Picture this, you’re getting back into running after time off, or you’re revving up the spring mileage to prepare for a race. Maybe you're training for the Columbus Cap City or you're looking out to the Nationwide Children's race this fall. But what do you do if your feet and arches start barking at you, keeping you from progressing further? A lot of runners will notice that deep, achy, and potentially sharp feeling along the bottom of the foot or through the arch within the first couple months.
It’s important to remember it’s not your body breaking down on you, it’s your tissues being asked to handle too much loading with too little prep. The foot and arch act like a spring with every step, absorbing and returning force thousands of times per run. When your strength and capacity isn’t enough, those tissues tire out quickly leading to that tight, sore feeling that doesn’t just stretch away.
The fix isn’t to stop running, but we do need to be more intentional about how you handle your mileage. A simple warm-up that gets blood flow into the calves and feet can make a healthy difference before you even start your run that day. HERE is a quick warmup specifically including some focused calf, ankle, foot, and arch work. Next, it’s about progressively building your mileage so your tissues have time to adapt.
You need to respect what your body is telling you, so gradually increasing volume and giving your body time to respond and adapt is your best bet. A good rule of thumb is a 10% increase in mileage weekly, but when you’re initially starting out at 0 miles, that’s gonna take forever to get to any substantial weekly mileage if you’re prepping for a race. If you are not a “runner”, start with 3-5 miles TOTAL your first week spread out over a few days, assess how you feel, then add 1-2 miles per week until 10 miles.
Most of the time, you’ll find those feet and arch symptoms settle down and running starts to feel enjoyable again. The goal isn’t just to get back to running, it’s to build the capacity so your feet can handle it long term without constantly feeling like they’re one step away from flaring up.