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A Friend Stopped By | 06/25/2008 2:30 pm

Summer Shoes: Good Looking, Bad For Your Feet, by Shirley Lord

By Shirley Lord
Miu Miu
Halley Parry

Editor’s Note: Shirley Lord has been at the front seat of the beauty business for years. Born in London, she was working in Fleet Street at the age of 18 and became woman’s editor of three leading London evening newspapers. In the early 70s she moved to the United States to become beauty editor of Harper’s Bazaar, moving in 1980 to American Vogue to become beauty and health director and where she has had a long and distinguished career. She is the author of five novels, and has also written two "Bibles" on health and beauty, and an autobiography.

On Memorial Day, of all days, just as I was about to slip off my slingbacks, going "barefoot in the park" was given a thorough drubbing in The New York Times, with ominous warnings of lurking parasites in the grass and dangerous bacteria everywhere to infect naked soles and toes. It was a catch-22 start to summer for many foot docs, who look to the sunny barefoot season as a reprieve for feet otherwise shod in fashionable shoes that grow unsteadily taller and taller, and less and less substantial with — surprise, surprise — women increasingly crazy to wear them. (There is still a l-o-n-g waiting list for the latest Louis Vuitton five-inch-heeled disco sandal.)

Click here to see some of this summer’s sexiest — and scariest — shoes.

As far as the majority of experts are concerned, "crazy" is the operative word. Dr. Richard Kushner, a leading New York podiatrist, puts it bluntly. "Twenty-five percent of the bones in the body are in the feet. When you wear these bone breakers, you are essentially walking only on the ends of the metatarsals. Not even a ballerina would do that for long. The amount of time you spend ‘toe walking’ is all important. Too long and too often means repetitive trauma, which will cause permanent osteoarthritic changes. And there’s no age limit. Permanent damage can happen at any age. It all depends on the duration of the assault.

When you wear these bone breakers, you are essentially walking only on the ends of the metatarsals. Not even a ballerina would do that for long.

"If you must wear very high heels, plan to stand for only 30 to 40 minutes maximum, then you may be able to avoid trouble."

Today, however, to the concern of the American Podiatric Medical Association, more and more ardent fashionistas are making the problem worse by turning to elective foot surgery. Not only do they seek to remove bunions, but to shorten, straighten and even realign toes that inconveniently get in the way of being seriously stylish around the clock without pain, not to mention the risk of a twisted ankle or two.

A New York Times medical article exposed some podiatrists, who advocate these elective procedures (and have press agents to prove it). "Critics do not understand that when doctors tell their patients not to wear high heels, patients do so anyway," a doctor was quoted as saying. "’People say, why do toe surgery if they work just fine? Well, why do a nose job when your nose is working just fine.’ It’s the same thing. People want to look their best.’"

Dr. Rock Positano, director of the nonoperative foot and ankle service at the Hospital for Special Surgery in Manhattan had an immediate response: "’You don’t walk on your face. The foot is a complex network that must support more than 100 thousand pounds of pressure for every mile walked.’"

"Women don’t realize that by tampering with the anatomy of the feet they are changing the mechanics of how they work," says Taryn Rose, a qualified orthopedic surgeon, who a few years ago, after long dealing with patients with serious foot problems, caused by too much dedication to fashion, decided to design shoes herself that were as wearable as they were fashionable.

