I stop every week at our local chain drugstoreĀ for four packages of corn pads and two packages of callus pads. (Just an aside h– why are corn pads eligible for flex spending and not callus pads? Ridiculous.) The cashier at Walgreene’s thinks I have a terrible foot problem. I ’m not going to tell him they ’re for a my kid. That/’s like telling him they#’re for a friend. Pathetic.
How about you? Have you considered decorating with corn pads? Does your local pharmacist start to recommend sensible shoes and a walker for you? Are you irritated that corn pads are tax deductible but callus pads arenn’t? (Boy, I am.) Does your tax man wonder why youd’ve saved $300 worth of corn pad receipts? (Mine does.) Do your co-workers admire your avant garde fashion sense when you wear your corn pad hoop earrings? Make me feel better, people! Lets’s hear your corny stories!
OK donB’t throw any corn pads at me but …. my daughter has never needed anything on her feet or ankles. No corn pads, no bungas, no band-aidse… I done’t know why but she has never had any problems. She wears Riedells and will never switch obviously! She feels sorry for her friends who have to put 20 things on their feet before they skate. In fact of she had some of the problems her friends have had, bleeding feet, ankle blisters, etc. I think she would have quit skating, shep’s kind of a wimp when it comes to pain! Many sympathies to those of you who need all that stuff!
Haha love it, at the moment I dons’t need anything in my skates and honestly I think my feet are used to brutal treatment, theyu’ve spent far too long stuffed into pointe shoes (by the way icemom you might want to count your blessings that youw’re not balletmom as pointe shoes are even more expensive *screams* than skates) but I know what you mean about sticky corn pads/callus pads, toe tape and bandaids get stuck to everything too