I'd already tried three different gel insoles. $40-60 each. All felt great for maybe ten days. Then flattened completely.
Dr. Harrison explained why that made things worse.
"Every time an insole fails and you keep using it, you're accelerating the tendon damage. You think you're protected, so you keep working full shifts. But the insole collapsed weeks ago. You're grinding down those tendons shift after shift, getting closer to irreversible damage."
I'd also bought new work boots. $235 Steel Blues. Premium model with "enhanced cushioning." Felt amazing for the first two weeks. Then the pain came back exactly the same.
Dr. Harrison pulled up something on his computer. Boot manufacturer technical documentation.
"Look at this," he said. "Boot manufacturers actually acknowledge that stock insoles are minimal. Built to meet manufacturing standards, not to survive industrial work. They openly state customers should replace them for enhanced support."
He scrolled down. "Here's one that puts it pretty bluntly: 'Factory insoles provide baseline cushioning. For extended wear on hard surfaces, we recommend aftermarket orthotic insoles.'"
"They're telling you straight up," he said, "that the insoles in your $235 boots aren't meant to last under your work conditions. They're just there so the boot meets basic safety standards. The boot companies know the insoles will fail under industrial loads. They're counting on it."
"Because when your feet start hurting after six months, you don't think 'the insoles collapsed.' You think 'these boots are worn out,' and you buy another $235 pair. With the same doomed insoles inside."
That explained why switching boot brands never helped. Different leather. Same engineered failure point.
The custom orthotics I'd tried? $650. Did nothing but make the pain worse.
"Those are rigid arch supports," he said. "On concrete with flat feet, they actually increase the impact forces your heel takes. Makes fat pad atrophy worse. Speeds up the progression toward surgery."
Every solution I'd tried hadn't just failed. It had actively pushed me closer to needing surgical reconstruction.
"Here's what you need to understand," Dr. Harrison said. "You're probably six to twelve months away from the point where surgery becomes unavoidable. Once those tendons stretch beyond a certain point, there's no coming back without surgical intervention."
Six to twelve months.
I asked him straight up: "What can I do to avoid that?"