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

Aurea Fig
Any shoe that has more than two inch heels are for those that do not know any better by placing your foot into a shoe that not only will hurt your feet but will also hurt your back. I am so glad someone finally got on the ball and started to design flats that are I can use when going out. I use to spend months looking for a nice pair of shoes. All I would find were heels. It drove me nuts and I would get so mad thinking, here I am ready to spend money on some nice shoes and all of the shoes are designed for young girls who don’t care what they wear just a long as it looks good for the moment. The sad part about it, is that the shoes in these pictures are really not very nice. They look like they belong in the Vogue Magazine with the weird looking clothes that one one wears.
By Aurea Fig on 06/26/2008 9:00 am
Susan Cuthbertson
What I would like to see are equally fashionable flats for those of us that cannot or will not wear heels. Having broken both ankles, at different times and years apart, I cannot wear heels and have a hard time finding nice looking dress shoes. I have even had discussions with shoe clerks who insist that this or that shoe would really be fine, until they see the surgery scars and then say they have nothing. I am pleased to see ballerina flats back in, but surely there is some designer somewhere that has the ingenuity to come up with beautiful flat shoes.
By Susan Cuthbertson on 06/26/2008 9:18 am
K O
That shoe is as scary as the Manson murderess blog plus the Hillary Clinton blog.
By K O on 06/26/2008 10:41 am
doll lady
Kitty….re: 06/26/2008 10:41 am hilarious……kerchuckle. (Wipes spit from the monitor screen!)
By doll lady on 06/26/2008 11:39 am
Frank Peterson
roflmao
By Frank Peterson on 06/26/2008 3:15 pm
My Two Cents
When I was growing up, I couldn’t wait until I could wear high heels, at 11 I got my first pair of ” squash heels” and over time my shoes got higher and higher heels. I LOVED them. I wish someone had told me that they would ruin my feet. When I went to work in my twenties I was in retail and wanted to look cute everyday. I had a different pair of shoes for every outfit. The mature women I worked with wore comfortable shoes, they didn’t care if they were cute or not. Now I am into comfortable too !!
By My Two Cents on 06/26/2008 12:01 pm
Kalisa Hyman
I totally blame Carrie Bradshaw. She fucking lied to us when she made us believe we could walk around the city all day in 4-inch heels. I certainly agree with Ms. Rose on the soft leather part. I can run hurdles in a good pair of $500 shoes. Cheap shoes kill my feet every time. And yes, I wear stilettos.
By Kalisa Hyman on 06/26/2008 12:28 pm
Frank Peterson
There are times, and admittedly they can be few and far between, when I am happy to be a man—looking at those shoes is one of them. Sweet Baby Huey—those would kill my tootsies. lmao
By Frank Peterson on 06/26/2008 2:07 pm
Lauren Deutsch
Chinese footbound “lotus feet” were “sexy” to the men of that place in time. Even the women who had little recourse might report it as sexy if surveyed. I could put my foot in a pitcher of martinis and have an olives and pearl onion anklette for accessory, too. Get real, WOWniks. I’d not send that e mail out as my c’mon headline. That is old school. Were you asleep in the 1980s when the ERA went down in bloddy defeat? (every pun intended). These sculptures (can’t call them shoes, honestly, just because they were attached to feet) screwed up peoples feet, back and made it impossible to run away from a drunken date, not to mention mugger / rapist. Can we get over this and ask ourselves what is really important right now. Take our collective intelligence, capacities to see the big and small pictures, empathy and significant resources and make an impact for the positive in someone’s life.
By Lauren Deutsch on 06/26/2008 2:55 pm
Pamela Munro
I agree with the Southern notion of “setting shoes” - that is shoes that look great on the feet, do wonders for your legs, but are not meant to be stood on for any periods of time - but just dangled on the end of your foot!
By Pamela Munro on 06/26/2008 3:07 pm
Marjorie Sunderman
Most of the gains made by women in the 60’s & 70’s liberation movement are gone, killed by the media. Wearing shoes that are the moral equivalent of Chinese foot binding is just the latest assault on women. In the 20’s mothers who wanted to make their daughters more salable had the bones taken out of the little toes. This achieved long slender feet in fashion at the time. Unfortunately those empty toes migrated to the top of the foot and in time caused the once fashionable woman to be unable to walk.
By Marjorie Sunderman on 06/26/2008 3:13 pm
Vee Dee
Don’t I know it. Being short - 5’2” when young, now, in my dotage, barely over 5’, I always wore heels, and when in style, narrow pointy toes. Now, I have that ugly name “hammer toes.” I’ve had surgery twice, and should have another, but probably won’t. My advice to younger women…don’t be seduced into thinking we have to elongate legs to please. Just feel good about yourself..be clean, well-dressed, and smile a lot. That’s about the sexiest way there is. And, if not, let ‘em go suck an egg!
By Vee Dee on 06/26/2008 5:19 pm
Rho
I used to wear shoes like this when I was working. I wore them all day long, and never got tired wearing them. I also felt better in shoes like that than wearing flat shoes. Now — since I’m retired, I wear flats most of the time. Wish I was still wearing those shoes. Now sometimes my back hurts — it never hurt wearing those shoes.
By Rho on 06/26/2008 7:18 pm
Lisa Solod Warren
I wrote about high heels years ago, humorously, in an anthology entitled France: A Love Story. Check it out at www.lisasolodwarren.com Go to About the Author page, read down, and click where it says about shoes ….published. this is pretty old hat. But the “feminist” comments are pretty funny. I may blog about that.
By Lisa Solod Warren on 06/26/2008 7:42 pm
Judy m.
I had stilleto heels in every color and wore them every day while I taught. If only I had had an inkling of the pain I would suffer from those days of tall sexiness. I think often of how invulnerable we think we are while young. The hard part is when you have to pay the consequences later.
By Judy m. on 06/26/2008 9:15 pm