Current Pedorthics | March-April 2013 | Vol. 45, Issue 2 | Page 33

“Stay hungry. Stay foolish." T hese wise words, spoken by Steve Jobs at a Stanford University graduation ceremony in 2005, were something I could relate to as a 26 year old, fairly new graduate and soon to be pedorthics professional. Like most people who listen or read Jobs’ speech, we discovered and learned that his successful career did not entail his graduating from college, (he spent the majority of his early 20's sleeping on friends’ couches), but how he spent his time studying his real interests and passion for typography. The life lessons and the point he was trying to stress and teach that day to all college graduates and people everywhere was to be successful in life as a professional you must continue to always do what you love. significant experience evaluating running gait. I remembered what my friend had told me about pedorthics, and began research this profession. As I learned more and its place within the world of healthcare, I knew I wanted to be pedorthist. However, the more I learned and studied, the more I began to observe some major flaws in how we as a profession handle the care and process of fabricating and treating with foot orthotic devices. As an avid runner, I had acquired my own experience wearing custom made foot orthoses, and was not quite satisfied with the final outcome. Having to wait 3-4 months alone was very discouraging when my running season only lasted 3 months. It became a vicious cycle – each time I would experience discomfort for another month, get new shoes, and adjust to the new foreign object in my shoes right in the middle of my competition season. If an orthoses didn’t work, I was forced to wait another 2-3 weeks to have them adjusted. This experience and thought stuck out in my mind when I decided on how I wanted to pursue my pedorthic career. In the spring of 2008, I started in the pedorthic profession. Two and a half years prior to this a friend of mine who had returned from college introduced me to the world of pedorthics. As most of us who enter this profession, we stumble on it by accident or are looking for a change in our chosen career path, even life. For me, I was going to school for a degree that I would, eventually find out was not for me and decided to transition out of it. After graduating with a college degree in exercise science, and becoming a Certified Pedorthist, I started pursuing my business adventure. Considering I was still ‘young’ and not wanting to take on an abundance of debt, I looked into developing an alternative business model. My mobile business started out as house calls from the back of my Honda CR-V, taking slipper casts, and bringing them back to my "lab" that was housed on the back of my rented condo balcony. No heat, in the middle winter, was a challenge, but necessary. My fabrication lab changed locations several times before actually becoming what it is today – the only fully mobile fabricating foot orthoses practice in the United States. During my not so voluntary break from my degree, I decided to move to Northern Virginia and pursue the idea of starting my own business. I knew I wanted a business in healthcare and had While the traditional brick and mortar business model has worked for many years for the majority of the pedorthic profession, it is out dated. It is time for pedorthists to quite literally think outside Current Pedorthics March/April 2013 31