You’re already paying attention to how your body feels when you move — that awareness itself is a gift.
Last week, Robert, 75, came in wearing his favorite pair of thick, cushioned walking shoes. He said, “These are so comfortable. They have great support and they cushion every step. But I still feel a little wobbly on uneven ground, and I catch myself gripping the floor with my toes when I walk.”
Robert wasn’t imagining it. The very shoes that feel best on sore feet can quietly steal information from the nervous system.
Thick, heavily cushioned soles act like a soft pillow between your feet and the ground. They muffle the signals your feet are supposed to send upward — signals about texture, slope, small changes in surface. That reduced feedback makes proprioception (your body’s sense of where it is in space) less accurate.
When the feet send fuzzy information, the brain has to guess. The ankles, knees, and hips have to work harder to compensate. Toes grip, calves tighten, posture shifts forward — all to create artificial stability.
Over time, those compensations can create new aches in the knees, hips, or lower back… while the feet themselves grow even less sensitive.
Your feet are part of the balance trio we talked about earlier. When they can’t “talk” clearly to your brain, the whole conversation gets harder — even if your legs are strong.
The good news? You don’t have to give up comfortable shoes. You just need to give your feet occasional chances to speak clearly again — and strengthen the muscles that help them do their job.
Try this simple 1-minute awareness check at home (barefoot or in thin socks is fine):
Stand near a counter or wall for safety.
Take 10 slow steps across the room — first in your usual thick shoes.
Then take them off and do 10 slow steps barefoot (or in very thin socks).
Notice the difference in how clearly your feet feel the floor and how your ankles and hips respond.
Most people are surprised at how much more information their feet provide when the cushioning is removed — even for just a minute or two.
You don’t have to live barefoot. Just give your feet a little “talk time” a few times a week while you strengthen the small muscles that support them.
If you know someone who wears thick, cushioned shoes because their feet hurt or feel numb… please forward this to them right now.