Barefoot Ken

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Barefoot Ken

Barefoot Ken

@Long_Brown_Path

Runner, writer, financial analyst, barefooter. 100+ marathons/ultra's complete. 100+ barefoot races complete. 500+ mountains climbed without shoes

New York 가입일 Ocak 2014
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Barefoot Ken
Barefoot Ken@Long_Brown_Path·
Hey friends, I'm super-thrilled to announce my next book, due out in September, about a peak-bagging challenge I undertook and what I learned about minimalism, the mountains, and myself. Available to pre-order at barefootken.com/chasing-the-gr… Thank you @UlyssesPress and @firerooster
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Barefoot Ken
Barefoot Ken@Long_Brown_Path·
Thank you for the thoughtful post, Doc. I almost wonder if the patient's decision to elect surgery is an attempt at self-empowerment -- "to do something" - in order to create an outcome where either the procedure results in clear benefit, or it does not, but in either case the uncertainty is resolved. "Doing something" is a break from the complexity of trying to manage a chronic issue thru conservative options. That complexity can be quite painful -- in the sense of imposing cognitive load -- like when you bounce back and forth between some days when you feel better, and other days when you feel worse. The ancients called these "perturbations of the soul," which we've shortened to "anxiety" and "stress." One of the great benefits of athletic training imho is that you learn to manage yourself in complex/high-stress regimes
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Howard Luks MD
Howard Luks MD@hjluks·
Yesterday's post prompted a number of practitioner responses expressing frustration that "patients don't listen to them". Well.... that's okay. One of the hardest conversations in this profession is between the patient who wants something done and the surgeon who knows that something isn't the answer. PTs and docs tell me regularly that they feel stuck, that they've explained the evidence, and the patient still wants the procedure. What do you do? My answer is that our job is to educate and inform. Not to convince. We can explain what the research shows, what the risks are, and what rehab is likely to accomplish that surgery won't. We can be honest and direct about our clinical judgment. What we cannot do, and shouldn't try to do, is override a patient's autonomy. Informed patients get to make their own decisions. That's not a failure of communication. That's medicine working correctly. I like to operate. I became a surgeon because I find it meaningful, and I'm decent at it. When surgery is the right answer, I don't hesitate. What I find genuinely puzzling, after all these years, is when a patient tries to convince a knee surgeon with 30 years of experience that they need an operation, and every instinct that surgeon has developed over those 30 years is telling them otherwise. That clinical intuition exists for a reason. It should be trusted, not negotiated away. The harder version of this is the surgeon who says: If I don't do it, someone down the street will. And that's true. It often is. But I can only answer for what I do in my operating room. If I believe surgery might genuinely help, I'll recommend it, and I'll do it. If a patient has moderate arthritis and wants me to clean out a joint that the evidence says won't benefit from cleaning out, I won't do it. Not because I'm judging the patient. Because I can't compromise my principles for RVUs. This isn't self-righteousness. It's the only way I know how to practice medicine and look at myself in the mirror. The patient may find someone else. That's their right. My obligation is to tell them the truth as clearly as I can, and then let them decide.
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Fit Kate
Fit Kate@FitKateFitness·
@Long_Brown_Path 😊😊😊 WOW - thanks Barefoot Ken - and thank you for the great feedback - and may I now call myself a fitness influencer? 🤣
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Barefoot Ken
Barefoot Ken@Long_Brown_Path·
The other day, @FitKateFitness asked for suggestions on how to overcome the depressing effect of cold gray mornings, and I was like just focus on goals blah blah blah. So this morning, when I woke up to 40 F and rain -- and this mind you after ☀️days in the 70s! -- I was like, 😰NOPE. Maybe the treadmill....or maybe I'll just sleep in. And then I was like -- what about @FitKateFitness ? Would she think I was some over-the-hill #barefoot loser who talks a big game, but when push comes to shove, hides under the covers? So I dragged my sorry butt out there and did 8 miles in the soggy Grasslands and had a good time! Bonus - gray willow catkins and Northern Harriers. Thanks @FitKateFitness !
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Fit Kate
Fit Kate@FitKateFitness·
..... the answer to the riddle 😂 and they aren't diamond push-ups.
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Barefoot Ken
Barefoot Ken@Long_Brown_Path·
😮
Vinnie Tortorich@VinnieTortorich

