Boots and Balance
Back in November I discovered that my long-standing and comfortable hiking boots had sadly come to the end of their days, devoid of support and grip with soles hanging half off too. Today was the day I started to break in their replacements. I swear my ankles belong to that princess who could feel a pea under the mattress, or perhaps I just don’t like change.
Needless to say we got off to a bad start together, when I lost my balance slipping on a wet rock and landed on my back only minutes after setting off. Talk about a confidence wrecker for somebody who’s still in the process of rehabilitation from a tear to the meniscus. At least the ground was soft, so no harm done apart from the astonishment at how easy it can be to fall over.
Thankfully, I don’t give in easily and numerous adjustments to the laces saw me complete a 3 mile circuit with only a slight rubbing at the front of my right ankle. The weather was reasonably mild, the sky was blue, my knee behaved itself and the inside of the boots kept my feet warm and cosy.
All being well, I’m going to try them out again tomorrow, maybe with different foot beds though to see if that helps change the position of the boot where it rubbed. I suppose it’s only now, walking in replacements, that I fully understand why I got every mile of wear out of the old pair. In fact I’d had them so long that I’ve been telling myself that assuming today’s boots work out as comfortable, they might just outlast my dodgy knee.
Nothing like a double dose of optimism even if it is countered by a helping of macabre pessimism. It’s just for balance of course, and, disregarding comfort, that’s where it seems the real question mark might hover over the new pair.
Comments
I dread new anything and hang on to old clothes and shoes long after they should have been binned. (In that respect, and many others, I find myself gradually turning into my mother!)