Message from @Deleted User
Discord ID: 348662646591193090
With my case, I saw a foot doctor (podiatrist). He taught me how to tape my feet, and ordered VERY expensive shoe inserts. The 500 dollar inserts are just barely better (for my case) than are Spenco Total Support insoles. https://www.amazon.com/Spenco-Total-Support-Insoles-Womens/dp/B008CJNTI6?th=1
Should I lessen my running. It doesn't seem that bad. I think I just moved away from heel striking too quickly.
Tylenol is not an nsaid
Per wiki, aspirin, ibuprofen and naproxen, are all NSAIDs. But Acetaminophen is generally not considered an NSAID because it has only little anti-inflammatory activity. So that's why I was wrong to reflexivly say Tylenol. But I have found you do not want or any other form of tendonitis to set in, because once it does it becomes a chronic condition that is three times as hard to be rid of. After sometimes keeping me awake at night, mine took years to finally clear up. Early medical intervention is the best approach.
Ibuprofen, naproxen, aleve
Doc: your are correct.
Stawberry you do need.to back.off the running
If you keep running on it, it will get worse
You can get severe chronic pain from this if you keep pushing through
Unless you're training for something career critical take a break, do some swimming or something
If you're not doing significantly better after a week or so can consider some oral steroids for stronger anti inflammatory effect
Ice, nsaid, rest most important
I haven't been running at all is the thing
I was just about to get really into it
I just learned how to run correctly recently
Last big thing I did were the marches in Cville
I figured I just did too much too quickly
Yes, I pointed that out on myself already. But the stretching and walking in pea gravel are remedies I know can work.
I also recommended early genuine medical intervention. The pain from it can wake you up at night. It took years for all my tendonitis-type symptoms to diminsh. If you ever get what feels like a sore muscle that never goes away, get to a doctor. Use Ibuprofen, stretching, massage, and Ice. And steriods.
I took some ibuprofen and iced my foot. It only started to hurt after standing up at work all day and when I first woke up on the back of my heels for a minute
If it goes away in a week or two could I do some light running?
Tendons take twice as long to heal as muscles. You'd be wise to wait 4 weeks to go running. That's why you have a bicycle and a place to swim, right?
Another trick is ro roll a ball on the floor under your foot when sitting down. A tennis ball works well.
This type of thing can turn chronic if not careful. Baby it a bit for a month, do lower impact things like Chuck saying, then start back gently.
I feel like all I've done are low impact things. I'm lucky enough my grandparents have a pool but I find it disappointing that the moment start making plans to run this happens
Work on your upper body with weights. Maybe lower body 10 days. If this turns permanent (like almost happened to me) it will cause you years of misery and sleepless nights.
I've got RLS so sleepless nights are the norm. How long should I take to work my way down to using minimalist shoes so this doesn't happen again?
some would say that shoes are the problem, and that barefooting is best. Some claim FiveFingers shoes are bad, some say they are good. For now, I'd recommend getting those Spenco Inserts inside normal shoes, and getting lots of massage, stretching, IBU, ice, and rest. Then try the duct-tape sock mocassins on pea gravel. This can take months or years to heal. Buy a better bicycle.
What is pea gravel? I'm not really looking at months to fix this am I? Like one day of walking around Cville couldn't have ruined my tendon?
Pea gravel is rounded small gravel. It is found in some driveways. It is not the crushed gravel you usually see, and it moves around and never really forms a solid surface.
I injured my shoulder once in a rodeo. I did not listen to my doctor, and took off the brace and started catching baseballs before I should have. By not following my doctor's orders, the injury went on a long time. Go see a doctor, and I think he'd agree that a month off is what you need.
I've heard since it was an unusual amount of stress that I don't normally have it may heal quickly
I'm fine with taking a month easy
But if this last years I may as well just give up entirely
A month of swimming or bicyclling, and upper-body lift is not giving up. I bet you're a long-distance fag, and like most of those you need the upper body workout anyway.
I used to be a runner, too. Sorry if I my specualtions were wrong or insulting, it was meant to be funny.
My best Two-Mile run was 11:02. I'm still pretty pround of it.
Proud, I meant.
I'm trying to get into long distance and free running
And I never even got to run in my transitional shoes and my foot is already messed up