I've had some foot problems in the past (couple of stress fractures, plantar fasciitis). My recent increase in activity led to achy arches & a sore joint where the big toe connects to the foot. To the point where anything other than athletic shoes or wedge sandals or wedged flip flops hurts to wear (and I favor round toe, loafer type with a slight heel shoes vs. pointy high heels). I figured that I should make an appt. with a podiatrist. I've learned from past experience that waiting until you're in such pain walking is hard isn't the way to go & leads to longer recovery times.
The overpronation my feet are prone to had caused a bunion to form, along with heel spurs on both feet. I'm going to try orthotics to see if that helps with the overpronation, along with stretching exercises and icing (when there's pain). If it does require any sort of surgery, unless the pain gets worse, I plan to wait until I'm within a good weight range (by BMI standards). Because the recovery time means about 4 weeks of no cardio which I think would be too discouraging at this point. Though upper body strength training is ok after the first few days.
I was planning to start jogging (moderate pace on a treadmill for less impact) when I lost about 20 more pounds, but since the podiatrist said the realignment of the foot is putting more stress on the 2nd metatarsal (where I've already had a stress fracture in each foot), I think I'm going to stick to the lower impact activity. I've been doing.
My fitness routine consists of:
Cardio:
Arc climber or elliptical (I don't do hills so as not to aggravate anything)
spin classes 2x a week
Strength training:
classes 2x a week
ciruit weights 2x a week
And I always do the push against the wall calf stretch to ease the calf muscles after.


I hope everything is ok with yours! Hopefully you can get down to your idea weight before the surgery (if needed). Good Luck!!
ROSEBUD