in this context.
Your description of different foot striking patterns is the exact same for me. Although I'm not neurodivergent, I do get bothered by people stomping around. I grew up on hardwood floors and naturally adapted my gait-just seems rude and actually inefficient not to.
I hate when people stomp around like that. I've always walked very quietly, but occasionally I'll stomp around just so people know I'm there and don't run into me. I scare people all the time with how quietly I approach.
I'm autistic and people very rarely hear me approaching, I just walk that quietly on most surfaces. I haven't paid attention to how I walk though and shoe wise I wear whatever is comfortable for me for the time being. Sometimes I prefer very supportive and built up shoes like Timberland or similar, other times I may prefer Crocs or Birkenstock type slippers, and now for a while I've been wearing my Converse a fair bit. All down to how my feet feels at the time and what type of sensory input I can handle
and@@ReyOfLight
you need to get used to barefoot first to understand it
Been wearing barefoot shoes for over 6 years after being told the way I was walking was leading to my knee hip and back problems. It has been a game changer.
I have never used barefoot shoes but 20 years ago I switched to barefoot running on a treadmill and when I am running outside I am wearing sport shoes with an extremely flat sole profile. This switch was initially (the first 6 months) difficult and painful (especially for my calves) but on the long run avoiding heel striking has made a huge positive difference for me. I never experienced again pain in my joints (especially my knees) and my foot stability has improved massively what helped me to prevent the frequent injuries which I had with conventional sport shoes. When I am walking I am still a heel striker but not longer so hard then before. A negative side-effect was that my feet size increased so that many shoes didn't fit longer after a few years.
I have always been a lover of walking barefoot. About 13 years ago I became a yoga teacher and since the job allowed for it, I started to wear shoes less and less. My toes definitely splay out, the front of my foot becoming slightly wider. Because of the practice of yoga as well though; There's a lot of balancing and finding stability through a conscious awareness of the way your feet splay, etc. My feet were definitely stronger! During COVID my studio closed though, and I started walking more (with normal tekkies) as well as wearing slippers a lot (it was a rough time!). My feet changed again, and it was not good. Before COVID, I merrily had theories about the way my feet changed, but it became an accidental experiment as I realised how my feet had changed and set out to consciously strengthen them again. Barefeet RULE! (Have not worn the shoes, although I love a thin soled shoe)
Walking barefoot leaves you at risk to parasites…. Hookworms enter the soles of your feet and work their way to your intestines and eventually to your brain
You should see the feet of natives in the rainforest, their feet are wild lol
I recall in a book I read a while ago that foot striking was described in two ways besides heel to toe. The first was on the pads of the foot, per usual, the second was from the outside of the foot, rolling forward to pad of the foot. It is not as drastic as you might think, and basically constitutes what you were doing at (6:06) It has a very similar effect to rolling, but it carries less momentum and reduces your impact. It's also great for running in boots, or flat footed shoes.
Another thing he to keep in mind, is that when you walk barefoot you usually keep your weight centered rather than throwing it forwards, to avoid stepping on sharp things, you also reduce impact.
Thank you for this, very nuanced. There were two types of creators i was watching, and their opinions clearly were on oposite ends. One claiming heal striking was more efficient, while the other believed forefoot was more efficient. Though forefoot does have much more "health" benefits, it was pretty great when I heard you mention it does look weird if you try to fully walk using that. So the part where you mentioned that the heel still plays a role was comforting to hear as I attempt to inprove my walking ability.
" look silly "
So did the first Europeans in jappan think funnily enough
As someone who recently transitioned to barefoot shoes, when completely barefoot I have always landed on the front. When using shoes and walking for exercise, the heel strike seems to happen more naturally. Of course,I also transition to light bouncy front landing steps now that I have better leg spring. Before I would do really hard heel landing speedwalks which wrecked my knees if prolonged.
Thanks for this video 👍👍
I first learned about barefootshoes 3 months ago, after walking barefoot for about 9/10 months out of the year for a little over 4 years now. I'm not really a hiker, so what I walk most on is hard surfaces. (I do always have a pair of flipflops with me, in case I need to use a public restroom, visit a petrolstation etc.)
