The real reasons women wear heels

BY STACEY
HUTSON
I am a 6'5" woman — when
I wear heels. My confidence, my stature, my hip sway, everything is bigger, and
some would say better with stilettos strapped to my feet. I can make heads
turn, men smirk, and women gasp at the pure sight of me. I love and hate heels
for all these reasons and more. And I would guess, no matter how you feel
about them, you've probably worn them too.
The Spine Health Institute
reports that 72 percent of women will wear high heels in their lifetime. Many
wear them daily – 49 percent of 18-24-years-olds, 42 percent of women ages
20-49, and 34 percent of women 50 and over.
To some, heels are a nasty
habit. Lumbar spine flattening, posterior displacement of the head, and
unwelcome increased pressure on the foot are all results of heel-wearing. They
can even cause spasm-producing spinal nerve conditions. Any woman who has gone
through an evening standing, walking, dancing or leaning casually against a bar
in high heels knows the pulsing, constrictive, numbing pain they can cause.
But we still wear them. Why?
Heels
make our walk more attractive

Psychologist Paul Morris and
his colleagues did an experiment to test what heels do for a woman's
attractiveness. They recorded females walking in flat shoes, and then again in
high heels. Like any good experiment, they needed a way to isolate the effects
so that other factors didn't muddy the results. So one by one, they decorated
12 different women of varying ages and sizes with glow in the dark dots at
specific points along their body. They then had them walk a treadmill in
complete darkness so that only their glowing dots were visible – one time
dressed in 2 1/2-inch heels, the other, dressed in flats.
The observers couldn't see the
women – their age, their weight or their face. They could just see the way they
moved when they walked. What happens when you rate a woman on her heel-walking
alone? Apparently, a change in gait. With heels, there is a reduced stride, and
increased rotation and tilt of the hips. In other words, she struts.
Without any of the other usual
indicators of attractiveness, this change in gait alone made the study
participants find the heeled-females more attractive.
They
make us appear more feminine

Morris and his colleagues
decided to take it a step further. They altered the experiment, showing the
same videos of the women treadmill-walking in darkness to a new group of
participants. But this time, they asked the participants to identify which
subjects were females, and which were males. The key to remember here is, all
of the walkers were still female.
With every "male"
guess, the participant had mistaken a woman in flats for a man. Nothing
ground-breaking here, but it confirms scientifically what we already assumed.
Heels are girly, ladylike, and feminine.
Certified image consultant,
personal stylist and confidence coach, Laurie Brucker, agrees. The subject of
"to heel or not to heel?" often comes up with her clients. Her
answer? She is an advocate for them because they make you strut.
"When a woman walks in
heels, fluid strut is required which forces women to move their hips!"
Brucker says. "By moving their hips, whether a subtle strut or an
exaggerated cat walk, it reminds women that they are women!"
Heels
are office dress code

Imagine going into work one
day, confident in your chinos and ballet flats, only to be asked by your
employer to leave and come back with heels — or just leave.
That's exactly what happened
to Nicole Thorp. Her employer, Pricewaterhouse Coopers, told her she had to
wear shoes with a 2-4-inch heel. Thorp refused their demands and was sent home
without pay. Although legal and within the company's rights, she took it upon
herself to change that and started a petition. It called on the people to make
it illegal for a company to require a woman to wear heels to work.
The petition has received over
150,000 signatures and a whole lot of attention from the press and social
media, becoming something of a movement. Or at the very least, a hashtag. Type
#myheelsmychoice into Twitter to find people all over the world standing
flat-footed in solidarity with Thorp — from outraged women sharing similar
experiences, to a Swedish handyman who wore bright pink stilettos on the job to
prove a not-so-subtle point.
"There's a history behind
heels and the damage that it can do to women," Thorp says in an online
video interview. "And there's a sexualized element to it, as opposed to a
shirt and tie for a man."
They're
culturally-ingrained

Fashion journalist and style
icon, NJ Goldston, lives in a place where the choice isn't heels or flats. It's
sling backs or stilettos. Los Angeles. Tinseltown, La La Land. Where heels are
considered the style de rigueur, an entry point into a mutual admiration
society.
In her world, your car doubles
as a moving closet. "No matter your social circle or neighborhood (except
maybe the beach communities), heels are the LA way to amp up a more casual look
on the fly when there is no way to go home and dress up after a long work day,"
Goldston says.
She admits, the LA culture is
embracing a more fashion-athletic look. She recently overdressed for a Sunday
brunch in Malibu where more casual footwear may have been more acceptable. But
that's the exception, not the rule. "LA is such an event-driven town that
flats are not really the way to go when you are attending a major luncheon or
party."
Popular
culture told you to

