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Joan Juliet Buck | 05/01/2008 12:00 am

Joan Juliet Buck: 'I Was Born With Eleven Toes'

Joan Juliet Buck

I was born with eleven toes, and a Russian ballet teacher put me on pointe at five. I have feet that hurt me and alarm strangers. I do not wear thong sandals out of compassion for others. Ovid, in Ars Amatoria, counseled women with ugly feet to wear small, attractive slippers. In the Museo Montemartini in Rome there are several statues wearing these soft slippers. You wonder whether they posed in winter or simply had ugly feet. Like many people who were once on pointe, I have something called Morton’s Neuroma — essentially a small, red-hot dagger inserted upwards into the ball of the foot by miniature but highly trained torturers, who get to work after you have walked in high heels for exactly twelve minutes on tarmac, ten on parquet, six on marble, and five seconds on cobblestones. The dagger springs to life inside Manolos and Chanels, sneakers and hiking boots, espadrilles, wedgies, sandals — everything except a few rare pairs of Christian Louboutins, ballet flats from Repetto, lace-up cowboy boots, and Uggs. Ballet flats are fast going out of fashion, lace-up cowboy boots are hokey, and Uggs are anathema to the fashion world.

I love dancing, but the first thing I look for is a man who will massage my feet once I’ve gone a few rounds on the dance floor. I can tell you who knows his way around a bunion and who is very sexy on the feet and who is very patient. Once, at the Carlyle bar with Julia Reed after a dinner party, I handed my two feet to a Republican she knew; he massaged them so well that I assured him he could get a really good practice going once he left George Bush.

My biggest problems when I was the editor of French Vogue were my two feet. I used to store the high heels in boxes according to pain level — one dot for okay, two for “be careful,” three for no walking at all. Parties were hell, particularly when they were held on the unforgiving floors of museums. Evenings ended prematurely, in tears, only because of the shoes. I had an electric foot massaging machine under my desk at French Vogue, which was about as chic as having a washing machine under there. Certain photographers wouldn’t speak to me because of my feet, or rather, my shoes. But since I have stopped trying to get fashion photographers to speak to me, my feet have been happy for the first time in their lives. I wear my little shoes that don’t hurt, I am barefoot inside the reviled Uggs, I walk distances that I never imagined. Here’s what I have learned about shoes: they hurt less if you wear them without tights, stockings, or socks. This is a good reason to wear trousers most of the time. And when you are going to take a plane, wear socks. God knows what you can catch on the floor of the terminal, or on the plane.

But recently, a friend wanted me to meet a man, so she invited me to spend a few days on her husband’s yacht. I primped and prepared and bought nice fabrics to drape around me in a style Ovid would approve of, and brought seven pairs of delicate slippers that would mask the feet. Everything was in place. We climbed the wooden steps to the boat. To my horror I saw, right in front of me, a canvas bin full of shoes. I looked at her feet , and her husband’s feet. Good looking feet, quite naked. I stepped on board. There was a moment when I could have been a beauty, but I respected the protocol, and I removed my shoes. Barefoot, I was undone.

"Change your shoes, change your life." Is there any truth to this idea for you? Click here to tell us.


