Understand Your Feet
Vibram FiveFingers® assists the natural form and function of your foot. Before you make the transition to wearing FiveFingers®, it is important to familiarize yourself with your bare foot through our series of sensory exercises rovided by our fitness advisor Stacey Lei Krauss.
Your feet contain 52 bones, 66 joints, 40 muscles, and hundreds of sensory receptors, tendons, and ligaments-collectively forming two of the body's most beautifully efficient mechanisms. Yet most people assume that there is something inherently "wrong" with their feet: too wide, too narrow, arches too high or flat, etc. Traditional shoes have become a way of "fixing" these assumed abnormalities. And, as a result, the powerful architecture of our feet has become hidden, disliked, and incredibly sensitive – even weakened. Feet have taken the brunt of a cultural notion that your foot is "wrong;" that corrective shoes will make it "right."
By practicing our recommended sensory exercises, you'll rediscover the vast potential of your feet and come to a better understanding of how they look, feel, and perform – before and after making the switch to Vibram FiveFingers®.
LOOK: Take off your shoes and socks. Take a good look at your feet. Become familiar with the shape and condition of the feet. This will help you understand and identify the changes that will take place as you transition to moving and running in FiveFingers.
TOUCH: Massage is one of the best ways to stimulate the nerves and muscles of the feet-and it feels good, too! Try these exercises sitting down and barefoot.
- Run your fingers between your toes – push back and forth, twisting your hand a little.
- Use your elbow to rub the entire base of the foot
- Use your hand to push toes back and forth creating a gentle stretch
- Administer gentle pressure with your thumbs, moving towards your toes. Feel/tweak your tendons, ligaments, and connective tissue.
FEEL: Feet are excellent at collecting information. Thousands of neurological receptors in the feet send valuable information to the brain to tell your body where it is in space and what the terrain is like. Actively stimulating these receptors improves balance, increases circulation, and enhances overall foot health.