Remember back in the day when you were playing outside barefoot as a child? Can you remember how it felt when you were connecting with the earth?
Do you remember the feeling of the sand submerging your feet, the tickling of the grass blades or the soft gooey mud squelching between your toes?
How did that make you feel...happy? calm? connected? If it did, you will be happy to know that this is well-documented to be true! A great reason to kick those shoes off and get playing.
Here are some benefits and tips to help you and your child get back to basics and go play barefoot or as they say 'earthing'.
There is so much strengthening and aligning to be done with little feet over the first several years of life. Barefoot play enables optimal activation of all the little muscles, ligaments and nerves in a child’s feet. There are so many tiny structures in a child’s foot and the more stimulation the foot, ankle, knee and leg receive in the early months and years of walking the greater these areas are to strength and work at their best. Arches, bone and muscle strength, ligament flexibility and stability all increase as a result of the use of feet without shoes or ridge supports on. It helps support your child's feet in avoiding developing flat feet.
The comfort of our own homes is the perfect place to maximise barefoot time. Carpet, tiles, floorboards, and climbing furniture are great indoor surfaces to explore. Outside, it's even better to go barefoot. Grass, gravel, decking, sandpit, cement, dirt - so many options for barefoot play and brain stimulation! If there are bindis or my kids don’t want to get wet feet at times then gumboots are by the door however their use is very minimal.
Planting little feet on the Earth without anything in between allows little bodies to soak up all those delicious negative ions on offer. Earthing or grounding is an effective tool to support nervous system regulation by increasing the ‘calm rest and digest’ part of our system (parasympathetic nervous system). Good for shifting a bad mood, a ‘wound up’ child (or mum!) or increasing the feel-good vibes, going barefoot is an incredible tool to have in the self-regulation toolkit. Bonus points if it’s on the sand by the ocean or a large body of water.
3. Surrender to trusting your child is safe!
All that is left to do is surrender to trusting that your child is safe, that they will ask for help, or will learn from their experiences if something hurts them during play (little brains learn super quickly!).
Not all situations will allow for safe barefoot play. Here at Australian Children's Chiropractic Centre we highly recommend when wearing shoes, you ensure they still allow the natural movement and flex of their developing feet.
The three shoe brands we love and recommend are Vivobarefoot, Attipas and Old Soles.
Follow the link here to our Instagram to see a video of Dr Jacey explaining this in more detail.
If you feel your child has little barefoot play and it is affecting their development or perhaps you have noticed they have flat feet. There is lots of little ways to help improve foot strength and proprioception at any time.
Some easy ways to do this with your child are:
Learn more about your child's physical development, such as with their balance and proprioception. Follow the below link to book a free 10-minute call with our Chiropractic team.
This is the perfect opportunity to ask any questions you may have about your child's development and see how Chiropractic care may be the right fit for your family.