36 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Babette dYveine
I think shoe designers are women-hating men! Otherwise, why would they design such torturous devices? I’ve never been able to comfortably wear really high heels — I’ve stuck to 1 1/2 to 2 inches most of my life. Now that my husband has shrunk, he’s just slightly taller than I, so I have a good excuse to wear flats. I really hate shoes (which you’d never guess by looking in my closet), so for most of my life I walked around barefoot whenever I could. Then a couple of years ago I developed heel pains, so I now have to wear orthotics (yuck!).
By Babette dYveine on 05/04/2008 8:34 am
Jenny Oops
I love shoes, but can’t really wear high heels anymore. Have a ‘crabby knee’ that had a fight with a canoe years ago. Of course, the canoe won, and now that demmed knee has decided to get down to some arthritic bone on bone — little snot — which really messes up my life of shoes and fashion. Marin County, is fairly casual. Can even verge on ‘extreme laid-back’ in some places, like Fairfax, where we live. I’m not that laid back by nature, but have noticed that I seem to succumb more and more every year. Marin, in a way, is still part country: We seem to have the best of two worlds — three-fourths country and two-thirds City — and you get to choose your spot on any given day or slide up and down if you wish. Makes for an interesting array of people. And we do, indeed, have an interesting array of people. Bill Clinton came to speak at our Speaker’s Bureau. We have a great Speaker’s Bureau, too. I was sitting next to a man way at the top of the auditorium. The place was jammed; we were lucky to have a seat. Anyway, I’m curious, so I talk to people. This guy was writing fastly and furiously even before Clinton started to speak, so my curiousity was pretty close to the top of her ‘perk’. The man had said that he was from back East. Had to wonder what he was doing on the West Coast listening to Bill Clinton. He said he followed Clinton. Oh, okay! Then the speech began. No more talk! The next month I opened my copy of ‘The Atlantic Monthly’ to find this rather picayunish attack about Clinton and the place where he spoke. The article was written by P. J. O’Rourke. It didn’t take much to realize that I had been sitting next to Mr. O’Rouke, himself, at the speech. I wrote a remarkably (in my view) contained LTE to ‘The Atlantic Monthly’, complaining about Mr. O’Rourke and his tainted view of the world, which they never printed. So if anyone here knows P. J. O’Rouke would you please tell him that there’s a lady in Marin County who is still tikked at his outrageous take on Marin in his article. His main complaint: this group, unnamed, in this place, unnamed, didn’t even know how to dress when they came to hear a former president of the United States speak. Granted, none of the men wore suits and the women were mostly wearing casual dressy outfits. But tis most unfortunate Mr. O’Rourke only knows how to make shallow judgments. I knew a lot of the people there (one of the things I like about Marin is you are constantly running into people you know) and all the people I saw were people making things happen, making a difference in ever so many directions — locally, nationally and internationally. Too bad, P. J. runs around with such limited vision, but I guess ‘picayunish is his stock in trade. That warped opinion of Marin and her people, however, didn’t seem to stop him from stopping by when he was trying to sell his last book. TSK! TSK!
By Jenny Oops on 05/04/2008 8:42 am
Jenny Oops
P.S. Never mind about your extravagence of toes, Joan. Put a ruby on one of them, or a blue velvet ribbon. Or, you could also sprinkle them with silver angel dust and become Ms. Twinkle Toes of the party.
By Jenny Oops on 05/04/2008 9:04 am
Sandbee (FB) 54
Wish I hadn’t worn my flip-flops last week on the plane, you are right about wanting socks on those airport floors. For some reason we got stuck waiting barefoot forever and by the time I got something back on my feet I felt like they were crawling with germs. I actually went in the lav on the plane and used what I could to clean my feet in there. Also, I can’t imagine wearing those Fit-flops, thongs are for comfort, not exercise.
By Sandbee (FB) 54 on 06/17/2008 5:37 pm
Dona Howlett
I do know one thing for sure………if your feet hurt you hurt all over. In my younger years I was a Cosmetologist…..I took several pairs of shoes to work and changed every few hours. That was restful to my tired feet. My father used to tell me when I was a little girl and wanted to wear High Heels……Dona, you will wear High Heels for parties and dress up (where you can be seated most of the time) the rest of the time wear comfortable shoes…….(and spend the most money on the comfortable shoes).Your feet will thank you when you get old. He was RIGHT
By Dona Howlett on 06/18/2008 8:41 pm
Jeannot Kensinger
I have the normal amount of toes , if 10 is normal. I always had ugly feet, they also managed to grow from a 7 to 9 1/2 during pregnancy. I cant remember when they did not hurt even walking barefoot. Now they are worse as psoriatic arthritis has decided the toes need curling upwards. I want to be a mermaid in my next life.
By Jeannot Kensinger on 06/29/2008 7:01 am