[pct-l] Simple idea to prevent blister
Jeffrey Olson
jolson at olc.edu
Wed Feb 20 20:38:48 CST 2013
It's not just friction. It's moisture and friction. Dan's second
paragraph at the end of this says this.
The tighter your socks, the fewer hot spots can develop. The friction
that happens naturally between foot and shoe is mediated by the tight
sock. In the worst cases, the sock gets hot and a loose shoe disperses
heat. Tight shoes and loose or thick socks concentrate heat and
moisture and blisters happen. Wear looSe shoes, tight socks, and walk
with abandon. Your shoes should slop around your foot as you walk.
Your stride should feel the ground and the slop allows this. This will
happen only if you wear tight socks.
You can feel this when every step uses the full foot through the
stride. The advice in the above paragraph is pretty surface. It's only
when you're putting 40,000 steps a day on your feet that the beauty of
tight, clean socks and a regular stride will be revealed. If you're
protecting a body part - a calf muscle, or heel, or ligament in the
ankle, a hip or butt muscle - that irregularity will occur and your best
laid foot/shoe/sock plans can be dissipated - blown out enough to
create throbbing, constant pain, to ruin the hike.
However, if you begin with a good foot, sock and shoe strategy, the
irregularities in body-while-walking that reveal themselves will appear
earlier and be more easily dealt with.
What's the hikers canary-in-the-mine? It's the foot and its ailments.
The first six weeks of hiking involves finding a bodily rhythm based in
supporting the foot and its motions. It's the foot and how it's
planted, the rolling over into the next step that makes a million steps
to Canada possible.
The ideal foot motion is the foundation of a dance. There is no
trudging, no ruing being on the trail, no wondering why I'm doing this.
There is no feeling the pack is too heavy or the trail too steep.
What exists is a planting of the foot and a rolling over into the next
step, where the rolling is a lightness-in-being that remains whether
going up or down or along the valley floor. The difference between
trudging through and dancing-while-walking is attitudinal.
To be sure the lows will be there. Hunger, thirst, a slight strain, a
particularly steep uphill while enervated - all will happen. But those
are the lows. The highs are what we wait for. We don't make them
happen. We find our hiking rhythm and live through feeling depressed
and tired and angry and small.
We have a center that remains the same whether emotions are high or
low. This is the key - this is the key to walking. The center carries
us through feeling down and feeling high. Day after day we feel our
emotions run rampant and we continue to put one foot in front of the
other, rolling over our center in each step, affirming the foundation
that is our hiking being... It's all in the moment, and no stretch of
the imagination will help us put one foot in front of the other. It's
all about rhythm and constance and being-centered and knowing I will
feel low and want to leave the trail.
The lows, and highs will pass. What remains is one foot in front of the
other as an expression of my being harmony with the cosmos as I feel
them... That's what I walk for. That's the foundation of my meaning
and purpose in living, where I find them. All else is structured by
this day-after-day experience. I am changed by hiking. I am more
comfortable being-in-the-moment than I was before.
I take this hard won feeling into my social and work life and no longer
struggle to create meaning and purpose in a job or relationship. I've
already found what I need to live a life that enraptures me. I wake up
into this bodily understanding and open to a new power to create my life.
This is what long distance hiking offers - the realization I can create
my life, and the foundational power to do so - foundational insofar I am
a human being first, and all else is peripheral, insignificant play.
When I look into your eyes we see each other or we don't. I can create
in ways that others don't understand because I am putting one foot in
front of the other as I live. The months on the trail have transformed
and even if it is true that only I see and feel the change, and no one
else does, I stay centered and create within the ongoing act of putting
one foot in front of the other, all there is.
Jeffrey Olson, "Jeff, just Jeff"
Rapid City, SD
On 2/20/2013 6:25 PM, Dan Jacobs wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 20, 2013 at 3:54 PM, Yoshihiro Murakami
> <completewalker at gmail.com> wrote:
>> The cause of blister is shear force to exfoliate the dermis and the
>> epidermis by the friction. In other words, it is necessary to reduce
>> the friction between skin and socks to prevent blisters. There are
>> several strategies.
>>
>> The smart wool socks reduce the humidity of the surface of skin.
>> The socks should be changed regularly.
>
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