Cons of walking?

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Replies

  • globalc00
    globalc00 Posts: 103 Member
    My point is this kind of flaws the advice people give to other when they say exercise more and you can eat more. Technically true, but the amount or intensity you have to put in is probably not what most people expect to be able to eat that extra slice of whatever.
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,092 Member
    If brisk walking does nothing else, it gets me out of my basement gym and get fresh air on the days when I don't run.

    In winter it can be challenging to avoid the ice when walking. I have fallen a few times on ice that I couldn't see.

    The benefits of just being outside for fresh air makes the risk worth it to me. Clears the mind.

    After having two people in my immediate family suffer compound fractures from falling on "invisible ice," I'm a little more risk averse. But it's pretty easy to gauge the risk of ice (based on recent/current temps and precipitation), and those factors still leave a lot of winter days with low to no risk of ice in my neck of the woods. Fortunately, they're predicting higher than average temps and lower than average precip for the winter here. I like looking at pretty snowfall as much as the next person, but I'm not crazy about shoveling it, and I hate the thought of falling on the ice.
  • angelexperiment
    angelexperiment Posts: 1,917 Member
    Do not buy the foam soled shoes they wear down super fast make sure it’s rubber soled and I’d say yes good shoes are expensive but wearing improper or worn out shoes cause sprains and strains! And be properly fitted at a runner store the can tell you your walking patterns
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    lgfrie wrote: »
    globalc00 wrote: »
    I have reached the end of YouTube and web walking on treadmill. Lol. The issue is my mind knows 1 hour is 1 hour. It’s a long time much less 2 hours.

    Breaking Bad takes 62 hours to watch. You'll be set till mid January.
    globalc00 wrote: »
    I watched 1 season of it and couldn't bring my self to watch season 2. I really don't get why people think it's such a good series.

    Obviously it doesn't have to be Breaking Bad. Whatever time you spend watching TV, do it on the treadmill.

    I've exercised to Battlestar Galactica, The 100, Dark Matter, The Good Wife, Scandal, several Marvel series, Jane the Virgin, and numerous other shows - basically, whatever I like but my OH doesn't or has already seen.
  • Dogmom1978
    Dogmom1978 Posts: 1,580 Member
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    lgfrie wrote: »
    globalc00 wrote: »
    I have reached the end of YouTube and web walking on treadmill. Lol. The issue is my mind knows 1 hour is 1 hour. It’s a long time much less 2 hours.

    Breaking Bad takes 62 hours to watch. You'll be set till mid January.
    globalc00 wrote: »
    I watched 1 season of it and couldn't bring my self to watch season 2. I really don't get why people think it's such a good series.

    Obviously it doesn't have to be Breaking Bad. Whatever time you spend watching TV, do it on the treadmill.

    I've exercised to Battlestar Galactica, The 100, Dark Matter, The Good Wife, Scandal, several Marvel series, Jane the Virgin, and numerous other shows - basically, whatever I like but my OH doesn't or has already seen.

    ^^

    I second this. I also read on the treadmill although it’s harder than it sounds 😂. I love to read and if I couple it with my treadmill or arc trainer I’m not being lazy 😜

    I cannot read on my rower or summit climber though 😔
  • Dogmom1978
    Dogmom1978 Posts: 1,580 Member
    cwolfman13 wrote: »
    globalc00 wrote: »
    sijomial wrote: »
    globalc00 wrote: »
    Walking out side for me has health hazard since where I live, there are no side walks and cars and scooters zoom by. Air quality and weather is also a factor. So I prefer to walk on treadmill.
    But my biggest complaint about walking is the calorie count. I really have no idea how many calories i'm burning. Too many conflicting articles out there on how much you really burn even if I am on a treadmill much less outside.
    If someone has a known good formula to calculate walking calorie, please share.

    @globalc00
    I tend to use the simple bodyweight in pounds X efficiency ratio of 0.3 X miles walked = net calories
    (e.g. At my 168lb weight walking 3 miles would get a number of 151 net cals with caveats that it's intended for flat ground and "normal speed" walking.)

