Day 21 : Get on the Grass

12/06/2015
Steps 6438
Water 6

You heard me, get off the damn sidewalk.
This is something I've been telling folks for nearly 40 years, since my days of running barefoot. (that will be another post)

"Why should I do that?" You ask. "It's smooth, flat and safe."
Well, you just answered your own question.
Pavement is smooth, flat, safe and hard. None of these are good for you, your feet and most importantly, your bones.

The biggest culprit is hard. Why do you think shoes have so much padding? Those super thick soles and cushy shoe liners are an effort to compensate for the unyielding surface of pavement.
You've heard the old saying "like hitting a brick wall." Well, that's what happens to your body with every step. Doubly so when you're running or jogging.

Most research on footwear has always been an effort to try and deal with the problem of how to lower the impact of every step you take on pavement.
It's not just sidewalks and parking lots, but nearly every modern building except for your house, has cement floors. 
 They may be covered with tile, carpeting or wood laminate, but they are still rock hard and unyielding cement underneath.
So the next time you're out for a walk, especially if you feel any pain, step to the side and walk in the grass a bit. You'll probably notice an almost instant lowering of joint pain in the feet and knees.

Be careful, it's a bit uneven!
Yes, this is the other reason to get off the pavement! Because it's flat, smooth and safe.

This is a long-term problem that most folks, even specialists, have not grasped yet.
Nature is always changing, and that means the ground you are walking on. Every step you take on the grass is different from the next. A tuft of grass here, a low spot there, a pebble or stick.
"But that's why I stay on the sidewalk, it's smooth and safe."
Seems like good logic now, but in 50 years, dead wrong.

If you've spent most of your life off the grass, you might actually find it hard to walk on. You might find it a bit unsettling to your sense of balance. And you'll be right. Not because the ground is uneven, but because your sense of balance has been atrophied from years of non-use.
Your feet are actually the lower sensors for your balance control system.
Your feet constantly send signals to a your head with every step. A constant stream of up, down, back, side, bump, soft, hard, etc. All those signals being regulated by your brain, in an effort to keep you upright.
Those are the signals as you walk in nature, on pavement, it's more like hard, hard, hard, hard. The same signals, day in and day out.

As time goes by, you may notice a strange uneasiness on grass. You seem to be unsteady on your feet, and you rush back to the pavement. As the years go by, you might find yourself stumbling over the smallest change in that flat, hard world. A crack in the sidewalk, the edge of the carpet, or even stairs. You start looking for handholds as you go through your day, railings, walls, table edges and chairs.

Then one day, for no apparent reason, you just topple over. If you are lucky, it's just an embarrassing moment as folks come around to help you backup. If you are not, it's a broken wrist, elbow, or hip and you are heading to the hospital, rehab or casket.

So, just like all the other bad habits you've learned over the years, now's your chance to change another for the better.
Start taking a few steps off that hard, man-made world, and get back to nature where you belong.

Get back on the grass.

KRASH

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