I'm now looking at barefootshoes for those 2/3 months a year I can't walk barefoot (for long periods) because of the low temperatures (in dry weather I switch to flipflops if it's getting close to freezing, in wet weather around 12°C).
I do my best to avoid any heelstrike, but about 50 years of walking on regular shoes isn't that easy to shake. 😉 But as I literally hear a healstrike in my head, it's quickly corrected.
I'm now experimenting with landing mainly on the front of my foot (what did you call that 🤔), because that's how in my opinion you get the maximum out of the natural shockabsorption of your feet. But without any further adjustments that shortens my strides. I've tried several adjustments - the people in my neighbourhood must think I started working for the Ministry of Silly Walks 😂 .
So it's still an ongoing process and I love it. ❤
@ZZZP-SchoolNL I tore my meniscus in my right knee TKD sparing a couple of decades and to attempt to heal without surgery and while the swelling went down I walked backwards around our circular neighborhood every day. I had neighbors come out and ask me what I was doing. Still makes me smile! No surgery but 20 years later injured same knee doing a race called the Bolder Boulder. Lots of hiking steps, walks w loved ones, runs, and time outdoors in between.
@@chopwood2995 I hope you can recover from your latest injury without surgery as well. Much better for your overall health. And much more fun for the neighbourhood 😆
(Great story, thanks for sharing 🤗)
Barefoot running godfather Barefoot Ken Bob teaches landing on the whole foot at once, and bending the knees a lot - more than you think. He describes the knees as our body's natural shock absorbers. He actually takes people straight over to gravel when teaching them for the first time, so they understand how light they should move, and how much they should bend their knees. He also invites people to imagine they are sneaking up on someone from behind, again to illustrate proper lightness and knee bending.
@@BlueGorillaInTheMistvid anywhere?
@@sez9660 Can't post links, but search his name on UA-cam, you'll find some stuff
While I'm not quite a barefoot/barefoot shoe person, I used to do all of my gym exercise barefoot. It has always been great. Also, I always thought the "pointy" shoe style to be kind of ugly first and foremost, but to know they're also not that good either makes me feel very validated. Thanks!
If your foot muscles are conditioned for barefoot walking (meaning walking with no shoes) wearing a shoe that protects the sole of your foot will allow you to walk faster than you would barefoot because it’s protected from laceration, being forced to walk slower actually protects the tendons and ligaments and small underdeveloped muscles in your foot from injury when first conditioning, basically if your going to go barefoot, before you buy a pair of barefoot shoes train yourself to be able to walk a few miles while completely barefoot, it will force your movement to be correct before you move fast while in a barefoot shoe, overuse injuries happen much easier when your feet aren’t trained, remember they are small muscles that you have probably never worked out and they build slower than you might want, stick with it
One thing that's really important in the long term is that we train our feet to be used to getting squished together in shoes that are usually not wide enough. That means most people don't really notice anymore when their shoes are too tight. In a lot of cases that leads to bunions on one or both sides of your feet.
Also, when we get older, we don't notice when we need shoes one or even two sizes bigger. Feet get bigger during your life.
So longterm that means, I have a LOT of older (and someone not so old) patients that have actual injuries from their shoes - e.g. blisters or other kinds of wounds that get infected - which doesn't sound like much but imagine being diabetic and not noticing these wounds (since your nerve endings are dead), keeping on wearing these too tight shoes and then those infections getting really serious.
Like amputations serious.
And there are LOADS of people like that. The right shoes might not be a cure all but it might this problem a lot less common.
Thanks, fascinating video. One thing you don’t mention but that has occurred to me might be important (having been experimenting with barefoot shoes for the last few years) is that any shoe, even barefoot ones, reduce the sensory input you get from the *skin* on the sole of your foot. When completely barefoot, you get feedback from your skin as to the substrate you’re walking on a few milliseconds before putting your weight down - at least when walking. Which allows you to adjust foot position, weight distribution etc and so avoid landing heavily or stepping on a sharp stone. For example if you’re walking barefoot on a lawn then you feel the touch of the grass just before your foot touches the actual ground (however hard or soft the latter may be). I find that even in barefoot shoes I sometimes land unexpectedly hard on my heel on uneven ground and I wonder if this lack of feedback from the skin (just before impact) might be the reason.
