▲ | neutronicus 16 hours ago | |
Oh yeah, haha I've never done the like barefoot-barefoot thing but switched to minimalist zero-drop shoes. It was in fact a game-changer for me, all of a sudden in my 30s I could run 10k without IT band pain (even when fairly athletic playing American football in my youth). But when I pushed more into the 10-mile range I got runner's knee - diagnosed w/o MRI or anything as patellar tendinitis although I'm sort of worried it was actually my meniscus. I kept wanting to get back to it and kept re-aggravating. So I have now mostly given it up for like a year. Bad for my health of course. But as I move forward forced days off (ideally cross-training w/ swimming, kayaking, hitting a heavy bag, etc) just have to be part of the plan. | ||
▲ | johnrob 14 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
Have you tried non-running (indoor) cardio as a regular replacement? Jumping jacks, squats, jump squats, mountain climbers, even jogging in place. I do cardio everyday but running is only every 4th day. Of course, if you have access to equipment there’s always stationary bike and other machines like an elliptical. | ||
▲ | JKCalhoun 15 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
Yeah, zero-drop shoes is what I mean by "barefoot" running. Landing on the balls of your feet, not your heel. Maybe 10 miles is too much regardless though. |