Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The same thing happened to me. A couple things I realized during my eight weeks in the boot:
1. I walk many places like you and getting fresh air boosts my mental health. Instead of walking to my favorite places, I used that time to sit outside and read or work. Still getting my fresh air and sun but minimizing impact on my foot.
2. Working out is important to me and boosts my mood. I began swimming twice a week since there was no impact. I’d wear my boot to the pool deck, place it on a towel and cover it then wear a supportive water shoe to walk to the edge. It was no more than 3 steps. I equated it to getting into the shower. I’d swim for 30 minutes or so then get out, sit on the side and dry my leg and put the boot back on. Also, I was a terrible swimmer to start and actually made a lot of progress. There are ideas online on how to structure your workout.
3. I also lifted weights at the gym on a bench. Lots of sitting but really worked my arms and core. I couldn’t get into to seated yoga or anything like that. I need something high intensity.
4. Even if you think it’s better, don’t overdo it. I ended up in a boot 3 extra weeks because I thought I was healed and took my boot off more often than I should have.
Nobody should be swimming with a broken foot, until you are out of the boot. You are trying to keep the bones in one place so they heal. Kicking for swimmers is pretty hard on foot bones in terms of movement. (Even if it is not weight bearing).
Anonymous wrote:The same thing happened to me. A couple things I realized during my eight weeks in the boot:
1. I walk many places like you and getting fresh air boosts my mental health. Instead of walking to my favorite places, I used that time to sit outside and read or work. Still getting my fresh air and sun but minimizing impact on my foot.
2. Working out is important to me and boosts my mood. I began swimming twice a week since there was no impact. I’d wear my boot to the pool deck, place it on a towel and cover it then wear a supportive water shoe to walk to the edge. It was no more than 3 steps. I equated it to getting into the shower. I’d swim for 30 minutes or so then get out, sit on the side and dry my leg and put the boot back on. Also, I was a terrible swimmer to start and actually made a lot of progress. There are ideas online on how to structure your workout.
3. I also lifted weights at the gym on a bench. Lots of sitting but really worked my arms and core. I couldn’t get into to seated yoga or anything like that. I need something high intensity.
4. Even if you think it’s better, don’t overdo it. I ended up in a boot 3 extra weeks because I thought I was healed and took my boot off more often than I should have.
Anonymous wrote:I had to wear a boot for months and felt similarly. Plan to do some fun sedentary stuff, watch shows you’ve been meaning to get to, etc. unfortunately I didn’t heed that advice and I ended up having to wear it for longer than originally
Planned. Don’t be like me!
Anonymous wrote:count your lucky stars you didn't have an unexpected foot surgery for no fault of your own. there are many of us in casts and completely non-weight bearing unable to walk for 8 weeks, and then we get lucky like you and graduate to a walking boot for 8 weeks, hopefully. use this to do all the boring projects around your house you've been putting off for years like scanning old photos, going though files, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:count your lucky stars you didn't have an unexpected foot surgery for no fault of your own. there are many of us in casts and completely non-weight bearing unable to walk for 8 weeks, and then we get lucky like you and graduate to a walking boot for 8 weeks, hopefully. use this to do all the boring projects around your house you've been putting off for years like scanning old photos, going though files, etc.
I'll politely overlook the pointless jockeying for position of who has it worse and take on board your advice to do boring household projects. I do have some junk drawers to clean out, thank you for the idea.
it is your reply that is impolite, be grateful for suggestions to your whiney post. and expecting politeness on DCUM?, adorable!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:count your lucky stars you didn't have an unexpected foot surgery for no fault of your own. there are many of us in casts and completely non-weight bearing unable to walk for 8 weeks, and then we get lucky like you and graduate to a walking boot for 8 weeks, hopefully. use this to do all the boring projects around your house you've been putting off for years like scanning old photos, going though files, etc.
I'll politely overlook the pointless jockeying for position of who has it worse and take on board your advice to do boring household projects. I do have some junk drawers to clean out, thank you for the idea.
Anonymous wrote:The same thing happened to me. A couple things I realized during my eight weeks in the boot:
1. I walk many places like you and getting fresh air boosts my mental health. Instead of walking to my favorite places, I used that time to sit outside and read or work. Still getting my fresh air and sun but minimizing impact on my foot.
2. Working out is important to me and boosts my mood. I began swimming twice a week since there was no impact. I’d wear my boot to the pool deck, place it on a towel and cover it then wear a supportive water shoe to walk to the edge. It was no more than 3 steps. I equated it to getting into the shower. I’d swim for 30 minutes or so then get out, sit on the side and dry my leg and put the boot back on. Also, I was a terrible swimmer to start and actually made a lot of progress. There are ideas online on how to structure your workout.
3. I also lifted weights at the gym on a bench. Lots of sitting but really worked my arms and core. I couldn’t get into to seated yoga or anything like that. I need something high intensity.
4. Even if you think it’s better, don’t overdo it. I ended up in a boot 3 extra weeks because I thought I was healed and took my boot off more often than I should have.
Anonymous wrote:count your lucky stars you didn't have an unexpected foot surgery for no fault of your own. there are many of us in casts and completely non-weight bearing unable to walk for 8 weeks, and then we get lucky like you and graduate to a walking boot for 8 weeks, hopefully. use this to do all the boring projects around your house you've been putting off for years like scanning old photos, going though files, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I had to wear a boot for months and felt similarly. Plan to do some fun sedentary stuff, watch shows you’ve been meaning to get to, etc. unfortunately I didn’t heed that advice and I ended up having to wear it for longer than originally
Planned. Don’t be like me!