Barefoot running godfather Barefoot Ken Bob compares learning to walk or run with shoes on to learning to play the piano with earplugs in for this very reason.
I keep hearing that walking barefoot is linked to toe striking, but for me, it's the opposite. When I started to spend my summers mostly barefoot as a teenager, I quickly adapted heel striking in order to avoid injuries. When walking on gravel, twigs or on a mountain trail, I didn't have to pay as much attention if it was my heel that hit a sharp object first. My toes and balls on the other hand were way too sensitive, no matter the calluses I gained. Now I'm almost thirty and apparently, my partner can hear me coming a mile off.
Ugh, is this why my husband stomps around? It's so distractingly loud, man. I'm glad we have a one-story house.
Yes, much of what the barefoot community says is complete BS. A lot of it is based on a study that found that habitually unshod Kenyans mostly forefoot strike. Except that many of the subjects of the study were running a sub-5:00 mile! How the hell are you supposed to heelstrike while running 1:15 laps around a track??
@@imnotlettingyouseemynamehuh interesting. I go barefoot unless it's required to wear shoes or just smart to wear em like boots with ankle support for airsoft. Doing a little testing during my walking I keep my feet mostly perpendicular to the ground rasing my toes slightly mid stride. Landing flat on the ground settling my toes down with everything shortly after impact. For running I lead with my fore foot with it becoming more exaggerated as I get towards sprinting speed. At full sprint the back of my foot doesn't quite touch the ground. Not a runner but do walk and hike a lot barefoot.
I am 55 and suffer chronic lower back pain. A year ago I switched to barefoot shoes - it took me a month to get used to them (carefully) and I naturally adjusted my walking to avoid the pain of the heel strike. I still have chronic back pain but my feet are great. Wide toebox is amazing and I find because of the design of the shoes mean they are better ventilated hence my feet have never overheated since switching. I will never go back to regular shoes, apart from my walking boots on hikes I wear barefoot shoes all the time. Great video and very well explained.
I’m a vintage viewer and switching to barefoot, actually Vibram with all toes separated, full ninja, has transformed my knee health. I can feel how much stronger my feet are and how much more mindful I am when walking. I can’t recommend them enough. I’m a gardener and constantly walking on prickly ground and plant debris, the vibram soles are very effective at protecting me. Thanks for your very thorough exploration of the subject 🙏
I've been in Vibram Five Fingers exclusively since about 2010. What struck me the most about the transition was the way the shape of my foot changed. I went from fallen arches back to the high arches I had when I was younger. Also, my foot became thicker. I also noticed that for the first couple of years, I experienced a noticeable "pins and needles" sensation during my first few steps in the morning as the muscles broke loose and really activated. Over time that subsided. I think the biggest hurdle, and what accounts for much of the injury associated with barefoot shoes, was the muscle atrophy in my feet from wearing conventional footware. The entire shock absorption structure of the foot is disengaged when wearing heel lifted padded shoes. There's a period where the muscles of the feet have to play catchup with the muscle conditioning of the rest of your body and it's pretty easy to injure your feet until that happens. It's made a real difference in my hips and knees and I feel like those joints specifically are aging slow because wear and tear is now more evenly distrubted through my legs.
Good to hear that the pins and needles in the first steps go away. I get that too, and I was worried it was a sign of a developing injury
I did the same. Everything was great, until I started to develop medial knee pain due to the lack of cushion. Switched to Altras. Now I use a lower stack Altra to run in, and a thicker stack Altra to walk in.
@@SerafinaTorgul Altras are great! I love my Lone peak 4 pair!
Have you ever tried other barefoot brands or always vibram?
Any comments fro others about recovering from ankle sprain and chronic tendinitis and which walking shoes are beneficial ( or NOT bebeficial)?
I Walk for over 20 years barefoot and I’m slightly amused about the „barefoot shoe trend“…
I had never again issues like fungi, smell, cornea, I never hurt my feets that much that I couldn’t walk further and I’m pretty sure most of the glances I earn are in envy ( because my foots are healthy and well shaped ) and in admiration and almost every chat about it starts with „I love to try it but I don’t dare…“
I've been wearing the same moccasins daily for three years. They are wearing through but I don't want to replace them. It's like wearing nothing at all and keeps my feet strong for if I'm playing golf or hiking.