    Beware that many estimates are gross cals (including MyFitnessPal's METS based estimates and many apps) which would mean an element of double counting if using MFP as designed for exercise calories. (MFP number for me with an hour at 3mph would be 251cals.)

    This calculator tends to give higher numbers than my simple formula (184cals for comparison) but usefully has a field where you can enter the grade so helpful for your treadmill incline walks perhaps?
    https://exrx.net/Calculators/WalkRunMETs

    Based on your calculation. I would burn 210 calories for 10000 steps or 5 miles. Burning a hair more per hour than my hourly tdee. Quite depressing. 😩

    Reasons like this I feel like it’s easier to not eat than exercise. 1 hour walking burns less than eating a banana.

    There are far more benefits to regular exercise than just calorie burning.

    ^^

    Yes! Calorie deficit is for weight loss and exercise is for my mental and physical health.

    Also, I enjoy going outdoors with my furkids 😊
  • freda666
    freda666 Posts: 338 Member
    edited November 2020
    The only negative with walking for me now is that I keep getting very wet as it is Autumn here. I try to hit the times of day that the weather forecast says it is less likely to rain but does not always work out.

    But hopefully by this time next year I will be in maintenance so will have spent the money on some decent wet weather gear, an expensive purchase so I do not wish to make while I still have weight to lose. For now, I just have to make do with what I have.

    I do enjoy my walks though and as someone who enjoys crafts, it nicely offsets the time I spend sitting so I enjoy that more as I don't then worry about being too inactive.

    When it is really really wet, I get out the stepper and put on a movie or trawl through YouTube for entertainment and can easily do an hour but I much prefer to get out of the house when I can.
  • peggy_polenta
    peggy_polenta Posts: 325 Member
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Dogmom1978 wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Theoldguy1 wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Don't think there can be any negatives :smile: unless you plan on doing excess miles every single day, which is what I did a few years ago and burned myself out not to mention my poor heels and feet were suffering too (had to let go of my step tracker eventually because I couldn't stand to see less than 20k+ steps a day)

    Oh yeah... the other con is how much more shoes and socks cost and how fast you wear out shoes once your average stays over 10k. Don't be fooled by shoes supposedly designed to be "walking" shoes. In this country that just means it is possible to walk in them. It doesn't actually mean they are designed for exercise.

    I can buy a lot of shoes vs the cost of poor cardiac health.

    How nice for you. Not everyone can. Healthy lifestyle items and food are overpriced because they know we are investing in our wellbeing. Besides that it takes a lot of effort to find the right pair of shoes and not long after you do they replace it with a newer model that sucks.

    I jokingly refer to my husband as Goldie locks because of how hard it is for him to find shoes he likes.

    Also, I try NOT to purchase items that are designed for “healthy lifestyle” as that simply means they are charging me 200% more than it’s worth 😂 I am very very very frugal 😜

    Pretty much the only way I can "interview" shoes now is through Prime Wardrobe or ShoeBacca. To find my recent pair it took trying 16 pairs of shoes. The ones I settled on are not ones I like looking at but it is form over function for me. After finding it I went to a NB outlet store and took advantage of the buy one get half off deals. So I own 3 pairs but one is already been semi-retired to be used for rainy days.

    I am barely getting 12 weeks of use out of a pair of shoes currently. Even shopping for deals that is stupid expensive.

    Even still I have to use a foot roller.

    I was told recently I should look into some expensive inserts. Geez, what is next?

    if you are going thru a lot of shoes...you should have at least 3 pair of shoes that you alternate wearing everyday...(even if they are the same kind in your case). 3 pair of shoes alternated will each have a longer life than if you wore each pair daily and consequetivly.... ...if that makes sense.
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,092 Member
    Dogmom1978 wrote: »
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    lgfrie wrote: »
    globalc00 wrote: »
    I have reached the end of YouTube and web walking on treadmill. Lol. The issue is my mind knows 1 hour is 1 hour. It’s a long time much less 2 hours.

    Breaking Bad takes 62 hours to watch. You'll be set till mid January.
    globalc00 wrote: »
    I watched 1 season of it and couldn't bring my self to watch season 2. I really don't get why people think it's such a good series.

