Barefoot running article from 12/27 Wall Street Journal

Baring Their Soles:Pain Doesn’t Defeat Unshod Marathoners

By JOSEPH PEREIRA
December 27, 2006; Page A1
Last month, after returning from an eight-mile run, Tsuyoshi Yoshino heated up a three-inch sewing needle until it turned bright red. Then, he says, he plunged the glowing instrument into the ball of his foot, puncturing a three-inch-long blister.

Despite the risk of infection, he walked around his San Diego house for 20 minutes on the open wound to get used to the pain. “It’s not something I like doing,” he says. “But I have to.”

While other marathoners train by carbo-loading, Mr. Yoshino has a more painful regimen. The 32-year-old graduate student at San Diego State University is one of a growing cadre of formerly shod distance runners making a torturous transition to running barefoot in the hope of improving their times and strengthening their soles. Blisters are an inevitable part of the journey. Mr. Yoshino estimates he’s popped about 40 of them in the past 18 months. (See “Running Shoeless May Be Better,1” June 6)

Over the years, a handful of world-class runners have been able to compete barefoot because they had run that way all their lives, hardening their feet naturally from early childhood. Among them: Ethiopia’s Abebe Bikila, in the 1960s, and South Africa’s Zola Budd Pieterse two decades later. But for runners long-accustomed to cushiony footwear, making the switchover often involves bizarre, agonizing feats.

“I wish there was an ‘Idiot’s Guide to Barefoot Running,’” says Mr. Yoshino, a former collegiate cross-country athlete. In 2002, he completed the Boston Marathon – in sneakers – in two hours and 43 minutes, placing him among the top 260 finishers.

Nowadays he limps to a halt after eight miles because his bare feet heat up and blister. Since commencing barefoot training through the streets and hills of San Diego 18 months ago, he’s consulted an acupuncturist for pain relief. A sports-injury specialist taught him to remove deeply embedded thorns from his feet with a box cutter.

Mr. Yoshino says he’ll need to lance another 100 blisters before achieving his dream – an outer crust on his feet as hard as that of some Australian aborigines. “It’s no picnic,” he says.

Although no one knows how many competitive and recreational runners go barefoot, membership in Yahoo’s barefoot discussion group has tripled to about 1,100 since 2003. Track teams at several colleges and high schools, including the state universities of Texas, Arkansas and Oregon as well as South Lake High School in Groveland, Fla., have incorporated barefoot runs into their training circuits.

Because it demands discipline and a high tolerance for pain, “I like to call barefoot running ‘Accidental Zen,’” says Ken Bob Saxton, a 51-year-old marathoner and computer technician from Southern California. Known as “Barefoot Bob,” he practices what he calls “toe yoga” for sole strengthening – placing his feet flat on the ground and using his toe muscles to point his toes straight up until the feet start to hurt. Mr. Saxton says he was one of eight barefoot runners to finish the Los Angeles marathon in 2005; in 2000, he was the only one.

Paul Keeley, a U.S. Marine at the South Carolina Military School, wants to run the Boston Marathon unshod next year. Last summer, he began training by pounding the streets of Charleston, S.C., in combat boots, hoping to nurture some preliminary calluses. He took off the boots this fall but soon landed on a surgeon’s table for an abscess in his middle toe that required draining. Mr. Keeley, 18, says his calluses had hardened so well that he felt no pain when a pine needle or some other sharp object penetrated his skin and worked its way to the bone. He says he’s still on track with his barefoot-in-Boston plan.

“Barefoot running isn’t for sissies,” says Jonathan Summers, a 37-year-old Boston horticulturist who took up the regimen this summer after seeing a couple of unshod runners pass him by at a local 10K race. “It’s like running on sandpaper.”

Vibram FiveFingers
Vibram USA’s FiveFingers Classic, which gives the feel of barefoot running.

When his blisters hurt most, Mr. Summers dons a running shoe with ballet-slipper like soles to mimic the barefoot experience. Footwear maker Vibram USA sold 10,000 pairs of the shoe so quickly last spring that it is rushing out 30,000 additional pairs, which should hit store shelves in February. Nike also makes a similar model, called Nike Free, whose thin soles were designed for barefoot training.

