Foot Pain: A Unique and Natural Approach
As a board-certified reflexologist, I have seen a lot of people with foot pain. Based on what I’ve witnessed patients go through, I’m convinced that the origin of most foot pain, and some other pain as well, lies in people’s shoes – not their feet.
After many years studying with renowned natural foot health podiatrist Dr. Ray McClanahan and his nonsurgical approach to foot pain through tissue rehabilitation and educated shoe selection, I have learned how effective the right shoe choice can be. Not only can shoes slowly deform foot structure, they can also compromise the overall function of your feet, as well as other parts of your body.
In addition to learning about the anatomy, physiology and pathology (dis-ease) of the feet from Dr. McClanahan – which greatly enhanced what I’d learned in reflexology school and decades before in massage school – I’ve also studied, and now utilize in my work, a unique form of reflexology called "structural reflexology." Developed by Geraldine Villeneuve, author of Put Your Best Feet Forward, structural reflexology
integrates the location of the muscles that move the feet with the classic reflexology map. Structural reflexologists can see how stress on any particular foot muscle can potentially add stress and tissue changes to a corresponding part of the body.
The reflexology map that I mention above was discovered by physiotherapist Eunice Ingham in the 1930s. While working on patients’ feet in the office of Dr. Joe Shelby Riley, Ingham realized that areas in which patients had problems in their bodies were the same areas where she felt “deposits” – ropey, grainy textures – in the feet, if one imagined a body superimposed over a pair of feet. Thanks to Dr. Jesus Manzanares’ biopsies and microscopic analysis of these gritty deposits verses normal foot tissue, we now know that reflexology works via the nervous system. When reflexes on the feet that correlate with a specific body part are pressed on or held, it helps the body normalize the function of that body part.
Learning from some of the best podiatrists has helped me enact one of my favorite maxims: “Give people a fish, you feed them for a day. Teach people to fish, you feed them for a lifetime.” I have gained valuable and effective resources when it comes to helping patients alleviate pain from a variety of foot conditions and would love to share my knowledge.
Linda Frank is a State and National Board-Certified Reflexologist with offices in University Place and Tacoma. Certified by The Natural Foot Health Institute, Linda educates the public about reflexology and how to avoid foot pain naturally via radio, TV, in print and in-person presentations. She has taught reflexology at Bellevue Massage School and Bastyr University and will be teaching a Reflexology Certification Program in Tacoma.
“Linda Frank is a stellar scholar, researcher, practitioner, and educator … nationally acclaimed …and …highly respected for articles she has written that passionately articulate the importance of keeping feet healthy and vital. Those who talk with Linda will soon realize she is a wealth of knowledge….”
- Geraldine Villeneuve, founder, Structural Reflexology






