It started with something small—just a quick complaint before dinner. My son walked in, shoes half untied, and said his feet were “on fire.” I didn’t think much of it at first. He had practice earlier, long hours on his feet, sweat, friction—it all seemed normal. But when he finally showed me, I froze. The skin between his toes was peeling, red, and raw in a way that didn’t look like simple irritation.
He tried to brush it off, but I could tell it was worse than he admitted. The burning wasn’t just uncomfortable—it was constant. Every step made him wince, and suddenly the idea of him going back to practice the next day didn’t feel so simple anymore. I realized this wasn’t something that would just disappear overnight without attention.
That evening, we cleaned the area carefully and made sure his feet were completely dry afterward. He stayed off them as much as possible, letting the skin breathe and recover. It was a small change, but within hours, the discomfort started to ease just enough for him to relax. The redness didn’t vanish, but it stopped getting worse.
By morning, the difference was noticeable. The burning had faded into a mild irritation, and the peeling looked less aggressive than the night before. It wasn’t completely gone, but it was manageable—enough for him to move without that sharp, constant pain. Sometimes, the simplest steps can make the biggest difference when something feels out of control.
What I learned from that moment was how quickly something minor can turn into something intense if ignored. Paying attention early made all the difference. And while it didn’t fix everything overnight, it gave him exactly what he needed—a chance to recover, step by step, without pushing his body too far.