Grub
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2021
Right. I get what you're saying now. My feet are kinda wide so I tend to avoid the narrower guy's shoes in general just because I hate the feeling of it so I can kind of understand what you mean.Yeah, sorry, I'm not an anatomist so I'm not describing it very well. Inside the work boot, your foot is still able to spread and flex. Women's shoes are a lot narrower and more binding. If you were to wrap an exercise bandage around the entirety of your foot, including your toes, it'd give you a good idea of what I'm talking about. Your foot spreads, contracts, flexes as you need it to, and provided your work boots are the right size, your foot is able to do that inside your boot, even though the boot is heavy. Women's shoes are narrower and don't allow your foot to spread at all, meaning that it's harder to adjust to different surfaces and speeds, and you need to take smaller steps with no side swing.
I've never actually noticed that but I guess I was never really looking for it. This sounds like it's going to be one of those things that once you notice it you can't unnotice it.Balance is definitely curtailed. You watch a woman first when she's wearing shoes, and then when she's barefoot; the changes in her gait are very noticeable, imho.