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Happy Feet

Give your feet just a little attention, and your whole body will feel better.

By Melanie Haiken

They hold us up all day long, they get us everywhere we need to go, and they connect our bodies to the earth. Some yoga teachers even call the feet the "roots" of the body.

Yet for all that our feet do for us, we don't do much for them in return. We cram them into tight shoes, pound along on them all day, and generally ignore them unless they're giving us serious trouble. The result is that at some point in their lives 7 of 10 people will suffer from foot problems, many of which are entirely preventable.

Robert Kornfeld, a holistic podiatrist in New York City, says he's seen it all: people hobbling in with knobby, inflamed bunions and hammer toes, the dull throb of tendinitis, the achy soles of plantar fasciitis.

Those aren't just niggling minor ailments; some foot problems can alter the foot's structure and trigger pain elsewhere in the body. "I sing that song to my patients," Kornfeld says: "'The foot bone's connected to the leg bone...'" In fact, experts say one of the most important reasons to treat foot problems early is to prevent them from throwing the knees, hips, back, and shoulders out of whack.

And one of the best ways to take care of your feet is with yoga. "I recommend that all my patients start yoga immediately," Kornfeld says. "When you treat foot problems with yoga, you end up treating back pain, hip pain, all kinds of structural problems. Not only does it stretch out the muscles and lead to a greater range of motion, but it helps heal the root issue of inflammation as well."

In fact, yoga gives feet a healthy workout that they rarely get any other way. "You couldn't ask for a better set of tools to reawaken the feet," says yoga teacher Rodney Yee, of the Piedmont Yoga Studio in Oakland, California. Below, some tips from the experts on how best to use yoga to prevent or treat foot pain.

Throw Your Weight Around

The first place to begin building awareness of your feet is in standing poses such as Tadasana (Mountain Pose). Before you start the pose, think about how you naturally stand, suggests Janice Gates, a specialist in therapeutic yoga and the founding director of the Yoga Garden Studio in San Anselmo, California. Do you tend to put your weight on the inner edge of your foot, which tends to make your legs bow inward, or on the outer edge, which tends to make the knees bow out? (If you can't tell, check the bottoms of your shoes—you can often tell from the way the soles are wearing.)

Notice how your weight falls, and then play with it by rocking forward and back, lifting first your toes, then your heels. If you tend to stand perched a little forward, try shifting your weight back a bit, and vice versa.

Next, try lifting the arch of your foot while pushing down around the edges, creating both a sense of rooting into the earth and lifting energy up from the center, to form the Mula Bandha (Root Lock). "Sometimes I use the image of a jack-in-the-box: collapsing down, then springing up," says Gates. "You're pushing down to lift up." Once you start to do this, you'll find yourself more aware of your feet and distributing your weight better in your everyday life.

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Reader Comments

Alicia

I am so happy to find Yoga Journal. I have suffered from Plantar Fasciitis for 2 years now. I have have the recomended surgery and still have no relief. I asked about therapy in the Medical world and streaching was suggested but no one addressed the root issue of the inflammation. At the club one day I noticed Yoga on the class list. I decided to give it a try. The instructor was/is wonderful she made me feel very comfortable and I was pleasently supprised how good I felt after class. I have continued practicing and I can feel a great relief in my feet and in my mind. Yoga Journal carries me through the times I can't make it to a class. My life has been enriched by this enlightnment...I can't thank you and Joy enough...
Alicia Duke
Melbourne, Florida

Holley B.

I have been struggling with plantar fasciitis for 5 years. I have had 2 orthotripsies and not only have I not been exercising for years, I am sitting most of the day so as not to exascerbate my arch/heel pain. I studied dance in my younger years and was a devotee of Jazzercise. I started walking on an incline on a treadmill every day and this is how I injured my foot. I love to exercise and this inactivity is not only driving me crazy but has reduced my quality of life. I can't walk on the beach, walk my dog, or play sports of any kind. It is causing my body to become atrophied and I worry that I'm shortening my life. I cannot ever be barefooted so I used to think that Yoga was out for me. Are there things I can do with Yoga to strengthen my feet and get rid of this plantar fasciitis once and foreall?

Debi


i` ve had neck surgery back surgery , want to learn how to do yoga , but concerned about my neck it is hard to do the positions , bare with me I`m new , but have read and research yoga sounds more what I`m looking for is there any dvds that help with people with injuries ?

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