    Obviously it doesn't have to be Breaking Bad. Whatever time you spend watching TV, do it on the treadmill.

    I've exercised to Battlestar Galactica, The 100, Dark Matter, The Good Wife, Scandal, several Marvel series, Jane the Virgin, and numerous other shows - basically, whatever I like but my OH doesn't or has already seen.

    ^^

    I second this. I also read on the treadmill although it’s harder than it sounds 😂. I love to read and if I couple it with my treadmill or arc trainer I’m not being lazy 😜

    I cannot read on my rower or summit climber though 😔

    I would give audio books a try because, as you say, reading is not easy on a treadmill. I was always having to hit rewind on audio books (way back before Audible, when I was listening to cassettes) when I used them on a long commute that I thankfully got rid of about 15 years ago, or while I was outside walking or doing yardwork, because real-life would distract me and I'd realize I'd missed a whole paragraph or more.

    But I think I could probably stay focused on an audio book on a treadmill. Or a podcast. I just discovered one that's been going for a couple of years called LeVar Burton Reads, so I've got a big backlog to catch up on. They're short stories, so you can probably finish a whole story in one treadmill session. A lot of them are science fiction or fantasy, so maybe not a good choice if you're one of those weird people who doesn't like either. :smile:
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,092 Member
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Dogmom1978 wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Theoldguy1 wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Don't think there can be any negatives :smile: unless you plan on doing excess miles every single day, which is what I did a few years ago and burned myself out not to mention my poor heels and feet were suffering too (had to let go of my step tracker eventually because I couldn't stand to see less than 20k+ steps a day)

    Oh yeah... the other con is how much more shoes and socks cost and how fast you wear out shoes once your average stays over 10k. Don't be fooled by shoes supposedly designed to be "walking" shoes. In this country that just means it is possible to walk in them. It doesn't actually mean they are designed for exercise.

    I can buy a lot of shoes vs the cost of poor cardiac health.

    How nice for you. Not everyone can. Healthy lifestyle items and food are overpriced because they know we are investing in our wellbeing. Besides that it takes a lot of effort to find the right pair of shoes and not long after you do they replace it with a newer model that sucks.

    I jokingly refer to my husband as Goldie locks because of how hard it is for him to find shoes he likes.

    Also, I try NOT to purchase items that are designed for “healthy lifestyle” as that simply means they are charging me 200% more than it’s worth 😂 I am very very very frugal 😜

    Pretty much the only way I can "interview" shoes now is through Prime Wardrobe or ShoeBacca. To find my recent pair it took trying 16 pairs of shoes. The ones I settled on are not ones I like looking at but it is form over function for me. After finding it I went to a NB outlet store and took advantage of the buy one get half off deals. So I own 3 pairs but one is already been semi-retired to be used for rainy days.

    I am barely getting 12 weeks of use out of a pair of shoes currently. Even shopping for deals that is stupid expensive.

    Even still I have to use a foot roller.

    I was told recently I should look into some expensive inserts. Geez, what is next?

    if you are going thru a lot of shoes...you should have at least 3 pair of shoes that you alternate wearing everyday...(even if they are the same kind in your case). 3 pair of shoes alternated will each have a longer life than if you wore each pair daily and consequetivly.... ...if that makes sense.

    Also having multiple pairs means you shouldn't ever be in a situation of having to wear a brand new pair multiple days in a row while you "break them in." I know they say shoes should be comfortable from the get go, and I strive for that, but I seldom find a new pair that really feels as comfortable as a pair I've worn for a little while.
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    Dogmom1978 wrote: »
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    lgfrie wrote: »
    globalc00 wrote: »
    I have reached the end of YouTube and web walking on treadmill. Lol. The issue is my mind knows 1 hour is 1 hour. It’s a long time much less 2 hours.

    Breaking Bad takes 62 hours to watch. You'll be set till mid January.
    globalc00 wrote: »
    I watched 1 season of it and couldn't bring my self to watch season 2. I really don't get why people think it's such a good series.