Former furoshiki user here. They worked well because I could move around outdoors the same way I moved indoors. Fit was also better due to the compliance. Stopped using them after post-concussion symptoms made footfalls painful.
Sorry to hear about the accident there - I will check those out.
@Ben Vallack No worries, I've been getting better. My old first revision pair developed a few holes, and I don't have enough wear on the second to judge durability. It won't have the ankle support you mentioned but that's a plus for me.
furoshikis are leaving not enough space for toes.
10 year trail runner here. I switched to wide toe box 2 years in, it made a massive difference and caused MANY injuries because I switched immediately and never looked back. I had to adjust everything in my form from my joints mostly. My ankles and knees would hit at angles that were "new" to them after years of not having a big toe out balancing where it should be. My tendons would feel like they were always being pulled on at weak points I had never used. Its similar to someone who never trains stabilizers and tries lifting heavy. It took 1 full year of knee and ankle injuries before I began running the way my body should be, without even a shin splint to account for. I can now say that even when I wear closed toe shoes the big toe goes back to its spot after 1 run and stays there. I've grown muscle groups in my calves I didn't even know were there, my feet grew thick meaty muscles connecting under my big toe and My ankle/knee has never been stronger/resilient. Have not had an injury in 5 years(10-15 mile trail runs every other day) and I truly believe its from the stability gained with just my big toe properly being placed for balance. I will say if you smoke a joint before your run in the woods, your gonna be in tune with your body as well.
Funny thing, I've been running barefoot for years already and I am not able to run in shoes anymore
👍 😂😂😂✨
I run very thin flat shoes on trails (Golden Gate trail run half marathon the last weekend) but thick well cushioned shoes on training runs on concrete pavement in the neighborhood. Concrete is dangerous, people. I injured my foot almost fracture once when the shoes got old and the sole wears out.
I grew up playing outside barefoot a lot and I always end up with massive holes worn into my shoes where the big toe is supposed to be. Wondered if it was a problem or not. Nice to see it can't be tamed lol.
This. All of this. SO MUCH THIS.😊
So I started wearing barefoot shoes in 2012, I didnt know why at the time but they seemed to have a calming effect on me, so i've been wearing them ever since. Jump to last year and I was diagnosed with ADHD. I think the proprioceptive feedback from my feet gives my hyperactive brain something additional to focus on, sort of like stimming in a way I guess.
So yeah, they can help ADHD in my experience.
If you are from the states, i would say you don't have ADHD, just to much sugar in a body that is very energic and don't need much sugar at all.
@@RogueSecret I'm British, and I'm a qualified nutritionist. I know how to eat in a biologically appropriate fashion. ADHD is a neurodevelopmental disorder, though the effects of an improper diet could mirror some of the traits of ADHD but certainly not all of them.
@@RogueSecret you got that diagnosis from a UA-cam comment?😵💫
@@RogueSecret 😂😂😂
I have ADHD too and am looking into them because I can't stand having my toes squashed
I moved over to barefoot shoes four years ago. I love them! It is much better than the pointed shoes. I am able to stand and walk longer distances.
I trained with someone who taught me about being barefoot and it really makes my life better. I just got some really minimal shoes and it's so much better for me. My feet were in bad shape but as I wear minimal shoes and get barefoot more often, some of my pain issues are going away and my feet are super strong so I can walk on anything like rocks as long as they are not super sharp.
@Karl with a K It has everything to do with shoes IF you spend a majority of time in them. It's like having a cast on or a corset for many hours a day. Muscles will naturally atrophy when they have no room to move around and create stability.
I don't know how I missed this video, but I just ordered a pair with your promo code. The Moonlander keyboard was a massive improvement for my frozen shoulders, so I'm sure these will be fantastic too! I walked around on shoes 7 sizes too big at one point in my life, so getting my body back in order has been a real challenge. Thanks for all of the great information and products!
I got awful ingrown toenails as a teenager, I think I had to have the procedure done where they cut off the edge of your big toe’s nail five different times. I realized that my toes are wider and shorter than average for my shoe size, so I switched to wearing shoes with wider toe boxes and my problems disappeared.
I haven’t gotten any barefoot/minimalist shoes yet, but I’m definitely considering making the switch, just because they’re the easiest shoes to find that have very wide toe boxes.
