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Healing at an Artisan Fair

How Desperation and VOXX Socks Improved my Quality of Life

By Leigh MacfarlanePublished 4 years ago 7 min read
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10-ish years ago, I suffered a triad of athletic injuries. First, I tore all the ligaments in my shoulder during a tennis forehand. Second, I tore all the ligaments in my ankle during a tennis dash to the deep far right of the court. And a year later, I tore my hamstring while doing the splits in yoga. No irony there.

The hamstring injury hurt the most at the time, but now, years later, that is but a distant memory, while both tennis injuries have worsened over the years. They have brought both vocational and recreational changes to my life. This year, when the repetitive motion of putting stamps on envelopes at my desk job was enough to send me home with burning shoulder nerves, I decided, okay, I can't afford it, but I'm going to look into physio therapy. Clearly, I can't afford not to. I'm too young to live this way.

And then, one week after deciding this, I ended up at an outdoor artisans fair. I thought I was going to look at local art works. Instead, I found two booths, side by side, which have both contributed to changing my quality of life. One of the tables had a big jog of cold lemon water and a bunch of essential oils on display. The table beside them had socks.

I stopped in my browsing to read a poster labeling the parts of the foot. The literature claimed that VOXX Life technology could help with foot pain and with balance. Their tool? Socks.

This wasn't normally a claim I would waste any time on. It turns out, I am a bit of an alternative medicine sceptic. Then the woman manning the booth invited me to remove my shoes and step up for an experiment, and because I was getting desperate for some improvement in my health, I gave a mental shrug, and shucked my flipflops.

"Okay," I said, "But I have a bad ankle. I already know I'm going to be bad at this."

With bare feet, I stepped onto the board she indicated, then made fists with my wrists, and placed them on top of one another underneath my breastbone. The woman then placed her hands on top of mine, and pushed down. I immediately toppled. I inadvertently pitched forwards and stepped off the board.

"Okay," she said, bending over to place a pair of insoles on the board, "Now stand on these, and fold your hands again."

I let her position me correctly on the insoles, placed my hands as instructed, and let her push her weight down on my hands a second time. She added enough force that my arms dropped down several inches, but I... didn't budge. It was a startling and dramatic demonstration.

I stepped off the board, put my flipflops back on, and followed her back to a rack of socks. Where I caught my first glimpse of the price tags. Ouch. $40 for a pair of ankle socks. Still, physio would cost a lot more than $40. Even if I was throwing my money away, giving these socks a chance might be an affordable alternative.

VOXX Life is a company which spent six years developing the technology in their products. They studied "decades of research in brainstem functionality and the peripheral nervous system, and also reviewed the latest research in sensory mechano-receptor mapping," and also a bunch of other health science stuff. At VOXX, they wanted to know how the brain's sensory receptors, the peripheral nervous system and the brainstem interact. Then they wanted to implement what they learned into a line of products designed to increase balance, manage pain, and generally improve energy and function.

They learned that the relationship between the brainstem, peripheral nervous system and the brain's sensory receptors are interconnected. They work together to gather sensory input and create motor output. The brainstem connects the brain to the central nervous system, relaying signals between the brain and the spinal cord and also "controls several important functions of the body including pain management, alertness, arousal, breathing, blood pressure, digestion, heart rate, swallowing, walking, posture, stability and sensory and motor information integration."

VOXX developed technology with a "very specific sequence and pattern of neuroreceptor activation on the bottom of the feet that triggers a signal that aides in the brainstem reaching homeostasis." In other words, wearing VOXX products triggers the brainstem to signal the brain in ways that induce a relatively stable equilibrium between all three elements of the body. These trigger point patterns are woven or molded into footwear products. The results people saw were significant enough that the technology was then sold to the army and to professional athletes.

The result VOXX users observed included improved posture and balance, improved mobility and energy, and generally reduced or more easily managed pain levels. VOXX's website says, "The concept is simple. The science is proven. The results are extraordinary." I just say, "It works."

When you get your socks, you are instructed to keep them on 24/7 for a week. Apparently, they come with an antibacterial ingredient which allows this. You can wash them in the machine when necessary, but hang to dry. I followed these instructions religiously. Within three days, I no longer recognized myself. The difference was undeniable, yet I tried to deny.

"This has got to be a placebo," I said, pretty much to anyone who would listen. So, I took a day without the socks. Not, I was forced to concede, a placebo. VOXX technology is the real deal. I was so convinced, I signed up as a rep.

My job at the time was largely sedentary, but I'd also worked at a fast-food restaurant on the side briefly. I remember sitting in my car after one eight hour shift unable to drive out of the parking lot because my ankle was spasming. That feeling when your leg has gone to sleep and the circulation is returning? That was happening all at once—and was focused in my Achilles tendon to the point that I was unsafe to drive home. I'd also, on more than one occasion, had my foot simply collapse underneath me as I walked up the four steps to my patio. It's a terrifying thing when you are a relatively young woman and with no advance warning, your foot simply crumples underneath you. All this changed.

I started taking walks. I resumed swimming. I started jogging up my stair case. I quit my sedentary job and took jobs requiring me to be on my feet for eight hours at a time. At the end of these shifts, my feet would hurt. Because, you know, feet get tired after running around on them for eight straight hours. So, my feet got tired—normal, been-standing-on-you-all-day tired. And my life changed.

Best $40 ever spent.

Now, I wear them all the time. I'm someone who likes big fluffy, floppy socks in winter, and bare feet all the rest of the time, but I don't even notice these socks. They don't make me sweat, and they feel great. Mostly, though, they make me feel healthy in them.

I don't know that I'll ever hit the tennis courts again. Not sure I even still want to. But the discovery of VOXX technology has gone a long way to getting me moving again. If I don't wear them for a few days, my foot reverts to its previous pain threshold, so I know I'm not healed. With VOXX technology, though, I now get to live my life actively again.

If you suffer from balance or pain issues, give VOXX a chance. It might just be the best money you ever spend, too. For more information on VOXX, visit their website https://voxxlife.com. They've been a game changer for me.

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About the Creator

Leigh Macfarlane

With a Creative Writing MFA, Leigh loves writing, photography, music, family, animals, stargazing, swimming, coffee, chocolate. She raised 4 children, bravely works in a daycare and hates car problems. Mosquitoes and Lily the dog love her

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