by VVebb » Jan 18 2011 10:31 pm
My wife injured both knees a while back, and as part of her recovery, she went to regular physical therapy sessions and also got a custom-made set of orthotics, which cost several hundred dollars. (Insurance might cover it -- check it out.) Her knees were "out of alignment" when she walked, which made recovery difficult. A major purpose of the orthotics was to change her gait so that her knees would operate on the proper plane, allowing a better recovery.
I personally have very narrow feet (size 11B-12B). It's very hard to find shoes in B-width, so I normally wear standard D-width shoes, but with extra inserts to elevate my foot inside the shoe, thereby making it easier to tie the shoe tightly. If I don't put inserts in my shoes, it's impossible to tighten the laces so that the shoes fit snugly because the two sides of the shoe run into each other below the laces. So, even a cheap set of orthotics saves me the time and money needed to obtain a set of shoes that fits me properly. (Lame, I know, but I discovered this solution a long time ago, and it hasn't failed me, so I've never actually purchased B-width shoes.)
I'm sure some people think that orthotics are amazing and others think that they are a waste of money, but that's just my two cents.
"The farther one gets into the wilderness, the greater is the attraction of its lonely freedom. Yet to camp out at all implies some measure of this delight."
-- Theodore Roosevelt, The Publishers' Weekly, Nov. 25, 1905