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The Common Running Mistake That Might Be Causing You Knee Pain

Running is a fantastic form of cardio that can help improve long term heart health, our quality of sleep, and even our overall mood and mental health.

However, for many of us, running is difficult or even painful, making us wonder if our bodies simply aren’t built for this kind of high-impact workout. But could we just be running wrong?

The unfortunate reality is that many of us are.

Running isn’t inherently bad for our bodies and, contrary to what many believe, it won’t ruin your knees. But if your form is even a little off, it can stress out your joints and cause short or long term pain. So as fun as it can be to demonize the exercise itself, too often we’re the problem. It’s us.

“There are specific things that you do when you are running that can lead to increased risk for injury,” Heather Milton, exercise physiologist at NYU Langone Health in New York, recently told us, Raj Punjabi and Noah Michelson, hosts of HuffPost’s “Am I Doing It Wrong Podcast?”

Listen to the full episode by pressing play:

“So it’s more about catering your running form rather than avoiding running because it hurts your knees,” Milton said.

Milton, who served as our trusty expert on the latest episode where we discussed working out safely, told us that many people who experience knee pain from running are doing something called “overstriding.”

“If you’re running and your heel lands outstretched first, and your leg is in front of you, that generally means that the toe is pointed up towards the sky a little bit more and that actually causes increased forces up your whole body,” Milton said. “And typically it’s the shin or the knee that’s going to feel that the most. And that then creates more stress on your joints.”

So, if we’re

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