Had the same problem as a teenager. Doctors and my parents didn't even think that it could be caused by tight and narrow shoes. Our society is dumb. 6 procedures due to such and obvious reason. And I as a kid listened to the grown-ups.. Didn't occur to me either. Started wearing wider shoes and no issues. Lesson learned.
What shoes did you have that had a wide toe box?
Same here dunno what caused it. But I got that same surgery just as many times to the point I would hide the hurt so I wouldn't have to do it again. I go to Hawaii and I got such a different treatment, they let me fall asleep while they did it and they put a ointment on the nail that stopped it from growing there anymore so I have a slightly smaller nail
do you have shoe recommendations ? i have also had this problem since i was a kid, grandma got me the surgery once when the cuts they made got infected and my mom wouldnt take me to the doctor but they still grow like this
@@gargutz I have wide feet and recently tried on a few different walking shoes - Keen shoes and boots seemed to be the widest (but not cheap and not fashion shoes).
I remember the wonderful feeling of wearing mocassins while walking in the woods. In those environments, a thin soul feels fantastic.
I've been running with a pair if vivobarefoot shoes for about 18 months now, and although I certainly had to ease myself into it to avoid injury, once my feet and calves built a little bit of strength it felt absolutely fantastic. It just feels a whole lot more efficient and I can run longer distances without hitting a wall. I enter this almost zen like flow that I never experienced with traditional cushioned running shoes. If anyone is thinking of transitioning to barefoot running I would definitely recommend doing a couch to 5k program, even if you are already a regular distance runner. Just give your muscles and tendons time to adapt.
I can also attest to the quality of vivobarefoot shoes, as that one pair has lasted me 18 months and they're still in great condition. I would be lucky to get a year out of regular cushioned shoes in the past.
What model do you own?
Yeah I think people who immediately run in them are weird. I just did farmer walks, going up stairs, walking backwards with the weights.
Doing that strengthens the hell outta your toes, ankle, and all those things that normal shoes support.
After that I've never had a problem running in them. It doesn't even feel different.
I just did this all in grass or my house with no shoes.
And this is exactly why I subscribed!!
I got into barefoot runners 5 years ago and did a lot of research, books, articles and lots and lots of videos. But even then I was completely unaware of the heel strike while walking, it's almost as if the people who wrote this stuff wanted to erase heelstrikes from existence..
Thank you for all your hard work and research into this and every topic you touch on. I am very greatful to be a little bit more knowledgeable
Thanks so much - comments like this make it all worth while, honestly.
I watch other videos, and they say you still need to land on forefoot/ midfoot while walking...which is almost impossible to me, or it looks weird
@@slavasss2189 yeah I agree - I think people take it further than they need to!
My understanding is that heel striking on hard ground is still bad for you, even if you're wearing cushioned shoes. You're just less aware of it, because instead of feeling all the impact in your heels, it's being transferred to your knees, hips, and back.
When I heel strike my knee pain comes back. Maybe heel striking is good for some people but for me switching to a mid to front foot strike made a big difference. Honestly, I think a lot of the stuff depends on your body. We try to make a one-size-fits-all solution but that’s not really how people work. So if heel striking feels better for you then do it.
I've worn barefoot shoes for years at this point and I agree, while walking it's actually hard to avoid heel striking, but a fore or midfoot strike while jogging or running is very nice and natural
As someone who’s walked both with and without shoes in my life I’m interested to see what he says.
Thank you so much for making this!
I really appreciate the specifically the citations on the history of why shoes became pointed and also directions to the studies about the efficiency of heel striking in different conditions.
I've been walking around on my forefront, and it never felt quite right. I feel like this video just gave me a blueprint to how to heel strike more gently (ie. still maintaining the focus on pushing off the back foot/working the glute rather than reaching ahead of me with my foot and letting my knees take the shock, but now gently landing on the heel instead of awkwardly leaning forward to reach over and land on the ball of my foot).
This video is a huge collection of knowledge - really fully spanning from clarifying why barefoot is better and very soberly describing the current discussion/discovery in the barefoot world now. (I guess it's important to remember we're not REALLY the barefoot community. We're the people in industrialized countries who want to be LIKE the real barefooters.)
