hotshot05
Guide
It is very difficult to describe in words what I felt.Unless you believe in fairy tales spun by our scared religious texts, human being evolved over a period of time adapting to the process of walking and running on dry hard land ... barefoot. http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2007/04/humans-hot-sweaty-natural-born-runners/
When you walk/run barefoot it is very different from what happens when you wear shoes or footwear.
1. We tend to be very careful with placement of our feet. This means typically the ankle joint acts more agile. No more twisted ankles and sprains
2. We tend to land on toes instead of heels. This means no more bone jarring shock transmitting up the feet to knees and hips.
3. We tend to actually utilize the elasticity of the Achilles tendon and power of gluteus (buttocks) muscles instead of hamstrings and quadriceps, allowing us to travel farther with lesser effort.
4. We are more upright and the stride does not overextend = not striking at sharp angle to the ground = less shear on tibia = no shin splints.
So first of all when you say your legs started to pain. What does it mean?
Was it simply because of lack of training, which will improve over time ... or was it painful sensation leading to injury?
My legs felt very heavy. Right from ankle to knee cap, it was paining. I had to slow down and walk very slowly to recover. I hardly did this for a month. So don't know of it could have had gotten better with time.
I have the same issue when I am in a hurry and try to walk very fast for some time (2+ mins). Legs become very heavy. It does not pain that much. Just that I literally have to drag my legs in the end. In the end, my stride length decreases considerably. I take very small steps and reduce speed to make my legs feel normal again.