I used to joke that "bad feet RUN in our family" until it started to sound like a bad joke, even to me! Wasn't it just about a year ago that Jillian put that ugly black ankle brace on. She wore it all Fall, all Winter and Spring, and almost all Summer, until the bottom of it wore completely out and it snapped in half. She said she'd try going without it and it seems that whatever was wrong with her ankles last year, had in fact, healed.
Apparently, that was just a chapter in our book on gymnastics feet. A week or two after her 12th birthday, Jillian started to complain that the back of her heel was sore. She didn't say it was too sore to train, so I didn't pay much attention to it....... Until she woke up on a Tuesday morning and she could not put any weight at all on her foot. She could only walk on her toes.
She was completely unable to stretch the achilles enough to put her foot flat on the ground.
That day she had a session with her private trainer ( Trainer Dave works with Jillian on core body strength, hip flexor stretching, reducing muscle adhesions, and lots of other cool stuff) and both her trainer and his partner investigated her complaint and they came to the conclusion that she was having referred pain and stiffness from a calf muscle pull. At about the same time, Jillian came to the conclusion that she wanted to kick the next person who touched her aching leg.
The following day she was no better, and we headed off to the doctor. We are thankful to have found a doctor who was an athelete himself and who understands the type of training a gymnast is required to do year round. He is, above all, one of the more optimistic people I've ever met. People feel healthier after just talking to him.
Kind Dr. E declared that Jillian probably had tendonitis, which seems to be an umbrella term for most of what ails young gymnasts who cannot remember falling or hearing anything snap in two. But we were glad to now have a name for the pain because that meant we could make a plan. The second best thing about this doctor is his ability to give us a plan for recovery that keeps us so busy, the time seems to fly by! LOL! The next 24 hours was a whirlwind of heat and ice, epson salt soaks, advil, stretching, and so on and so on.
Imagine our disappointment the next morning when there was absolutely no change. Okay, there was one change, but it wasn't on her foot. It was in her mouth. Her lips and mouth were covered in blisters, horrible ulcers and blisters. So now she couldn't walk and she couldn't eat. And I couldn't decide what I had done that had created this terrible reaction. Was she allergic to ibuprophen all of a sudden? Was the joint therapy syrup from the health food store actually poisen? Was she starting to fall apart at the ripe old age of 12? To Be Continued........