Before we know whether that was a good ratio or not, we need to know what your blood sugar was before you bolused, and also how long you waited between bolusing and eating. Did you test before the meal as well?
(It isn't a useless result to have, though. All records are good. With just a little more info, that will be interpretable. What we do know is that you haven't gone into a crashing hypo, so we are getting closer to your "target ratio."
On the carbs, 33+28=61, so that is more a 1:12 ratio, isn't it? 1:10 would have been 6 units. So if your blood sugar was between 4.0 and 6.0 before lunch, then I would try eating the same meal again tomorrow and taking 6 units. Then check your blood again. All info is good info, so all numbers are good when you are trying to find your insulin needs.
However, if your blood sugar was high before lunch, that (1:12) might be the right ratio but you needed a little bit more insulin as a "correction dose". So, again, it depends on the meter numbers. At this point you may be feeling cross with the figures but you are still doing the right thing to get where you want to be.
On the foot drop, and the aching, they are both possible side effects of your roller coaster. Foot drop would be nerve damage, but if you get your blood sugars under control, nerve damage can repair itself, as long as the roller coaster doesn't go on and on for months or years.
At this point, you may feel like all this is a lot of work and requires a lot of calculating, but you will be surprised how quickly it becomes second nature. In a few weeks you can have everything under control, then over a few months you learn to calculate for refinements in things like diet and exercise.
When I was starting to get a grip on my diabetes after I got a pump last year, I found Gary Scheiner's book Think Like a Pancreas very useful and encouraging. At the time I also had what looked to be foot drop - occasionally I would trip while walking and it seemed to me that my foot was 'dropping.' It has stopped now. But I went through all these stages of basal and bolus testing.
You probably won't believe this yet, but now that I have my diabetes under control, it feels more like a "game". I am just playing to get "the best numbers"! It used to depress me so much I could hardly think about it. I just tried to ignore it all the time. Since I got it under control, I am like a new person. My mood is really good, I have loads of energy, and I feel much more confident all the time. part of that is obviously chemical (blog sugar and the brain) and part of it that the disease is not beating me any more. Believe me, it's worth going through these efforts. It will improve your life massively.