Dr. Mary Beth Crane, spokeswoman for the American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons, says only people college-age or younger should run without shoes because older joggers “don’t bounce as well” – and that even youngsters should limit barefoot training to grass under strict supervision. Among other dangers, she says, is a “very real potential” for foot infections.

Barefooters counter that, just as casts atrophy muscles, shoes weaken feet. Because barefoot running flexes the arches more than shod running, it builds up a matrix of tiny muscles between the sole and the ankle. Lack of use of those muscles – caused by wearing thick-soled shoes and arch supports – is considered by some doctors to be a main cause of ankle injuries and plantar fasciitis, a common foot ailment.

“A lot of this shoe support stuff just makes your foot lazy and puts your foot muscles to sleep,” says Dr. Irene Davis, a biomechanics researcher and director of the University of Delaware’s Running Injury Clinic.

Barefooters also try to minimize pain and stress on their feet by changing their running style. They land on the balls and arches of their feet – rather than their heels as shod runners do – because the middle part of the foot is more flexible and absorbs much of the shock when the foot strikes the ground.

The ideal sole is thick and smooth from heel to toe with few cracks and crevices. That leaves little room for fungi and parasites to hide.

Rick Roeber, a Kansas City runner who’s run 11 marathons and a 40-mile race this year – all in bare feet – says his soles are “like leather, almost like a moccasin shoe.” But getting there wasn’t easy. “I used to lie awake at night just from the pain of my blisters,” he says.

To facilitate toughening, he tried “a bunch of wild and crazy stuff,” including applying fingernail hardener to his soles and wrapping his feet in duct tape while running. The hardener didn’t help, while the tape unraveled after a couple of miles.

In time, he says, his feet got used to “the new barefoot me.” Now he makes sure that he shifts his center of gravity slightly forward so that he lands on the balls of his feet as softly as possible. As if in rehab, Mr. Roeber proudly declares, “I’ve been 952 days, shoe free.”

Not all runners are barefoot believers. “I’m sticking to my Asics Tigers,” says Neil Murphy, a New York attorney who tried running without shoes through the streets of Brooklyn earlier this year after a friend recommended it. A barrage of nicks, cuts and bruises led him to declare recently, “Humans are too far up the evolutionary chain to be trying this kind of stuff.”

one thing I was thinkng about reading this…the people growing running around barefoot probably don’t do it on concrete. Ok they might have to run on rocks but possibly much of the running is over the ground, even if hard and sun baked can’t be as bad as concrete. I don’t think the human foot was made to run on concrete day after day for hours at a time.

Running barefoot is definatley not recommended for concrete. Actually, most running experts recommend concrete as the last resort, and this is with shoes. I often run just to the side of the road where there is gravel. I’m lucky to live where there are numerous running trails. In fact, there is a trail here that follows the shoreline of an ancient lake. If I wanted to I could probably run 200 miles straight on this trail which is mostly level.

"Despite the risk of infection, he walked around his San Diego house for 20 minutes on the open wound to get used to the pain. “It’s not something I like doing,” he says. “But I have to.”

And people think IM triathletes are crazy…

Haim

A few of the shoe manufacturers make “minimallist” shoes for those who want to run barefoot but do not want all the problems associated with running w/o shoes. As in most things, there are some threads of truth in their reasoning (such as atrophy of certain muscles, flexibility, shock absorption, etc.) but on the whole, you’re better off putting something on your feet. I think we’ve progressed a little from our early cavemen days.

I agree with you about not running on concrete. I try to do trails, gravel paths…but usually hit concrete frequently the closer to the race I get just to toughen up the legs, etc…I cringed reading about this guy running barefoot, lancing blisters and then walking around barefoot after he lanced it…infection?
I am also wondering how much faster running barefoot runner can be and how this will affect the race time overall?