Look through a rack of women's
fashion and lifestyle magazines, and you'll most likely find cover models
posing in designer pumps and at least one publication peddling, "Heels
that make heads turn."
An article in Glamour touts
the many benefits of wearing heels, saying, "Your calf muscles, no matter
how weak, look instantly better when you slip on your favorite pumps."
Even movies show women wearing heels in impractical situations.
We all know that heels are red
carpet staples. From Blake Lively who reportedly told People Magazine that
nothing is as "relaxing" as a great pair of Louboutins, to the petite
Ariana Grande who almost always seems to be wearing knee high boots with long
spiky points. And who could forget the queen of heels herself — Carrie Bradshaw
— who was always found pounding the New York pavement in her beloved Blahniks,
Choos or Louboutins.
Her former show, Sex and the
City, spells out women's love for heels in one quote many fans remember,
"The fact is, sometimes it's hard to walk in a single woman's shoes.
That's why we need really special ones now and then — to make the walk a little
more fun."
It's hard to argue with logic
like that.
Heels
get you more male attention

Researcher and professor,
Nicolas Gueguen, conducted a series of experiments using 19-year-old-women in
tight tops and heels or flats. He started out with the old fashioned "I
dropped my glove" routine, in which he found it was picked up and returned
60 percent of the time when the women wore flats, and 95 percent of the time
when she wore heels.
He also timed how long it
would take a man to approach a woman sitting at a bar. The women with flats got
approached within 14 minutes. Not bad. Except once the flats came off and the
heels were strapped on, that time got cut in half. Pickup lines were happening
within seven minutes. Impressive.
Heels
help you be more persuasive

In another experiment, Gueguen
took the women to the streets. No, not like that.
He had them stop pedestrians
to answer a survey about gender equality. The study found that 40 percent of
men would respond to a women wearing flats, 60 percent to women in medium
heels, and 80 percent of men were all ears when the women were wearing high
heels. Hmmm. Could this be applicable to court cases? Business pitches? Or
maybe even convincing husbands to wash the dishes?
They
symbolize power

One of the first accounts of
people wearing heels dates back to 3500 BC. Aristocratic men and women wore
them for ceremonial purposes. It has been said the added height set themselves
apart — or above — from the social classes. Aristocracy, perhaps, doesn't apply
in today's world. But power does.
Women in heels are often women
of power. Do a quick search for "business woman," and if the picture
is a full-length shot, you can bet that woman is wearing heels. Business
organizations like Business in Heels and Leaders in Heels use women dressed in
spikey heels on their home pages, or a red pump for their logo.
Sheryl Sandberg, Christine
Lagarde, Oprah Winfrey — all named by Forbes as the World's Most Powerful Women
– are repeatedly pictured in heels.
Heels
even the playing field

As a woman who stands at
6'1" in her bare feet, heels have never been a necessity for me. When I
put on 4-inch heels, I become a colossus. People literally have to crane their
necks up to talk to me. But for my 5'1" friend, heels are an instant
confident boost. Even though her office doesn't require them, she wears them
almost daily.
"I came up in restaurants
and I worked with mostly men. It was always important to 'show up,' and I would
say I often commanded more respect the more well put together I was," she
says.
Psychologists at the
universities of Liverpool and Central Lancashire might agree. They conducted an
experiment in which they digitally lengthened and shortened pictures of women, asking
for instant judgments from the viewing participants. The results revealed some
harsh truths. The heightened women were judged as more intelligent, assertive,
independent, and ambitious — not to mention richer and more successful — than
their shorter versions.
Dawnn Karen, M.A., Ed.Mc, of
the Fashion Psychology Institute argues that, just like shorter men, women too
can get a Napoleon complex. Heels are a way they can gain back some of the
power they feel they lack due to their height.
"Wearing heels makes a
woman feel in charge because height is the antithesis of power. She always
wants to be taller than her opponent. [Wearing heels] literally makes her look
down at someone instead of looking up at someone," Karen says.
The
choice is yours

All that said, flats have
definitely become more widely accepted than they once were. As of August 2016,
fashion retailer JD Williams reported that flat shoes outsold heels by 148
percent.
According to a study from
consumer analyst Mintel, for the first time, women are buying more flats than
heels. It found that 37 percent of women purchased trainers, compared to 33
percent who bought heels (compared to the previous year where both were at 35
percent). And with people like Nicole Thorp leading the charge, more and more
women may feel comfortable switching over.
It seems to me, though, that
this long-loved, long-hated, long-leg enhancing, back-pain-inducing,
head-turning, neck-cranking footwear isn't a decision for women. It's a
decision for you.
SOURCE:
THELIST
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