Saturday, March 17th, 2007 12:32 pm
I have very wide feet. When I was a child, I wanted a surgeon to remove my little toes all the way back including the metatarsal, so I could wear shoes without pain. It took me until maybe my twenties to stop wanting that surgery.
Saturday, March 17th, 2007 07:38 pm (UTC)
I wanted that surgery, too. I've always had wide feet.
Saturday, March 17th, 2007 07:53 pm (UTC)
Are you serious? Man, I thought I was the only one who made up the idea of that kind of surgery and spent decades wishing I could have it done to me. Yet the writer of the other journal where I commented earlier today -- this post being a copy of that comment -- ALSO imagined something very similar.

I wish children's shoes came in wide. (If they did when I was a child, I wish my family had been willing to look for them. If what I was wearing WAS wide, then I'll go back to my first sentence!)

I wouldn't be at all surprised if my current foot problems stem from those pinching shoes I wore for years while growing up. Bad bone placement -> pinching or abrasion of nerves -> eventual neuropathy? I'd believe it.
Sunday, March 18th, 2007 12:41 am (UTC)
I honestly wish I could get that done. They do not MAKE shoes that fit my feet, and as a result I have calluses and various uncomfortable spots. If I get shoes in the correct length, they're too narrow -- even men's 5E sneakers from New Balance. If I go half a size up for a bit more width, I get worse heel calluses from the looseness there.

Oh my god. There isn't a "not taking new customers" banner on the Hersey Custom Shoes site anymore. Am I missing it in the site redesign, or can I really seriously order shoes from them? I am going to go measure my feet RIGHT NOW. (Seriously. The prospect of paying a $250 setup fee and about $250 for shoes? If they will FIT? Absolutely.)
Sunday, March 18th, 2007 01:39 am (UTC)
I sincerely wish it were even feasible. I truly wanted it, growing up. (Now I'd rather they take the 3rd and 4th instead of the 5th. Better for balance, and those are the ones that are hosed on my feet anyway.)

My feet are too small to go men's. I just wear shoes that are too long. A physical trainer yelled at me for it once, but you know what? It's that or not wear shoes. I think he honestly had no clue, even after I told him.

Oh holy moly! Hersey is ACTUALLY TAKING NEW CUSTOMERS? I might faint from shock. Too bad I can't really wear shoes any more. I waited AGES for those guys, hoping their shoes might help my feet!
Sunday, March 18th, 2007 02:32 am (UTC)
I always ended up wearing the ugliest shoes in creation which came in wide, or shoes that were too long for my feet. I'm a 9D, and I'm lucky that Easy Spirit generally fits me. I'm also lucky that I've never been a shoe hound, because finding stylish shoes in wide widths that don't cost an arm and a leg is impossible.

I wonder if wide feet are an inherited trait? My mom is a B width, but her mom was a EEE. And my dad is a EE. I think my fat fingers are inherited from my dad - he once had an argument with a jeweler about enlarging a ring of mine - the jeweler didn't believe a girl (I was maybe 12) could wear a size 8 ring. My dad held out his hands to show the guy how big his fingers were.
Monday, March 19th, 2007 01:23 am (UTC)
Oh yes, forget stylish. Back when I wore shoes, if I ever had to look good, I'd just have to hope everyone would ignore the half inch of space behind my Achilles tendon and the resultant clopping sound when the shoes flopped on and off my heels. I think "never been a shoe hound" is more than a lucky coincidence; it's a direct result of having wide feet.

My feet (and hands) are tiny as well as wide. I'd be about a 5 in shoe sizes if they came wide enough. (Best I could usually do was a 7 or 7.5.) I don't know how many Es because I've never found enough. :-)
Saturday, May 19th, 2007 10:45 pm (UTC)
i dreamed of that surgery as well.
I'm going back in your LJ trying to figure out this wheelchair reference.