How to Fix Plantar Fasciitis (NO MORE HEEL PAIN!)

How to Fix Plantar Fasciitis (NO MORE HEEL PAIN!)


Plantar Fasciitis is one of the most common recurring tendonitis injuries that active people will have to deal with. Often times, the reason why the plantar fascia keeps getting inflamed and the symptoms keep coming back is due to the fact that we never truly treat the cause of the pain rather just the source of the pain. In this video, I’m going to show you what is really causing your heel pain so you can finally fix it forever.


First, it helps to understand the role of the plantar fascia. The real job of this tough structure is to support your arch in standing. It runs from the calcaneus or heel distally towards the tendon sheaths of the toes. Essentially, it spans the entire arch and can be felt if you strum across this area with your thumb. For those that have inflammation of the fascia, you feel a distinct knife-life stabbing pain in your heel when you take a step (especially in the morning).

The reason the symptoms are particularly worst in the morning is that the plantar fascia has had a chance to shorten and tighten up a bit over night with your foot remaining in a plantar flexed position mostly from the covers pulling your ankle down. Even later in the day however, the pain is obvious and it prevents those that suffer from it from walking, running or competing normally.

The problem is that people often times will seek out treatment for their plantar fasciitis and be left with either no resolution to the problem or worse, they feel slightly better but the pain comes back quickly. This is because doing nothing but ultrasounding, rubbing, massaging or rolling a lacrosse ball on the arch is not getting at the real problem. You are simply attacking the symptom and not the cause. So let’s get to the cause.

Most of the time, if you test your calf flexibility on the side of pain and determine that you have calf tightness then you definitely want to fix that since that is almost always the cause of same sided pain. The problem is however, doing a traditional hanging standing calf stretch off the stairs is not going to fix this pain. Instead, you need to realize that the pain is coming from the inability of the foot to maintain a rigid position at the time you lift your heel off the ground to propel your body. It is maintaining an everted heel with a loose midfoot which creates an unstable foot to try and press off of. This will result in an enormous amount of stress being shifted to the fascia to do something it is not equipped to do.

So if you want to stretch your calf you have to place the foot back in the position you are struggling to maintain. This is shown in three different ways in the video. Now, if the pain you are getting is coming from a side that does not exhibit calf tightness then you would want to look to the opposite side glute medius for weakness or a lack of thoracic extension or rotation to that side.

When the glute medium is weak on the opposite hip you get a dropping of the hip on that side. This forces the opposite foot (the one you are having the pain on) into pronation and creates an unstable foot once again. Either way, regardless of what the cause is you can see that it has nothing to do with the foot itself and everything to do with the joints above like the ankle, hip or spine.


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28 Comments

  1. Subscribed… over 1 year of continuing pain, I'm a runner who has lost a full year, actually getting better now. Watched tons of videos, know about the kinetic chain, but NO ONE has addressed the foot media as you did. Thanks only wish I had seen this a year ago. Putting it to work immediately.

  2. Thank you so much for this video man. I had to have steroid injections into my ligament just to help with all the damage. I really appreciate this. Turns out my calve is a hell of a lot more stiff than the other, I'll be doing these stretches religiously!

  3. Thank you for showing this. The medical community is such a scam…they just want to inject and use worthless machines to treat something that they obviously know little to nothing about. Just a few tries of this method you have shown has already shown me some small relief and that is in just a few minutes of trying it.
    THANK YOU!!!

  4. Want to thank you for this video. I have had a very sore painful left heel since Christmas. I'm going to do these exercises that you have shown here. I have had pain in my lower back so hoping this will help there also plus my heel. I also have a sore spot on the inside of my left calf. so will stretch my calves also. thanks again. I will be following you.. do you have a video showing how to strengthen my lower back?

  5. Yup you nailed IIIIT!!! THANK YOU!!!! πŸ‘πŸ»πŸ‘πŸ»πŸ‘πŸ»πŸ‘πŸ»πŸ‘πŸ»πŸ‘πŸ»πŸ‘πŸ»

  6. I have pf in my left foot, I had knee surgery to repair p.t., I think I might be getting a blood clot in my left calf. I will try the exercise in this video

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