Falling Head Over Heels
Grazia UK
|Issue 646
Terri White never wears flats – even when hiking in LA. Why? Because heels help her stand tall, and not just in the literal sense
THE DOCTOR LOOKED WORRIED. Which, in turn, made me worried. She held my x-ray up to the light, peering harder. ‘Nope,’ she sighed. ‘Still can’t.’ ‘Um, hello!’ I said. ‘Can’t what?’ And she started her sentence that way that you never want a doctor to start their sentence. ‘I think I need a specialist to look at this. It’s really weird, but...’ My heart started beating a little faster. ‘…the bones of your feet are too close together – I can’t read your X-ray. Er, what have you done to them?’
The shrug I lightly offered in reply didn’t tell the whole story. You see, I knew exactly what I’d done to them. I had worn high-heeled shoes nearly every day for 21 years by that point. I had specifically worn too-narrow, too-small, too-high high heeled shoes for 21 years. I had, I will now confess, shrunk my feet by two sizes (I was a size five at 18. I’m now a size three). And now, it’s time to tell you the whole story. Not just of how I crushed my own feet, but of how my love affair with shoes – like any great love affair – has brought me the greatest highs and lows I've ever known. But let’s start at the beginning. High heels came into my life at the age of 11, after a last-minute expedition to the precinct to buy a pair of school shoes. Rack after rack lay bare, with just one row of shoes left. They were my size, with a three-inch heel. My mum, only 18 years my senior at 29, held them aloft, proudly. She loved a heel too. So, when I clambered on to the bus next morning, with my too-big uniform and my too-tight perm, they were on my feet.
This story is from the Issue 646 edition of Grazia UK.
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