Bill Hartman 18:55–19:15
Yeah. No, that was great. Good morning. Happy Thursday. I have neuro coffee in hand and it is perfect. And that is really good today. I wasn't really going to have a question because I've been going over this in my head, but I figured it'd be faster if I just asked a clarifying question. So it's sort of foundational with the foot, specifically in the first array. And I was wondering if I was trying to write down, yeah, perfect. I haven't even looked up yet. So I was trying to write down what the rear foot versus the midfoot versus the distal foot is doing at each point relative to each other, and then which direction the wave is going at those points in time. Yes, very much so. So I guess I was picturing in early propulsion, you'd have more of an ER calcaneus. Right. And then, and then the midfoot, like the, like the proximal, the midfoot and proximal met head would be more relative. I yard. Well, okay. So, so, you know, I'm, I'm making this wave for a reason. Yeah. Right. It is moving from like, it's going from like when the first met head touches, right? It goes from the wave, IR wave is going from the first met head towards the heel and then up the body, right?
foot mechanicspropulsionwave mechanicscalcaneusmidfoot