    Obviously it doesn't have to be Breaking Bad. Whatever time you spend watching TV, do it on the treadmill.

    I've exercised to Battlestar Galactica, The 100, Dark Matter, The Good Wife, Scandal, several Marvel series, Jane the Virgin, and numerous other shows - basically, whatever I like but my OH doesn't or has already seen.

    ^^

    I second this. I also read on the treadmill although it’s harder than it sounds 😂. I love to read and if I couple it with my treadmill or arc trainer I’m not being lazy 😜

    I cannot read on my rower or summit climber though 😔

    I would give audio books a try because, as you say, reading is not easy on a treadmill. I was always having to hit rewind on audio books (way back before Audible, when I was listening to cassettes) when I used them on a long commute that I thankfully got rid of about 15 years ago, or while I was outside walking or doing yardwork, because real-life would distract me and I'd realize I'd missed a whole paragraph or more.

    But I think I could probably stay focused on an audio book on a treadmill. Or a podcast. I just discovered one that's been going for a couple of years called LeVar Burton Reads, so I've got a big backlog to catch up on. They're short stories, so you can probably finish a whole story in one treadmill session. A lot of them are science fiction or fantasy, so maybe not a good choice if you're one of those weird people who doesn't like either. :smile:

    Hmm, I'm not crazy about short stories in general (even by my favorite authors of novels) but wonder if this will change if it is an audio short story I listen to while I'm exercising.

    Science fiction / fantasy is right up my alley!
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,092 Member
    freda78 wrote: »
    The only negative with walking for me now is that I keep getting very wet as it is Autumn here. I try to hit the times of day that the weather forecast says it is less likely to rain but does not always work out.

    But hopefully by this time next year I will be in maintenance so will have spent the money on some decent wet weather gear, an expensive purchase so I do not wish to make while I still have weight to lose. For now, I just have to make do with what I have.

    I do enjoy my walks though and as someone who enjoys crafts, it nicely offsets the time I spend sitting so I enjoy that more as I don't then worry about being too inactive.

    When it is really really wet, I get out the stepper and put on a movie or trawl through YouTube for entertainment and can easily do an hour but I much prefer to get out of the house when I can.

    Do you water-proof real walking shoes? If not, what do you wear on your feet? I find shoes that are designed as rain wear aren't generally the most comfortable or appropriate for long walks, much less breaking into the occasional jog, which I like to do.
  • MadDogManor
    MadDogManor Posts: 1,530 Member
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Dogmom1978 wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Theoldguy1 wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Don't think there can be any negatives :smile: unless you plan on doing excess miles every single day, which is what I did a few years ago and burned myself out not to mention my poor heels and feet were suffering too (had to let go of my step tracker eventually because I couldn't stand to see less than 20k+ steps a day)

    Oh yeah... the other con is how much more shoes and socks cost and how fast you wear out shoes once your average stays over 10k. Don't be fooled by shoes supposedly designed to be "walking" shoes. In this country that just means it is possible to walk in them. It doesn't actually mean they are designed for exercise.

    I can buy a lot of shoes vs the cost of poor cardiac health.

    How nice for you. Not everyone can. Healthy lifestyle items and food are overpriced because they know we are investing in our wellbeing. Besides that it takes a lot of effort to find the right pair of shoes and not long after you do they replace it with a newer model that sucks.

    I jokingly refer to my husband as Goldie locks because of how hard it is for him to find shoes he likes.

    Also, I try NOT to purchase items that are designed for “healthy lifestyle” as that simply means they are charging me 200% more than it’s worth 😂 I am very very very frugal 😜

    Pretty much the only way I can "interview" shoes now is through Prime Wardrobe or ShoeBacca. To find my recent pair it took trying 16 pairs of shoes. The ones I settled on are not ones I like looking at but it is form over function for me. After finding it I went to a NB outlet store and took advantage of the buy one get half off deals. So I own 3 pairs but one is already been semi-retired to be used for rainy days.

    I am barely getting 12 weeks of use out of a pair of shoes currently. Even shopping for deals that is stupid expensive.

