For the Runners’ Lounge Take It and Run Thursday: It Was So Obvious.
When I first read what this week’s theme would be, nothing came to mind. And then it hit me; it was like I erased these stupid problems from my mind!
Anyway, I know everyone’s writing about shoe issues, but it seems to be a common problem for me!
Shoe Problem #1
It started with my first pair of running shoes. I did the right thing – went to a running store. Had the guys at the shore fit me. Tested them out on the treadmill. The shoes felt good. They sent me on my way with some Mizunos.
I was just starting out, following a plan that was gradually moving from walking to running, and gradually increasing the distance. But one day, I had to stop abruptly due to a sharp pain in my knee.
Next run, the same thing happened. I seemed to be able to get about a mile into a run before the pain came.
With training I was able to get farther before the pain hit, but it always came. This probably went on for the first six to eight months of my running.
When it was time for a new pair of shoes, I went with the Asics 2090s. I was hoping for a miracle, but the pain came back after the first run.
After the second run, however, it was gone.
Shoe Problem #2
I was happy with the 2090s. I bought a second pair when the first pair was showing a lot of wear. I had about 250 miles on them. I’d been told you can get more mileage out of running shoes, but I didn’t want to push it.
I was well into the second pair when I was training for races on back-to-back weekends. A 10-miler would take place the first weekend, a half marathon the next.
A week or so before the first race, I started playing around with some new insoles because I thought I wasn’t getting enough cushioning. My shoes should have had plenty of play left in them, still having less than 200 miles on them at the time.
Well, that was a bad idea. I did wear the insoles for the 10-miler, but ended up bruising the second-smallest toenails on both feet, probably due to the insoles taking up more space. I also rubbed some nasty blisters.
Oddly enough, the following half-marathon (Rock and Roll VA Beach, 2005) is still my half marathon PR. I didn’t use those insoles this time, but my little toes were still sore, and got worse. The nails turned from red to purple to black. At least by the time my toenails fell off (months later), new ones had grown back underneath!
A few weeks after those races, and I ran a metric marathon (26.2 K / 16.3 miles). I figured those shoes were still OK since they had just over 200 miles. I retired the previous ones at 250.
After that race, I realized the inside of my left heel hurt. A lot. I was a bit concerned until I realized the outside of my right foot was also really sore.
This was a road race, and the streets weren’t closed. We ran 16.3 miles in the shoulder, and there was a slope on most of the roads. The inside of my left foot and the outside of my right hit the ground first!
I was still shocked at how much my feet hurt. After I got home, I put one foot in an old shoe, another in the current shoe. The “newer” ones were noticeably more broken down, even though they had fewer miles.
I should have realized something was wrong when I started using different inserts. It would have saved me a lot of pain and two toenails! Though, I’m told you’re not really a runner until you’ve lost a toenail!
Shoe Problem #3
I switched over to Saucony Hurricanes when Asics was on a model I didn’t like. (Every other one seems to work for me, which means I may like the 2130s. I’ve just about worn through my last stockpiled pair of 2110s!)
We were marathon training, and increasing our distance. I was having a problem where my left foot was getting numb around the 10-mile mark. I’d loosen my shoe, but it didn’t help much.
I was worried, thinking it could be something serious. I Googled a lot of scary medical problems.
And then I realized on long runs, after my feet had swelled, I couldn’t spread the toes on my left foot.
Even though the length of the shoe had plenty of room, the toe box started to narrow before my feet did!
I switched back to the Asics (up a size and a half from my street shoe – my toes have plenty of room now!), and the problem hasn’t come back. Duh!
So, there you have it. I’m sure it’s not the last time I’ll make a stupid shoe mistake!
Oh my!!! I have some similar shoe issues. When you switched from Mizuno to Asics and then to Saucony, did you go to a running store and have assistance or did you do it on your own? I know all the advice points to a specialty store, but I have never liked the shoes they recommend. Inevitably, I wear them for a week, then go to Sports Authority and buy my stand-bys.
So going up in size helped the numbness? I have the very same problem…
Oh yes! I have made those similar issues. It took me a few years to agree to wear the LARGE size I wear today (which is way into double digits), but 1 1/2 sizes bigger than my street shoe. It made all the difference in the world. Thanks for sharing!
I have been running in New Balance 1220 series for five years. The one time I switched to some brooks (I was getting pissed at New Balance for changing the models and jacking the price to $130) I wound up with a collapsed arch and 4 months of physical therapy. And I had to swim because I couldn’t run. i HATE swimming.