I’ve read that you can get pretty much the same benefits by running with a thin soled shoe. If I remember correctly, the article recommended track shoes (are they thin soled?). Also, the author recommended running barefoot only once in a great while, just so your feet can sense the intricacies in the road/trail. It suggested running in the grass on a football field or something. I’d be afraid to stub my toe on a sprinkler. I know, I’m dumb.

You’re right…and there are a few shoe models out there with minimal soles but which mimic barefoot running.
Only time I have run barefoot is on the hard pack sand on a beach which is level and on golf courses on the grass only. Yes, the golfers yelled at us a lot…but it was a blast doing fartlek training…run from tee to green really hard, then jog over to the next tee off area to recover and start out again. 18 holes is a pretty good workout…ok sorry I digressed again…xzzzzz kinda very very bored today…

I’ve seen a guy running barefoot out at Torrey Pines the last couple weekends. May have been the Barefoot Bob guy mentioned in the WSJ. He had the lightest running technique I’ve seen. It really looked like he was floating over the rocks. He was wearing some sort of a sock-like device with individual toes to protect his feet. It was basically the most minimalist thing you could wear to still protect your soles. His technique got me thinking I should head out to a golf course for some barefoot running myself.

-Marc

I only train for the run barefoot. Several benefits I have found. I am faster running barefoot, my heart rate is lower, my recovery time is minute rather than hours or days and my core gets one hell of a workout. No more lower back pain on long rides on the bike.

I have the Vibram Five Fingers and don’t particularly like them. There is to much work involved in making sure your toes are in the right place.

Right now I am running in water shoes or beach shoes whatever you call them. I got them for $5.00 at Wal-Mart.

When the weather warms up I run only on grass. Because I won’t run barefoot outside during the winter I don’t see a need to try to condition the sole of my foot like leather.

A couple of things I have noticed since training 100% barefoot for three years now. I have zero injuries. I am flat footed and that isn’t even an issue. My arch is very strong. I have arthritis in my knees and I don’t even notice it. My leg turnover is very quick.

When I do race I wear racing flats.

Even if you incorporate a mile or two of barefoot running in the grass at the end of a run you will reap the benefits.

When I first started to experiment with barefoot running I was suffering from Plantar Fascia and Achilles Tendonitis. I cured my Plantar in about 30 seconds. I just felt this incredible stretch from the bottom of my foot. I cured my AT by running a mile a day on the grass. It went away after 10 days and has never been an issue for me. I had an ITBS issue last March. I trained in regular shoes over the winter. The first day I could run barefoot it was gone.

Just give it a try that is all I can say. I have many links about the benefits of running barefoot if anyone is interested. You can also write to Ken Bob Saxton at the Yahoo group. He very friendly and willing to answer any questions.

Those are made by Vibram, I think.

could you please post of few of these link to share. i’m open to the idea and i know during my early soccer playingn days our coach would have us run barefoot for conditioning once a wk on grass.
thanks

NOW You’re getting it.

The fine folks at Vibram wrote this article and sent it to the wall street journal reporter. That’s why it is the only shoe of its type mentioned in the article. Last year, these articles went around but oddly enough they all mentioned the nike free and didn’t say boo about the vibram sho or any of the other “barefoot running” shoes.

Consider yourself manipulated, consider all ofus who read it manipulated.

http://www.easyvigour.net.nz/fitness/h_gluteus_max_leg.htm

http://www.barefooters.org/

http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&lr=&newwindow=1&q=cache:LV0w3blrsk0J:www.sportsci.org/jour/0103/mw.pdf%20barefoot%20shoes

http://ahcuah.home.att.net/docs/hoffman.htm

Here are a few links. I hope you enjoy reading them.

NOW You’re getting it.

The fine folks at Vibram wrote this article and sent it to the wall street journal reporter. That’s why it is the only shoe of its type mentioned in the article. Last year, these articles went around but oddly enough they all mentioned the nike free and didn’t say boo about the vibram sho or any of the other “barefoot running” shoes.

Consider yourself manipulated, consider all ofus who read it manipulated.
And you know that because…

Big article about two years ago on slate pointing out how it happens and how to spot them.