    Even still I have to use a foot roller.

    I was told recently I should look into some expensive inserts. Geez, what is next?

    if you are going thru a lot of shoes...you should have at least 3 pair of shoes that you alternate wearing everyday...(even if they are the same kind in your case). 3 pair of shoes alternated will each have a longer life than if you wore each pair daily and consequetivly.... ...if that makes sense.

    This is what I do for my laboratory work shoes. Rotating seems to let them “bounce back” between wearings. Walking shoes, I don’t have much experience with yet
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,092 Member
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    Dogmom1978 wrote: »
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    lgfrie wrote: »
    globalc00 wrote: »
    I have reached the end of YouTube and web walking on treadmill. Lol. The issue is my mind knows 1 hour is 1 hour. It’s a long time much less 2 hours.

    Breaking Bad takes 62 hours to watch. You'll be set till mid January.
    globalc00 wrote: »
    I watched 1 season of it and couldn't bring my self to watch season 2. I really don't get why people think it's such a good series.

    Obviously it doesn't have to be Breaking Bad. Whatever time you spend watching TV, do it on the treadmill.

    I've exercised to Battlestar Galactica, The 100, Dark Matter, The Good Wife, Scandal, several Marvel series, Jane the Virgin, and numerous other shows - basically, whatever I like but my OH doesn't or has already seen.

    ^^

    I second this. I also read on the treadmill although it’s harder than it sounds 😂. I love to read and if I couple it with my treadmill or arc trainer I’m not being lazy 😜

    I cannot read on my rower or summit climber though 😔

    I would give audio books a try because, as you say, reading is not easy on a treadmill. I was always having to hit rewind on audio books (way back before Audible, when I was listening to cassettes) when I used them on a long commute that I thankfully got rid of about 15 years ago, or while I was outside walking or doing yardwork, because real-life would distract me and I'd realize I'd missed a whole paragraph or more.

    But I think I could probably stay focused on an audio book on a treadmill. Or a podcast. I just discovered one that's been going for a couple of years called LeVar Burton Reads, so I've got a big backlog to catch up on. They're short stories, so you can probably finish a whole story in one treadmill session. A lot of them are science fiction or fantasy, so maybe not a good choice if you're one of those weird people who doesn't like either. :smile:

    Hmm, I'm not crazy about short stories in general (even by my favorite authors of novels) but wonder if this will change if it is an audio short story I listen to while I'm exercising.

    Science fiction / fantasy is right up my alley!

    He's a great reader. But you don't have to take my word for it.

    giphy.gif
  • VeryKatie
    VeryKatie Posts: 5,961 Member
    Well if you have any injuries maybe. Or if you live in an area where pollution is horrible maybe. But otherwise no...
  • NovusDies wrote: »
    Dogmom1978 wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Theoldguy1 wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Don't think there can be any negatives :smile: unless you plan on doing excess miles every single day, which is what I did a few years ago and burned myself out not to mention my poor heels and feet were suffering too (had to let go of my step tracker eventually because I couldn't stand to see less than 20k+ steps a day)

    Oh yeah... the other con is how much more shoes and socks cost and how fast you wear out shoes once your average stays over 10k. Don't be fooled by shoes supposedly designed to be "walking" shoes. In this country that just means it is possible to walk in them. It doesn't actually mean they are designed for exercise.

    I can buy a lot of shoes vs the cost of poor cardiac health.

    How nice for you. Not everyone can. Healthy lifestyle items and food are overpriced because they know we are investing in our wellbeing. Besides that it takes a lot of effort to find the right pair of shoes and not long after you do they replace it with a newer model that sucks.

    I jokingly refer to my husband as Goldie locks because of how hard it is for him to find shoes he likes.

    Also, I try NOT to purchase items that are designed for “healthy lifestyle” as that simply means they are charging me 200% more than it’s worth 😂 I am very very very frugal 😜

    Pretty much the only way I can "interview" shoes now is through Prime Wardrobe or ShoeBacca. To find my recent pair it took trying 16 pairs of shoes. The ones I settled on are not ones I like looking at but it is form over function for me. After finding it I went to a NB outlet store and took advantage of the buy one get half off deals. So I own 3 pairs but one is already been semi-retired to be used for rainy days.

