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Injuries While Traveling | Don’t Ignore your Body’s Early Warning Signals

Tons of sightseeing and lots of exploring while traveling can stress your body. We learned the hard way that we shouldn’t ignore the signs of an injury. Even more so, we learned that we should give our bodies rest so that we don’t get injured in the first place!

The last thing anyone wants is an injury to prevent a fun time traveling. Our lesson was learned when we missed sightseeing in one city. Read on for our insights and how we won’t let this happen again.


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We pride ourselves in being able to take on most physical activities at a moments notice. This by no means, means that we do the activity at the highest caliber or that we’re winning any competitions for speed or strength!

We’re just in decent health and with good overall conditioning levels. We jog once a week for cardiovascular health, we stretch and do strength exercises regularly, and we walk everywhere.

Combine our health regiment with our traveling style of ‘leave no stone unturned’ and it’s easy to realize that we put a lot of physical effort into our traveling and sightseeing. We often turn down rides to the train station or an attraction, preferring to walk. We plan out daily walks of 5-6 miles that somehow consistently turn into 7-9 miles. And when sightseeing we’ve walked upwards of 15 miles, with a record of 23 miles in a single day sightseeing in Madrid!

Most importantly, we enjoy the exercise and look forward to it. If we don’t walk or exercise we simply feel lousy and sluggish.


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Loving Exercise Is a Good Thing, Right?

We thought it was great. Physical fitness and high activity levels keep us healthy and keep us moving, especially during our sightseeing adventures.

We, incorrectly, thought that we were conditioning ourselves. Eight mile walks became a baseline, so if we walked four miles, we felt like we’d just gone around the block once or twice.

We Went Past Conditioning and Into Stressing Our Bodies

The sad state of Shannon's shoes.

After our London adventures full of extreme walking, exceeding 13 miles at times, we were left hurting.

It started with Shannon. Her feet started to hurt with each step and the pain was located on each of her big toes, right on the joint. However, we just thought it was her shoes; they were wearing unusually quickly in the same area on each shoe. They had terrible 3-inch tears down the side!

We purchased new shoes and figured the pain would subside. It did in one foot, but her right foot just got worse. We arrived at our house sit in Chester, UK and she begrudgingly took a couple days off walking. (Seriously, Sergio had to insist she not go walking with him. He kept strong and didn’t let the pouty lips and sad faces persuade him). Those couple of days seemed like an eternity. Shannon returned to walking after a bit of time off and was better… for a few miles and then the pain returned.

Meanwhile, as we made our way to Liverpool, UK, Sergio started to feel discomfort as well. He had sharp pain in his arches (well, where arches should be, considering he has completely flat feet). The pain in his feet was soon followed by discomfort in his hip and then his back. Surely, his body was over compensating in an attempt to relieve pain in his foot, causing miss-alignment and pain in other parts of his body.

Time For R.I.C.E. (Rest, Ice, Compression, and Elevation)

At this point we both took heed! We were on our way to Didsbury, right outside of Manchester, for a house sit. We had several days planned out of sightseeing in Manchester, which meant walking the dogs before or after a bus trip into the city and then walking around city center Manchester.

Healing was our number one priority, so we canceled our sightseeing plans and focused on the pups we were carrying for and on resting.


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Not Allowing Time to Heal Could Mean Permanent Damage

We knew that if we didn’t rest and allow ourselves sufficient time to heal, we’d be in for trouble. As much as we generally push through discomfort, this was not the time to do so.

It’s an admirable character trait, to be able to push through tough situations by putting discomfort aside. The amount that can be accomplished after the point when others give-up or quit is well worth it, in most cases. However, in this case, if we ignored the warnings our body was giving us, in the end nothing positive would be gained.

Looking at the situation objectively and logically, while sightseeing now would be pleasurable and fulfill our desires to see everything, it would mean that in the end we would see less in the months to come.

We could do permanent damage to our structure, tendons and muscles.

So, we listened to our bodies warning signals and took a break. We went to the pharmacy and stocked up on muscle creams, anti-inflammatory ointments, tapes, and anything else that may help. We iced our feet, backs, and hips. When we walked the dogs, we did so with caution by slowing our usually fast pace and took them to the park and let them chase a ball to minimize our walking but ensure their exercise.

While most medical professionals caution against self-internet-diagnosis, we did some searching of symptoms online. Shannon’s symptoms pointed to sesamoiditis and Sergio’s to plantar fasciatis. We found videos on YouTube of how to diagnose the problem and pages on how to treat each issue.

We proceed to do the stretches, taping, and padding in our shoes for each of us. It took some searching, but we found a store that carried Green Superfeet (for Shannon’s comically high arches) and Black Superfeet (for Sergio’s utterly flat feed) insoles which would help relieve stress on our feet.

We took an agonizing, yet productive, two weeks off from extraneous walking. And now that we’re in Budapest, we’re easing back into it, making sure we’re fully healed before we get back to moderate activity.


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Healthy Lessons Learned

Not only did we realize that we had to give our body the time to heal through stretches, icing, and topical creams, but more importantly, we also learned that our bodies need days off to rest.

We can’t push every day. It seems like common sense when looking at it from the outside in, but it’s harder to see when we enjoy what we’re doing.

Time to for the body to heal is essential to healthy, strong bodies!

If we push ourselves physically every day, our bodies won’t have time to heal. So, while it’s healthy to do extreme exercising and pushing our bodies to the limit, doing it all the time is not. Instead, we’ll get the most health benefits from giving ourselves resting and recuperating time in-between long walks, jogs, and other strenuous activity that we partake in.

Final Thoughts: Now It’s a Mental Hurdle

We know logically that we need rest here and there. However, the challenge will be to actually do it and not feel guilty about taking some time off. It’s too easy to tell ourselves that we’re being lazy by not exercising like we think we should.

Going forward we’ll use each other to remind ourselves that a day accepting a ride, taking a bus or train, or just staying in, is not only okay, but wise and healthy. We’ll continue to remind ourselves that our bodies will be healthier, stronger, and more resilient if we allocate time to rest and heal until it becomes a habit and a normal activity for us.

This was a big lesson learned with a huge take away, that if we apply it, will serve us well in perpetuity, especially as we age!

Stretching keeps a body agile and healthy, often preventing injury!