A small note though: I'm not sure your title matches your video! (For instance, what was the REAL reason? Even if it is in there, it's not what I took away.) Also, I think this video is a little too advanced for people just beginning their journey. I wonder if a title like: The Barefoot Community is Too Scared to Admit This. I wonder if it would attract barefooters who've actually put more thought into gait types and who have stronger opinions on this stuff. You know best! I just would love to see this video get as much exposure as possible because it's so good.
Excellent video! Thank you for making it! :)
I like the title idea! I’ll try it - thanks for your comments!
@@BenVallack Holy shit, this video is popping off! So glad to see it! well deserved 💪
@@MinimalEncourager many thanks to your title suggestions!!
Totally agree with your thoughts.
I've had barefoot shoes for only a few months now but one thing I was not yet sold on was zero cushioning when we didn't evolve on concrete, as toe walking felt awkward and inefficient, but heel striking is uncomfortable without cushion. I never considered that you can still heel/flat strike but just do it more gentle. Really good video.
Just noticed was a very generous super thanks - very kind of you, thanks so much!
To add my anecdotes: I have been wearing a particular type of zero-drop, wide toe box, minimal cushion shoes for about 8 years. I got used to it after about 6 months. Now? Every time I wear conventional shoes with padding, and a raised heel, my feet are in agony. My I feel like I have no control. No connection to the ground. Like I'm always fighting with the shoe for stability.
It's a question of adaptation. It seems like many healthy, able bodied children and adults would benefit from transitioning to zero drop, wide toe box shoes, with minimal support or padding beyond a strong sole. There are certain lines of work that don't agree with this, but most people don't have those kinds of footwear needs.
I just don't wear shoes unless I have to. And when I do, flip flops. My toes are so wide cause no shoes ever so shoes hurt
i can agree. i tried my old shoes and they feel like hard pieces of plastic on my feet or something.
Several years ago I bought a pair of NB minimus shoes before studying abroad in Italy. I've always loved walking but began walking several miles a day in Italy, eventually jogging and running. While the minimus aren't barefoot, they are not far off, and I can remember how comfortable I got sprinting through the countryside. It was slow progress, but clearly made an impact. Once I got back to the states, I went back to standard shoes, and it was only recently that I remember how much I loved those shoes. Makes me want to go barefoot!
@Karl with a K how interesting! I’d love to read those studies.
You a bot bro?
Oh no! You caught me 😅
I've been wearing barefoot shoes almost exclusively for about 10 years and I'm still a big fan. Merrell Trail Glove for life!
Lovely video!
I rarely see someone mention how much of a role different terrain structures really play in "choosing" the most efficient gait. I put "choosing" in quotation marks because it's less of a concious decision and more your body just telling you what feels natural/good and what doesn't.
I've been barefoot as much as possible (shoes only at work or when specifically asked to, in vaccination centers for example) for the past 8 years and there are a lot of different ways of walkibg, jogging and running depending on the surface. Soft grass or sand? Sure, midfoot or even heelstrike that in a sprint. Rough grass to pavement? Midfoot to forefoot only and on a gradient. Introduce mid-sized gravel? Probably the most annoying surface to be barefoot on (aside from literal thorns or glass shards) but no problem; but I will shift my weight differently, put my feet further apart and really shift around a lot in general to see what the best next step is. I can even jog on that annoying gravel, but it looks more like when you imagine a cartoon character walking on hot coals due to me shifting my weight with every step.
Going fully barefoot as much as possible is a good idea (inside and outside). You do need to ease yourself into it, but you can easily train and strengthen your feet over time. This will allow you to walk on some pretty sharp stuff (thorns, broken glass, etc). But even better, you will learn to push off with your foot and actually USE it as a muscle group - instead of something you just roll over or land on. It will makes your impacts lighter, and you can start treating minimalist shoes like tools you use when needed - not as something you have to have on you 24/7. It will fix a lot of your foot problems (read: shoe problems) too. As someone who has gone barefoot almost 24/7 for ten years, I think this is the best solution. It's also born out by studies like Shullman's ""Survey In China & India of Feet That Have Never Worn Shoes". If you want to get started with it, google the "Go Barefoot" Discord, and they'll help you out.