    I am barely getting 12 weeks of use out of a pair of shoes currently. Even shopping for deals that is stupid expensive.

    Even still I have to use a foot roller.

    I was told recently I should look into some expensive inserts. Geez, what is next?


    Just to get through ADLs I have to buy supportive shoes with a wide last and broad toes and wear a 1/4 inch lift on one side, and the insoles wear out in three months so I have to buy four pairs of supportive insoles to get through the year with minimal foot pain. (There will be some. Bunions, Morton's toe arthritis in forefeet, traumatic arthritis in the midfoot on one side, collapsed arches, loose ankles, torn tendon in one ankle, and plantar fasciitis.) But what can you do, you have to be able to walk.....
  • B_Plus_Effort
    B_Plus_Effort Posts: 311 Member
    none, greatest exercise on earth!
  • DancingMoosie
    DancingMoosie Posts: 8,619 Member
    Cons of walking (for me)have more to do with my location: watch out for dogs(I carry pepper spray), lots of stickers, loose rocks and gravel that year up my shoes.
  • HabitRabbit
    HabitRabbit Posts: 25 Member
    @NovusDies and others with foot problems: Have you tried Hoka shoes? They were game changers for me. Expensive, but cheaper than orthotics, and more effective in my case.

    Also re: dog droppings on and near trails. We have a gorgeous paved trail through the woods near me, but it’s less stress on my foot to walk just beside the trail where the surface is spongier. That practice comes with considerable risk.
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    Just pulled the third tick in a week off my cat. I thought his monthly medicine was for fleas and ticks, but looked and it is just fleas. Would look into a med that covers ticks as well but I just bought another 6 month supply. Will revisit this in the spring.

    This wasn't a bad year for ticks on me. The drought helped. I leave outdoor walking shoes in the 3 season room. During the height of tick season I shower immediately after walks and check for ticks. The Lyme carrying ticks are too small to see easily when not engorged with blood, but brushing my skin in the shower is a good way to get rid of them.

    More tick tips:

    https://www.cdc.gov/ticks/avoid/on_people.html
  • Dogmom1978
    Dogmom1978 Posts: 1,580 Member
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    Just pulled the third tick in a week off my cat. I thought his monthly medicine was for fleas and ticks, but looked and it is just fleas. Would look into a med that covers ticks as well but I just bought another 6 month supply. Will revisit this in the spring.

    This wasn't a bad year for ticks on me. The drought helped. I leave outdoor walking shoes in the 3 season room. During the height of tick season I shower immediately after walks and check for ticks. The Lyme carrying ticks are too small to see easily when not engorged with blood, but brushing my skin in the shower is a good way to get rid of them.

    More tick tips:

    https://www.cdc.gov/ticks/avoid/on_people.html

    Ne PA here, one of the worst parts of the US for deer ticks (those are the ones that carry Lyme). Today I have spent over an hour checking the dogs that go hiking with us. I’ve pulled at least 40 deer ticks off of them crawling around. I usually don’t find many on myself, but the dogs pick up a ton. I don’t like to use medications for it as there are too many nasty side effects to most of the flea and tick preventatives for my tastes.
  • NorthCascades
    NorthCascades Posts: 10,968 Member
    lgfrie wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Don't think there can be any negatives :smile: unless you plan on doing excess miles every single day, which is what I did a few years ago and burned myself out not to mention my poor heels and feet were suffering too (had to let go of my step tracker eventually because I couldn't stand to see less than 20k+ steps a day)

    Oh yeah... the other con is how much more shoes and socks cost and how fast you wear out shoes once your average stays over 10k. Don't be fooled by shoes supposedly designed to be "walking" shoes. In this country that just means it is possible to walk in them. It doesn't actually mean they are designed for exercise.

    A walking fitness shoe usually means one that doesn't have an elevated heel like a running shoe. So, for instance, a New Balance 928, which is a walking shoe, provides an absolutely flat surface for your feet, whereas an 880, which is a running shoe, tips your foot forward about 10 mm.

