I can’t claim to have made healthy choices in all areas of my life throughout my history on the planet. But I can claim relative intelligence about one aspect of being in a body: I’ve always worn sensible shoes. I’ve owned one pair of heels in my entire life, a pair of platform shoes I wore a few times in the mid-’70s, before chucking them after twisting my skinny ankles in them one too many times. The last time I wore heels was to a fabulous restaurant in Rome in 1979. I borrowed a pair from one of my roommates and ended up walking home barefoot because it was more comfortable than walking on those stilts.
I can’t imagine a situation in which I’d be persuaded to wear heels now. First, they’re just way too uncomfortable. I can’t stand having my toes squished into little points, especially with most of my weight pressing into the balls of my feet and toes. When you wear three-inch heels, 72 percent of your body weight is concentrated into the balls of your feet—ouch!
The Trouble with Heels
Second, I know too much about what wearing heels does not only to your feet, but to the rest of your body. High heels completely throw off your center of gravity, causing everything above your feet—the whole rest of your body—to have to misalign in order to keep you upright.
Our feet are our foundation. The health of our skeletal structures depends on how we stand on our feet. We may not feel the effects of unhealthy shoes in our 20s and 30s, but our life’s habits tend to come home to roost as we enter our 40s and 50s. This article gives a great overview on shoe styles through the ages and how misconceptions about healthy feet have possibly harmed not only our feet but the rest of our skeletal structure. Here’s another that specifically addresses the problems associated with wearing heels.
All that said, my teacher says, “It’s not what you do once in a while, it’s what you do every day that makes you who you are.” Stylin’ shoes are probably not going to create huge problems for you if you wear them on occasion. It’s everyday wear that changes your skeletal structure. I once worked for a woman who was incapable of walking barefoot because her calves had tightened so much from wearing heels every day. Her heels could not touch the floor.
The Problem with Flip-Flops
I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but flip-flops are not the best option for your feet either. Because flip-flops lack a stabilizing strap on the heels, you have to tense your toes and the balls of your feet just to keep from kicking them off with each step. Of course, part of their charm is that it’s so easy to kick them on and off, but when you walk any distance in them, your feet will have to work very hard just to keep them on.
The other problem with flip flops is that they change how you use your feet when you walk. Instead of pressing evenly through your foot, you have to set the heel down, press through the outside of your foot, ending with the big toe. This can stretch the ligaments on the outer ankle, making sprains more likely. Also, as with heels, any misalignment in your foundation will cause a chain of misalignments all the way up your body. Here’s a blog on the downsides of wearing flip flops.
There’s always a happy medium. Perhaps you can wear more substantial shoes or sandals when you’re going to be walking distances, and save your flip flops for quick walks from your house to your yard.
Caring for your Feet with Foot Yoga
Aside from wearing flat-soled shoes with wide toe boxes, how else can you care for your feet? Yoga, of course. Decades ago, I learned some great foot exercises from Mary Palmer, the yoga teacher who first brought B.K.S. Iyengar to America. More recently, yoga teacher trainer Jenny Otto taught me some more great techniques.
Jenny has incorporated foot yoga into every class I’ve taken from her. In a 2008 article in Fit Yoga Magazine, she said, “Our feet are like steering wheels of the legs … What happens to the feet affects the knees, hips, and, ultimately, the whole spine. Everything starts from the ground up.” According to Fit Yoga, Jenny “not only healed her painful heel spurs through yoga but also built up the arches of her flat feet.” I also came into the world with flat feet and have seen my feet grow arches over the years of practicing yoga.
How to Practice Foot Yoga
Here are a few examples of foot yoga I learned from Mary and Jenny:
- Start with bare feet. Sit on a cushion or folded blanket and cross your right ankle across your left thigh. You may also straighten your left leg out on the floor and cross the right ankle over it. Another option is to sit in a chair, and cross your right ankle across your left thigh.
- Thread the fingers of your left hand in between your toes, moving them as deeply as you can into the webs between your toes.
- Squeeze your fingers with your toes; release. Squeeze your toes with your fingers; release. Repeat a few times.
- With your fingers still between your toes, circle your ankle 8 to 10 times, then switch directions.
- Remove your fingers and massage the ball of your foot with both hands.
- Massage your arch with both hands.
- Pull out gently on each toe.
- Release your foot to the floor and have a look at your feet. It’s likely your recently massaged foot will likely look pink and alive compared to the other one.
- Repeat the whole series on the other foot.
- Jenny also advocates rolling tennis balls under your feet. Try it standing in Tadasana (Mountain Pose). Standing on a yoga mat helps keep the tennis ball from sliding away. Roll the ball under one foot for about a minute as you stand on the other. Then stand in Tadasana and check in with your feet, legs and two sides of the body. Note if the sides of the body feel different from each other. Repeat on the other side.
You can do these exercises as part of your yoga practice, or you can do them at other times. I sometimes do foot yoga while I watch a movie (at home, of course).
How to Heal Summer Feet Year Round
My final recommendation for pampering your feet comes from years of living with summer foot syndrome—cracked heels. Yogis suffer summer feet even in the winter, because we practice barefoot all year. This causes our feet to dry out even in winter. A few years ago, I discovered a fabulous handmade natural product called Mom’s Stuff Salve. It’s made by Utah artist Lee Udall Bennion from all natural products, some of which she grows or gathers herself. I used it on my hands and feet all winter long, and I went the entire winter without cracked fingertips—a record. So far, there’s no indication that my heels are anywhere close to cracking and I’ve been wearing sandals for a month!
How do you care for your wonderful feet?