Thanks for your video Ben, it's good to see a balanced argument. I've been almost 100% barefoot for over 2 years now and totally agree with your thoughts and advice. After all that time, I have started running further and twinged my achilles tendon. Further evidence that you need a mature thoughtful approach. Even if you're competent in one area you still need to remain fully aware of what your planning and how to prepare for it.
I also love that I can run in my work shoes and so my shoes are as versatile as my feet.
I'm commenting as I've been wondering if there is a gap in the market. For when I am walking or running on our modern hard ground, if like to retain the wide foot box and zero drop, but get a little more cushion than the current inserts...
as a part of the foot community, (people commonly that have feet (plural for foot)) I like to wear things on my feet, and sometimes I don't wear anything on my feet.
I think barefooting and wearing minimal shoes made my feet flat. I noticed that shoes with a heel gave me knee pain when I was 18, so I did some research online and went down the barefoot rabbit hole. the thing is after 7 years of wearing mostly minimal shoes, my shoe size went from a 14 to a 16. Now there are no minimal shoes in my size, the best I can do short of custom shoes is converse. this could have been partly from me still growing, but my feet do seem flat and I am 2 sizes bigger than my dad who is my height. also the wide toebox can be a problem if you are doing sports where you need to do sharp turns running because your feet will slide around. still, I do enjoy going barefoot, it feels good even on concrete. I used to walk barefoot much more and I could walk on broken glass because I had thick calluses on the bottom of my feet.
I have no experience with barefoot shoes but during covid I basically spent 2 years at home and stopped wearing pointed and constraining shoes. I was 18 found myself at 20 with none of my shoes fitting anymore. I went from a UK 8 to a UK 10 which is over the standard for women's shoes (Im a 6 feet tall girl). I guess we will never know if its the barefoot thing or we were just still growing
Just heard from a podiatrist in Arizona who says feet are naturally wider here from people wearing sandals so often.
It's probably not that your feet are flat, but more so that the metatarsal bones have spread out and gotten used to more space. Did your feet get bigger or is that the size they should have always been? 🤔
I bet they got wider without getting any flatter. I don't see how or why they could have become flatter.
I walk barefoot always and agree on you about it makes no sense to divide the walk in forefront or heel strike. I simply walk following the path and let my feet do its thing. Even when I go downstairs, I grab the edge of the step with my toes. If the sidewalk is wet, I reduce the stride; if it is hot, my feet know the coldest path. I noticed I don´t walk in straight line anymore and when the terrain is uneven, my feet get more fun.
Lol you walk on the sidewalk barefoot?
Historically the toe box of pointed shoes was just as big as the toe box of e.g. a squared shoe. The pointed part started after the toebox, resulting in rather long, pointy shoes which don't press your toes together. Another important thing to consider is that shoes were made from leather which gradually shaped around your food with time, resulting in a perfectly fitting shoe and the sole was made from leather, so it basically behaved like a barefoot shoe's sole. Most modern shoes have neither of those features, but there are still companies making shoes in that style and they are so comfortable and don't look like shit like all those barefoot shoes (sry but I think they're dead ugly)
Yep, I agree. I've stopped wearing heels but am always creative in buying boots/sneakers/ballet flats that have enough space for my toes to wiggle inside but have a normal looking front shape. I always go for leather or stretchy fabrics. Barefoot shoes are just not my aesthetics. And just by doing this, my feet are also shaped with toes wide apart.
If you think barefoot shoes are "ugly" because they're not pointy then perhaps you need to have a think about what kinds of fashion ideas have been ingrained in your mind.
@@Vousie I don't mind square/round toebox. I particularly mind the shape of a barefoot one.
@@martinar.5722 What they're calling "barefoot shoes" are the ones that we see in the video - square toeboxes. Not what I, at any rate initially thought, which is those shoes that have individual pockets for each toes, which do look rather strange.
@@Vousie Nobody said shoes which are not pointy are ugly, there are ample styles of beatiful shoes. I just have not seen a single barefoot shoe style I think pretty, no matter whether they have seperated toes or not. Maybe you could consider not judging people based on a single comment on UA-cam?
if you just plan to walk then barefoot shoes seem fine, however if you're a runner than I'd say to avoid any minimalist or barefoot shoes.