Yesterday's post about tying shoes one-handed means I did not have to push a wheelchair across carpeting with one hand and one foot when I got home. The door jambs in my house also do not have gouges because it is hard to keep a wheelchair going straight when you do not have 2 hands.
Relace the Shoe: There can be only one free end at the top when you tie shoe laces one-handed. I have the lace come out of the top hole on the same side as my affected foot. This dictates which bottom hole I lace through first.Adjust Length of the Lace: I wear a leg brace so I need the full length of the shoe lace on my affected foot. However, the shoe on my sound foot closes more tightly so I cut off 3 inches before I relace the shoe. Trimming the bottom means I do not have excess lace at the top of this shoe.
Make an Anchor Knot: I put the lace through the bottom hole, leaving a 6 to 8 inch tail hanging out of the hole. The "tail" gives me something to wrap around my affected hand so I can hold the lace while my sound hand makes a double knot. I place one knot on top of each other rather than two side-by-side knots like pearls on a necklace. A scout leader told me this sailing knot holds against great pressure. Sometimes I leave the plastic aglet at the end of the lace and sometimes I cut it off which creates a tiny fuzzy pom-pom. Both tuck out of sight (see bottom hole in photo above). homeafterstroke.blogspot.com.
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