| Learning to Walk by Alan Ray |
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Walking is one of those things that, by the time we get to be adults, we forget how hard it was to learn. Until we have to re-learn it.
That’s the broad-brush description. Let’s now break it down. Marc also emphasized with me the need to hold the shoulders back and walk straight up. I had unknowingly developed a forward-leaning motion over the years of limping. This led to shorter, quicker steps. Critical to all this is that you must to remember to relax the toes. (That's the magical part that took me the longest to figure out.) When the toes are relaxed, and able to spread, you achieve the part that Marc was looking for. You can keep the foot on the ground longer. If you have limped, it will seem you’re keeping your feet on the ground an unnaturally long time. But a correct step begins with the heel plant, rolls through the arch and ball of the foot…and rolling off the toes. You can’t roll off scrunched-up. It may necessary to concentrate specifically on relaxing the toes. In the beginning, I found myself trying to walk too fast, and I dropped immediately back into limp-mode. As soon I concentrated on slowing down and thinking about the step, it became easy...and the limp went away. There were a number of means I used over the first two months after surgery to remind myself of the wrong things I was doing…and how to do the right things. Ways to get there There are some “tricks” that will make it easier to restore natural gait. These are a few that have worked.
Parts of this posting are offered from experience (my own). The techniques and mechanics of walking, including gait and cadence, were gifts from experts who had helped hundreds before me, and hundreds after me. Walkin’ in Straight Lines Alan LBHR 15Dec04 Dr. De Smet |
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