Nevertheless, you can train your toes to move and build their neural connection again. It takes determination and focus, everyday. You might even use your fingers to remind your toes how to move, spread, and curl, to help release them from their frozen state.
There are simple exercises to increase toe strength and with practice, the rewards will show as your sense of balance is restored. On a reflexology note, another bonus to healthier toe strength is improved innervation to the cranial nerves that promote the health and vitality of the head, neck and brain.
**If you can’t reach your toes, pair up with a friend or family member.
1. Toe Strength– Your toes should be as strong as your fingers. Place your fingers under your toes and curl your toes, then resist your toes from curling. If you can easily straighten your toes against this pressure your toes are very weak. You should not be able to uncurl your toes.
2. Outer toe strength– Curl the 4th and 5th toes against your finger and try to uncurl them. The weakness of these toes will determine how well your feet can balance the weight of your body. If these toes are weak your shoulders will begin the fold inward.
3. Toe spreading=A function of balance: The wider the toes spread the better the balance and the wider the shoulders will be. While your toes are spreading can you tap the tip of a pencil between them? If so– excellent!
4. 4 outer toe deformities– How straight are your toes? This test measures the deviation from straight lined toes.
The greater the deviation the more this deformity will throw off body mechanics. Use a pencil as your line to test for straightness.
5. Big toe straightness: Place a pencil along the inside of your foot from the heel to extend past the ball of the first toe. Does your big toe line up with the pencil or does it stray away from the pencil? The straight big toe encourages forward movement and a healthy spring, — the greater the degree the big toe strays from the line of the pencil, the weaker it becomes and eventually will not be as dependable to hold weight as the body moves.
Let’s face it, we are all subject to heredity and these genes are noticeable in the similarity of our toes to those of our parent or grandparent. Given this fact, even if toes have an “interesting” appearance, they can still be strong and functional. The problem lies when deformity developes from shoes that hold the toes tightly together or are just too small, creating increasingly weak and eventually, dysfunctional feet.
Please write and let me know how you progress in strengthening your toes. The key to success is not to overdo. Good luck!
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