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excerpt
from:
Waist
Land
by
Jean Godfrey-June
Despite
appearances, the bodacious Brazilians spilling from their bikinis
like so much steam from a cafe con leche this season aren't all
T&A. Designers have picked up on a fact that scientists can't stop
studying: It's all about the waist. Males, their stated preferences
for breasts, legs, et cetera notwithstanding, are all actually waist
men, the studies show. When scientists digitally alter photographs
of models, the ideally waisted versions win out over everything
else: digital boob jobs, elongated legs, liposuctioned, thighs.
Accordingly, at fall collections from Celine to Chloe to Donna Karan,
waists were cinched, belted and even, at Michael Kors, encircled
with diamonds in maximalist ode to the tennis bracelet. There were
Gucci belts like double locks, in red with thick beige stripes;
wild Fendi metallic belts; big belts with chains, outsize buckles
and thick stripes (horizontal!).
"The focus on
the waist is about a return to femininity, about an appreciation
of the feminine form," declares Karan, who belted thick black cashmere
coats with whippet thin lashes of leather.
Scientists are
far more exacting than fashionistas when it comes to the waist,
having discovered the waist-to-hip ratio, an odd mathematical reality
that governs the rules of attraction to a rather startling degree:
Women who score around .7 (their waists are 70 percent the size
of their hips) are invariably rated as more attractive by men, no
matter what the culture. Twiggy, Marilyn Monroe, Kate Moss, Sophia
Loren, and the Venus de Milo all have ratios around .7. Such a ratio,
scientists say, signals fertility. As women age, their waists thicken
at about the time their fertility declines.
At the same
time, plastic surgeons are reporting a surge in what John E. Sherman,
M.D. of Cornell medical school in New York City, terms "abdominal
body-sculpting procedures."
"Two or three
years ago, the majority of the liposuctions we were doing involved
the lateral thighs, otherwise known as saddlebags," Sherman says.
"These days, it's the stomach, the back of the waist - even, for
heavier patients, that little roll under the bra line."
Surprisingly,
the waist-defining plastic surgery of choice is liposuction, rather
than the traditional "tummy tuck," which Sherman says is a much
more complicated procedure, involving general anesthesia, greater
scarring, and much longer recovery times.
"Tummy tucks
are really now only for people who've lost a great deal of weight
and have a problem with extra skin, or those who have a muscular
problem- women who've have babies several kids and stretched out
their muscles to a point where exercise can't do much," he says.
"Liposuction makes more sense for most people. We'll do an abdominal
liposuction on someone on Friday, and she's back at work in the
middle of the next week, sometimes even on Monday."
Nonetheless,
a renewed program of crunches at the gym with the likes of Linda
Santos - one of the team of elite trainers in New York's Equinox
Fitness Clubs who are known for whipping models, rock stars, CEO's,
Internet gurus, and finance wizards alike into bikini-perfect shape
in record time- is definitely in order. Like Sherman, Santos hears
a lot from her clients about their stomachs. "When women come in,
they prioritize two areas, the waist and the lower body," she says.
What she tells them is that they can get beautifully toned muscles
- but that without cardiovascular exercise and diet changes, no
one will ever be able to see them.
Of course, she
- and any other decent trainer on the planet - has a simple prescription
for achieving that critical .7 measurement: (A) Eat less; (B) exercise
more; (C) sure, you can do crunches, but the only real route to
a flat stomach is to lose fat, period; (D) accept your body, and
stop obsessing.
"Twenty-eight
percent fat?" As in practically one third of my entire body? Isn't
80 percent of your body supposed to be water? Perhaps fat has water
in it. Even so, between non-negotiables like bones and hair, there
isn't a lot of room for much else. Twenty-eight percent of me is
nothing but fat. A double-clasped belt is going to make me look
like a giant ant.
It turns out
the ideal ratio is around 18 percent fat (depending on your age),
so I'm 10 percent off. Which doesn't sound so bad, except for the
look of pure horror that's still flickering behind Santos's brave
smile. "We have a lot of work to do" is all she says.
Of course, for
those - such as myself - who've had the "several kids" Sherman so
casually refers to, six-times-a-week workouts involve a completely
unrealistic time commitment (for that matter, so does the tummy
tuck). And while a friend of mine claims that every woman he knows
who's had a baby has ended up with a better body ("Curvier but thinner!
More defined!" he insists), there is one area of the body that pregnancy
absolutely does not improve, and that would be the waist. "Yes,
your stomach can stretch out," says Sherman, "though it certainly
doesn't happen to everyone."
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