After years of research, I owe you all an apology. I've been wrong. About everything. I spent the last decade telling you to avoid sugar and grains. I told you seed oils were poison. I told you the food industry was lying to you. I told you to question everything. Well, I questioned everything. And I finally found the truth. Sugar is actually essential for brain function. Your body needs it. Those headaches you get when you quit sugar? That's your brain telling you it's starving. I was literally telling you to starve your brain. And grains? The foundation of every great civilization. The Egyptians built the pyramids on bread. You think they were eating grass-fed ribeyes? No. They were carb-loading. I also want to apologize for everything I said about Kellogg's. Breakfast IS the most important meal of the day. I looked into it and that's based on real science funded by... well, it doesn't matter who funded it. The point is, a big bowl of Froot Loops and a glass of orange juice is exactly how you should start your morning. I've been working with some brilliant scientists at the Sugar Research Foundation and they've opened my eyes. Very generous people. Very well-funded research. Effective immediately, NSNG now stands for Needs Sugar, Needs Grains. I'll be launching my new program next week. It's called the SnackWell's Protocol. Fat-free cookies for breakfast, Gatorade for hydration, and a Jamba Juice smoothie with 87 grams of sugar for recovery. The science is settled. This post is proudly sponsored by @kelloggsus , @CocaColaCo , and the @American_Heart . Follow the money. Wait — I mean, follow the science. Happy April 1st. Question everything. Especially today. #NSNG #NeedsSugarNeedsGrains #SnackwellsProtocol #FrootLoopsAreHealth #QuestionEverything #AprilFools

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Fit Kate
Fit Kate@FitKateFitness·
@Long_Brown_Path We always knew it — you're not human. No Earthling runs 631 peaks barefoot through killer brambles like it's nothing. You're straight up alien. Planet where shoes are torture and feet are superpowers. Respect, Barefoot Ken. Not from this world 🦶👽 😊😊😊
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Barefoot Ken
Barefoot Ken@Long_Brown_Path·
Views from the summit of Blauvelt. Very cool place, killer brambles notwithstanding. Barefoot peak no. 631
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Barefoot Ken
Barefoot Ken@Long_Brown_Path·
When peak-bagging in Harriman, you do not need to bring ropes or pitons, and if you encounter class III or IV scrambles, you just walk around them. But that's not to say there aren't obstacles. The summit of Blauvelt was ringed with ferocious brambles, the worst I've encountered anywhere. It's like finding your way through a maze. Thank you to the deer for leaving paths. Next time I will bring rose clippers.
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Melinda Howard
Melinda Howard@MelindaHoward4·
Seen on today’s run: MFH out on his first solo run since his stroke 🥰🎉
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Barefoot Ken
Barefoot Ken@Long_Brown_Path·
As a barefoot runner, I'm more sensitive to temperature than light as I have a more narrow safety envelope to work within. However, I find grayness to be very dismotivating, for sure. But it doesn't usually stop me because I have important goals - 1,000 mountains, more marathons & ultras, working on speed for shorter races, etc. Our budget of energy for personal training comes from the importance of the goals. Also, I know from experience that once I'm in motion that the environmental conditions no longer matter
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Fit Kate
Fit Kate@FitKateFitness·
Good morning everyone! ☕️ Do you know that feeling? Those really gray days — cold, damp, uncomfortable, and somehow everything just feels heavier than usual. The motivation is hiding somewhere under the blanket and doesn’t want to come out at all. Especially tricky is this: You still manage to beat the inner lazy pig in the morning, drag yourself out of bed, leave the house on time and actually make it through the entire workday… …and then you get home in the evening and the real battle begins: “I just can’t bring myself to train.”You’ve already earned that little “I made it to work today” free pass in your head, and yet the motivation for the actual workout is still completely gone. Sound familiar?That’s exactly why I’m asking you today: What do you do on these gray, low-motivation days to still find the energy for training? What are your best tricks, rituals or little hacks that help you overcome that second inner resistance and actually get your workout done?I’m genuinely curious — drop your tips below! The more detailed, the better. Let’s see how many people actually read until the end 😅 Have a good start to the day! 😊😊😊#FitnessMotivation #WorkoutMotivation #DisciplineOverMotivation
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Barefoot Ken
Barefoot Ken@Long_Brown_Path·
Super smart exercisologists like the late Stuart McGill talk about the importance of proprioception and how visual inputs can interfere with natural balance. This video is not world class performance by any means, but I've been working for quite some time on balancing on one foot with eyes closed, which at first the best I could do was 1-2 seconds! -- this is 30 seconds per leg, towards a goal of 1 minute
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Jay Redmond
Jay Redmond@ColonelRedmond·
Wrapped up final race of the Orlando Track Shack race season with the 10K Winter Park Road Race. Finished with a new 10K PR of 39:21 (6:20/mile pace). 🏁
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Barefoot Ken
Barefoot Ken@Long_Brown_Path·
Let's talk functional fitness. You can spend hours in the gym, but how is that going to help you when it's 🥶 outside and you want a 🔥 🪓 takes strength, power, precision, and cardio
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Fit Kate
Fit Kate@FitKateFitness·
That was my fourth run according to my plan! Today I hit 3 km on the treadmill 🏃‍♀️ I'm really happy with the progress and how well it's going so far! 😊😊How's your training going right now? #run #running #happy
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MaverickWolfMSU
MaverickWolfMSU@maverickwolfmsu·
31 days post surgery and I’ve made some major progress even gingerly walking without cane. Still a long way to go but definitely satisfied with progress made thus far. Hip muscles are still weak but at least I’m getting my leg up a few inches on lying leg lift 🙌🏾
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