here some thoughts I found interesting :
http://www.kingcounty.gov/healthser...xercise/Reflexology_Paths_Marazita_Spano.ashx
"Wearing shoes all day through the toils of work and day-to-day activity, stress, illness, lack of hydration and inactivity can cause muscle tissue to weaken and blood flow to stagnate. This blood stagnation culminates in waste matter collecting in the feet. This waste matter forms crystalline deposits formed by urate crystals and calcium deposits at key nerve endings located in the feet. Reflexology practitioners call these deposits grainy or sandy structures."
"walking without shoes, walking on pebbled paths, cobbled stoned streets, sand dunes, and hard cement are not new phenomena. Primates continue to practice reflexology walking barefoot and allowing the earth and gravity to massage away areas of stagnation. In the human realm, universal adornment for protection and fashion can be charted back a few centuries."
a picture :
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-XS6AWYF9b...ealthyaging.ori.orgcobblestonephotoschina.jpg
http://www.kingcounty.gov/healthser...xercise/Reflexology_Paths_Marazita_Spano.ashx
"Wearing shoes all day through the toils of work and day-to-day activity, stress, illness, lack of hydration and inactivity can cause muscle tissue to weaken and blood flow to stagnate. This blood stagnation culminates in waste matter collecting in the feet. This waste matter forms crystalline deposits formed by urate crystals and calcium deposits at key nerve endings located in the feet. Reflexology practitioners call these deposits grainy or sandy structures."
"walking without shoes, walking on pebbled paths, cobbled stoned streets, sand dunes, and hard cement are not new phenomena. Primates continue to practice reflexology walking barefoot and allowing the earth and gravity to massage away areas of stagnation. In the human realm, universal adornment for protection and fashion can be charted back a few centuries."
a picture :
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-XS6AWYF9b...ealthyaging.ori.orgcobblestonephotoschina.jpg