this post was submitted on 09 Jun 2023
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Every running community needs some advice on ITB issues. What's yours? (Since I need some with the Gold Coast Marathon in 3 weeks)

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[โ€“] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

congrats for your PB ๐Ÿค—

on the ITB issue

I solved my problems about 10 years ago:

  • moved to minimalist shoes (barefoot running eventually) that promoted a better running form and be more strong and stable.

transition took time and patience, so put ego aside and look at the long term.

In that time ITB stretching with this pose in a relaxed and mantained way helped me a lot to relieve pain and also be preventive

THE FIRST PICTURE WITH HER BACK IN THE GROUND

itb streching exercise

[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You know I don't need much of an excuse to try anything different so I might have to grab a pair of minimalist shoes to try when they're on sale. Not sure I want to pay full price without knowing if I'll like them. Do you reckon Altra is minimalist enough? What brands do you recommend?

I have been doing similar stretches but I wouldn't say consistently. I'll definitely give that one a go.

[โ€“] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Altra are great, I have one pair to long road runs (over HM). Wide toe box, quite flexible, BUT also cushioned so, in my opinion, they may not give you feedback from your feet to automatically correct form. Merrell, Xero shoes, vivobarefoot... have good light, wide and flexible minimalist shoes.

BEFORE transitioning to minimalist shoes PLEASE read and inform about to do it in a progressive way, safely. I would recomend use minimalist shoes, not spend time in both worlds. Reduce your running distance/volume for some weeks to adapt and learn.

DO NOT OVERDO in the first days, your soleus and aquiles tendon could suffer if you run too much. It depends on your current running form though, so you may transition without issues.

If possible, spend time at home barefoot without socks and let your feet "awake", then go easy on short runs every other day and do some drills at home/work (calf raises, etc.) to strength your feet.

PLEASE, read and inform before proceed. GOOD LUCK!