Completely on board with the whole minimalist footwear brigade. The best places to start to get what they're all about is this post at Mark's Daily Apple [which I think is the first place I learned about them] and, well, the entire blog birthday shoes. You can even download a free e-book from there:
the [beginners guide] to Vibram Five Fingers shoes!
Vibram Five Fingers are the standard bearers in the whole 'barefoot shoes' deal, and now I have, apparently, 5 pairs. [Told you. Cult. Yay.] The short version of the hows and the whys is this - normal shoes restrict your ranges of motion and weaken your feet - 'casts for feet' as it were - minimalist footwear is designed to get you back in touch with how your feet actually work, strengthening and making them more flexible. When I first saw them it reminded me of how old school bodybuilders used to workout barefoot - like this pic of Arnold, back in the day - - and yoga, beach running and other disciplines trend to bare feet for the same reasons.
Classics, on the left, for summer/warmer weather kicking around, and a pair of Sprints on the right, for trainers in similar conditions.
KSO Treks, left, for all purpose casuals/semi-formal [pair of khakis or jeans wear] and Flows on the right, for cold weather PT or watersports.
A pair of Soft Star moccasins for around the house...
And a pair of Vivo Barefoot Dharmas, which is as close as I get to "normal" shoes.
Hey thanks for the shout-out to birthdayshoes. I got a kick out of your description:
ReplyDelete"Wannabe zen taoist anarchist transcendental agnostic libertarian conspiracy theorist magician yogi."
I can't say I meet all those things, but I do hit on a few of them (anarhist/agnostic/libertarian mostly). Anyway, seems we have some footwear in common, too (VFFs + Soft Stars + Vivos). Nice post!
Justin @ birthdayshoes
Hey Justin - thanks much. Big fan of birthdayshoes, you keep an awesome site over there. Take care...
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