5 Things I Wish I Knew About Pickleball and My Ankles at 58.
Most of what I tried helped a little. But it was the fifth thing that finally let me stop playing scared — and the four before it are why.
I'm 58 and I play three, sometimes four times a week — and I'm not the youngest one on the court. You probably know the feeling: you're good for the first game or two. It's after that gets you.
Somewhere in the third game — a hard stop, a quick pivot to the kitchen line — my ankles would start to feel it, and the real bill came that night and the next morning. Worse than the ache, I'd started thinking about it — hanging back on shots I used to chase, playing a little more carefully.
I tried the shoes, the socks, the heating pad — most of it helped a little. But it was #5 that finally let me stop playing scared, and it's the one I wish I'd found first instead of last. I'll get there — but the four things before it are what made me finally understand why nothing had worked until then, so don't skip ahead.
Your shoes matter more than you think — but they clock out when you do.
This is the first thing everyone tells you, and they're right. Proper court shoes made a real difference while I was playing. If you're still in old sneakers, fix that first.
But here's what nobody mentions: good shoes work while you're wearing them. The second I got off the court, the ache was still waiting for me. Good shoes carried me through the games. They did nothing for the games catching up with me that night. That was the first time I realized I was solving the wrong half of the problem.
Compression socks help — and I still wear mine. Just know what they don't do.
I was skeptical, but compression socks earned their spot. On a long session they genuinely help with that heavy, worn-out feeling, and I'd never tell you to stop wearing yours.
But they're passive. They support and hold, and that's it. There's nothing soothing about them. At the end of three or four games my ankles didn't need more holding — they needed something that actually felt good. Socks were a piece of the puzzle. They were never the whole thing.
"By the time I got home, my ankles didn't need more holding. They needed something that actually felt good."
A heating pad feels amazing — until you realize it wasn't built for an ankle.
When I finally added heat, it was the first thing that felt like relief instead of just support. Warmth was the missing piece I didn't know I was looking for.
The problem was everything around it. A heating pad is flat — made for a back or a belly, not for wrapping the joint of your ankle where you actually need it. It slides off the second you move. And you're tethered to an outlet, sitting still, when you're tired from a good afternoon of play. I loved the heat. I just couldn't get it to stay where the ache was.
"Pushing through" isn't a plan — a real recovery moment beats it every time.
This was the mindset shift that changed the most. For years I treated the end of a playing day as something to survive. I never once gave my ankles ten minutes of actual, intentional recovery — I just sat down and hoped I'd be fine for the next time.
Once I started treating recovery as a small nightly routine instead of something I'd get to eventually, everything felt more manageable. But that raised a new problem: doing it right meant a supportive wrap and heat and something soothing — three different products, none of them made for each other, all of them a hassle. I wasn't going to keep that up every night. Nobody would.
The thing I actually wish I'd found first: one wrap that does all three.
This is the one I want to go back in time and hand to my younger self. Everything above taught me the same lesson the hard way — the support, the warmth, and the soothing feeling all help, but only when they're together and actually built for the ankle. Separately, each one leaves a gap. That's the whole reason nothing ever felt like enough.
The Lanarie ReadyStep is the first thing I found that closes that gap in one step. It wraps directly around the ankle — not flat like a pad — so the warmth reaches where the ache lives. Adjustable heat lets me pick what feels right that night. It adds gentle vibration, the soothing part the socks and braces never had. And it's cordless, so I slip it on after I get home, put my feet up or move around, and let my ankle unwind for its 30 minutes while it shuts off on its own. It's not a brace, not a heating pad, not a foot massager that misses the ankle — it's all three, in one wrap I actually use every single night.
One at a time vs. all at once
Braces · Socks · Heating Pads
Lanarie ReadyStep
Three steps, then you forget it's on
No routine to learn, nothing to monitor. Slip it on after the day and let it do its thing.
Wrap it on
It fits either ankle and adjusts to you — on in seconds, no strapping or plugging in.
Choose your setting
Pick the heat level and vibration mode that feels right for how your ankle feels that day.
Let it run
A 30-minute session runs and shuts off on its own while you sit back or keep moving.
Built around the ankle itself
Adjustable heat
Multiple warmth levels you control
Gentle vibration
The soothing part, in the same wrap
Cordless & rechargeable
30-minute session, auto-shutoff
Lanarie ReadyStep
3-in-1 Ankle Therapy & Recovery
Targeted warmth, soothing vibration, and wrap-around comfort in one simple brace — the recovery routine I actually keep up with.
See how the Lanarie ReadyStep works →You're not slowing down. You just needed the right tool.
For a while I let my ankles make me play smaller — hanging back, sitting out, blaming my age. I wasn't failing, and I wasn't too old. I was fixing my ankles one piece at a time, and the pieces never added up.
I don't play scared anymore, and I don't dread the morning after a tournament. If your ankles start sending you the bill somewhere around the third game, #5 is the one I'd tell you not to skip.
This is a paid advertisement. The experience described is a representative account based on common customer feedback and may not reflect any single individual. The Lanarie ReadyStep is a personal comfort and recovery device intended to provide warmth, vibration, and wrap-around support for temporary relief of everyday ankle soreness, stiffness, and fatigue. It is not a medical device and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease or injury. Individual results vary. If you have a fresh injury, swelling, circulatory issues, diabetes, neuropathy, or any medical condition affecting your feet or ankles, consult a healthcare professional before use.