Walking on tiptoes?
As illustrated earlier in this thread, it's not exactly on tiptoes, more of walking on the ball of the foot and toes than heel-toe. If I try to, I can walk heel-toe normally (except right now the back of my heel is really really sore). I'll post an image of the soles of the boots I have been wearing for about 9 months to show where the wear is (mostly because that's primarily where my weight is)
[img][800:1071]http://img812.imageshack.us/img812/5706/img20111017215349.jpg[/img]
Note how the heels are practically new/untouched, while the tread around the ball of the foot (roughly lines up between the two grey lines) has almost completely been worn away..
NZaspiegirl016
Sea Gull
Joined: 10 Oct 2011
Age: 28
Gender: Female
Posts: 216
Location: Somewhere in Aspergian New Zealand
No, I don't walk on tip-toes. The one in my family who does is my non-AS sister. I'm not going to say NT because she may have OCD, but hasn't yet been diagnosed. Anyway, my mum is constantly telling her off for tip-toes. The way I walk though, according to my mum, even though I can't see it, is like this: / \ with toes in, "pigeon-toed" she calls it. She told me to point my feet out a bit, and when I did it felt and looked to me like I was doing this: \ / which was uncomfortable, so I went back to my normal walking.
I see my walking as normal, my mum sees it pigeon-toed.
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I've walked barefoot enough as a kid to have learnt that sticks, rocks, weird patches of grass, all kinds of hurtful stuff can attack the soft arch of your foot if you rest your weight on it. The balls are less sensitive... I don't walk barefooted nearly as often now, but i still lift the heel slightly. A sort of preservation instinct I guess.
I live on the second floor and actually have had neighbors that I can hear walking around on the first floor.
It's hard being quiet when walking when living upstairs from someone. I've been over my aunt's house when there were no people upstairs but when the cats ran around it sounded like a herd of elephants. Who would think that such soft little paws could be so loud.
I'm probably louder than I realize but I can't help it. I'm hoping to get a first floor apartment next time I move because of that and because I'm tired of going up and down the stairs.
I only walk on tip toes if I'm walking up the stairs. I feel like (for me) it's easier to stay balanced. With that said, I am actually pigeon-toed but people almost never even notice it. I do wear out shoes super fast though and it took forever to learn how to walk in flip-flops and high heels. Ugh!
My daughter and I are both toe walkers.
I can walk flat footed and for the most part I have since elementary school, it's more of a shuffle really, people comment that I have an odd gait. But I still toe walk when I'm barefoot outside, running, excited, have to go to the bathroom, going up stairs. The arches of my feet are very sensitive.
My 4 yr old autie is on her toes 75% of the time I'd guess. She will sometimes walk flat footed when she has shoes on, other than that she's always on her toes.
I walk on my tiptoes about 30% of the time sometimes i dont take notice of tippy-toeing when I am doing it. I usually do it when I wake up am very Anxious or happy.
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Yeeeeup. I walk like I'm wearing high heels when I'm barefoot.
I like it though, I can move quite quietly when I want too.
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I've toe-walked since I learned to walk, and I have terrible balance and coordination. I think it's because balance requires flat-footed postures. If I have to stand on the bus to work, I tip over and lose my balance all the time, and I think it's because standing requires being flat-footed.
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Helinger: Now, what do you see, John?
Nash: Recognition...
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Nash: Is there a difference?
It's pretty common.
I did it-- it was trained out of me (at least where people could see) along with rocking and spinning and hand-flapping. Grandma said, "Don't do that. ret*d kids do that. Do you want people to think you're ret*d?"
I was actually still a kid-- about 10 or so, around 1988-- the first time I wondered if I might not be autistic, because I'd read a story about an autistic child in Reader's Digest and identified with the desire to perform some of those behaviors. I was, of course, relieved to learn that I couldn't possibly be, because autistic kids didn't talk in 1988.
Gee-- Guess I should have been hanging out with Lorna Wing even back then. Right time, wrong place. *SARCASM ALERT*
My 4-year-old son does it. My 2-year-old daughter does too, though to a much lesser extent (and she also actively seeks out other kids to play with).
So far I've looked the other way. I think it's cute, watching him bouncing around on his toes, flapping his hands, repeating himself and grinning. It doesn't last long. It mostly happens when he's overcome with joy, and I've just reveled in seeing the kid so happy.
I think I've done the wrong thing. Those years are short and fleeting-- and others' reactions to those behaviors are going to turn joy into a source of great pain. Awareness of HFA has risen; unfortunately, tolerance and acceptance have not kept pace.
Mommy's sorry, Buddy. This HURTS. This hurts so much that, sometimes, I lay beside you in bed at night and hold you or stroke your hair and cry myself to sleep. But-- Don't do that. ret*d kids do that. Do you want people to think you're ret*d???
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"Alas, our dried voices when we whisper together are quiet and meaningless, as wind in dry grass, or rats' feet over broken glass in our dry cellar." --TS Eliot, "The Hollow Men"
Do other AS people have this habit?
I walk on my tiptoes when i am not wearing shoes, i'm not sure why i don't when i am wearing them.
It's just not possible to toe-walk in most shoes, because many shoes have a base that lifts both your heel and the soles of your feet up off of the ground. In any shoe that has a base of some sort, I can't toe-walk since all parts of my foot are level and elevated. But in shoes that are flat on the ground and have no support (like the special tennis shoes I wear for sensory issues that have no arch) or when barefoot, you don't have anything elevating all parts of your foot, so it's possible to control it yourself and just lift the heel and toe-walk.
Question for others- does anyone else run on their toes or walk backwards on their toes (while barefoot or in good toe-walking shoes)? How about being in toe-walk position while sitting down? I do all of these, and I never noticed until my best friend asked me toe-walking details in fascination once. And does anyone else find it physically impossible and awkward NOT to toe-walk while barefoot. I've tried to walk flat-footed while barefoot, and it's like walking in molasses.
And yes, I could easily walk in high heels the first time I tried. If I ever stumble in high heels, it's from my lack of coordination in general, not from the shoe.
_________________
Helinger: Now, what do you see, John?
Nash: Recognition...
Helinger: Well, try seeing accomplishment!
Nash: Is there a difference?
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