    I actually prefer running shoes for walking. My walking shoe of choice, the NB 990v5, isn't classified as a "running" shoe (it's a "lifestyle" shoe, whatever that means), but the heel is elevated 12 mm and you can really feel the difference. I have Achilles tendon issues, which are nearly 100 % absent when I use the 990v5s, for the same reason that walking downhill is easier on ankles than walking uphill - less stretch on the tendon.

    My only point being that 'walking' shoe isn't just marketing, it s a design thing. At least for fitness brands like NB.

    I have peronial tendinitis in both feet from a car accident. It's been 15 months. I'm so *kitten* tired of it.

    I have very little soreness if I wear 840v4 all the time. Basically any other shoe for much time and I start hurting.

    I feel like now that I figured this out, I might finally heal fully if I wear these all the time and don't let them wear out. I've even slept in them for a middle of them night walk to the bathroom.
  • NorthCascades
    NorthCascades Posts: 10,968 Member
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Dogmom1978 wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Theoldguy1 wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Don't think there can be any negatives :smile: unless you plan on doing excess miles every single day, which is what I did a few years ago and burned myself out not to mention my poor heels and feet were suffering too (had to let go of my step tracker eventually because I couldn't stand to see less than 20k+ steps a day)

    Oh yeah... the other con is how much more shoes and socks cost and how fast you wear out shoes once your average stays over 10k. Don't be fooled by shoes supposedly designed to be "walking" shoes. In this country that just means it is possible to walk in them. It doesn't actually mean they are designed for exercise.

    I can buy a lot of shoes vs the cost of poor cardiac health.

    How nice for you. Not everyone can. Healthy lifestyle items and food are overpriced because they know we are investing in our wellbeing. Besides that it takes a lot of effort to find the right pair of shoes and not long after you do they replace it with a newer model that sucks.

    I jokingly refer to my husband as Goldie locks because of how hard it is for him to find shoes he likes.

    Also, I try NOT to purchase items that are designed for “healthy lifestyle” as that simply means they are charging me 200% more than it’s worth 😂 I am very very very frugal 😜

    Pretty much the only way I can "interview" shoes now is through Prime Wardrobe or ShoeBacca. To find my recent pair it took trying 16 pairs of shoes. The ones I settled on are not ones I like looking at but it is form over function for me. After finding it I went to a NB outlet store and took advantage of the buy one get half off deals. So I own 3 pairs but one is already been semi-retired to be used for rainy days.

    I am barely getting 12 weeks of use out of a pair of shoes currently. Even shopping for deals that is stupid expensive.

    Even still I have to use a foot roller.

    I was told recently I should look into some expensive inserts. Geez, what is next?

    I didn't know this was a thing. Thank you so much for posting!!
  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    Theoldguy1 wrote: »
    Theoldguy1 wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    Don't think there can be any negatives :smile: unless you plan on doing excess miles every single day, which is what I did a few years ago and burned myself out not to mention my poor heels and feet were suffering too (had to let go of my step tracker eventually because I couldn't stand to see less than 20k+ steps a day)

    Oh yeah... the other con is how much more shoes and socks cost and how fast you wear out shoes once your average stays over 10k. Don't be fooled by shoes supposedly designed to be "walking" shoes. In this country that just means it is possible to walk in them. It doesn't actually mean they are designed for exercise.

    I can buy a lot of shoes vs the cost of poor cardiac health.

    The thing is, if I want to walk I have to buy the walking shoes TODAY. I have to budget for that. I don't necessarily have poor cardiac health today, that's a deferred consequence.

    So while having poor cardiac health may be more expensive in the long run, I hope you can understand how the cost of walking shoes/socks would be a potential con, especially for those who are on a tight budget and aren't currently experiencing health problems related to excess weight.

    Sorry most people that are walking for health (30 minutes 5X a week) will be fine in any shoes they have. especially if as a beginner they build up to the distance.

    OP is walking much more than that, so can you see how it could be a potentially relevant con in HIS situation?