What a great thread!
I have had periods of time when life got in the way and I had to take a hiatus but in my mind it was exactly that...
a hiatus.
I had plantar fascitis but worked ~48+ hrs a week as an ICU nurse and hiked on my time off in severe pain for ~2 years. It was nasty! I finally found someone who made me great orthotics and a doc who treated it with steroids and then physiotherapy. Miracle of miracles. Once I got myself to the right professionals my symptoms disappeared, and I keep them at bay by getting orthotic adjustments when it starts to flare. I believe some now use shockwave therapy also.
Degenerative disk disease, and my bum injured knee have also given me cause to greatly modify my adventures. The back is now symptom free with PT+ weight loss. My knee injury has given me a run for my money over these last 5 years. At one time what should have been a 10" walk would take me 1 hour. I refused to accept that I was defeated. I did the 10" walk and tried not to whine too much.
I re-injured that same knee yesterday. I called campground reservations in tears thinking I might have to cancel. The guy was so nice and supportive. Lots of ice, elevation, Naprosyn, etc and seems like it's starting to turn the corner. I think if I take it slow and easy I might be able to do lots of the hikes that some of you recommended to me.
I might have to do the things I enjoy with a support brace rather than just using a knee strap but I will do whatever it takes keep hiking until I drop. I am not a quad, I have no terrible degenerative muscular or neurologic disease, and I have not suffered a devastating stroke, so it's ever onward and upward. My pack might be lighter, my trails not as steep and long, but one thing is certain, I will not quit. I have to say that I got myself better with little or no help from the medical community who for the most part just blew me off. If I had abided their treatment plan, I would most likely be in a wheelchair dying of inertia.
I had to do the research and found the pedorthist. podiatrist, and PT who finally helped me. Yes...truth be told my orthopod was 100% useless. He treated me like an old person but the likes of him was not going to stop me.
I have other "hobbies" but my outdoor activities are my life. I will ski again perhaps only easy terrain with a good brace, but it will be a happening thing. I love to snowshoe, bike dirt roads and rural roads.
In his book A Dog's Purpose, Cameron wrote
“Failure isn’t an option if success is just a matter of more effort.”
Much like the invincible Iditarod racer, the late Susan Butcher, "I do not know the word quit. Either I never did or have abolished it from my language."
Modify yes, quit no.
It's never too late. I waited 30 years to have the guts to call and sign up for my Outward Bound course. Completed it at the age of 61. As one of my leaders told me "It's not what happens to you in life but rather what you do with it that matters." A Bonds traverse might never be in the cards for me but there is a whole world of hikes out there just waiting for us. Fast. slow, strong, or weak. Something for everyone so we can enjoy what is near and dear to our hearts for a long time to come.