Booty trapped: When the butt is the main focus

Honestly, I wasn’t going to talk about this until later, but this “butt study” (can you believe it, a butt study?!) crossed my desk and with it surged all kinds of thoughts about how I’ve viewed my heiny over the years.

I grew up in the era (or maybe it’s always the era?), where it was common to hear men say, “I’m a butt man” or “I’m a leg man” or whatever female body part was being singled out. But it seems the butt was a particular favorite… and according to this study, it apparently still is.

Recent research published in Aesthetic Plastic Surgery took a deep dive, quite literally, into visual attention patterns related to the female butt. Using advanced eye-tracking technology, researchers analyzed the subconscious gaze behavior in 67 straight men and women.

The data revealed that both men and women spent the most time looking at the “intergluteal cleft” (that’s the butt crack), though men lingered slightly longer. However, beyond this shared focus, women tended to spend more time examining the upper lateral buttock, the part of the butt that adds roundness, and also where the curve of the back meets the glutes. Men were more drawn to the hip dip – where the hip bone meets the thigh. This suggests that while the butt crack captures attention first, men and women then have, ahem, different points of interest.  

From a clinical perspective, I understand why this study was done as the findings hold implications for plastic surgery. What do people want? The study points out that as demand for butt augmentation procedures continue to rise, plastic surgeons need to understand these subconscious preferences. 

Given that, it’s clear that our idea of beauty arises from society’s standards rather than our own – and the pressures persist, perhaps more than ever with the pervasive reach of social media. Personally, I remember countless moments spent in front of the mirror, turning sideways to gauge the ‘hang’ of my butt (I’ll spare you an image of this). Over the years, depending on the intensity of exercise I was doing, the “hang” would be more or less … yet, I was always very conscious of how I thought it appeared. I’d buy clothes based on whether it made my butt “look big” or accentuated my curves.

Just so there’s no confusion, this is not my butt.

I know, I know—a lot of us have done this. Yet I want to be honest: this was just another way my feelings of inadequacy showed up about my body… and the more inadequate I felt, the more I cared. I have to say that this was another sneaky shame piece that didn’t surface until I saw this study. In the grand pecking order of concerns today, my butt is the least of it. 

As you know, through this series, I’m working hard to UNshame my body and break free from the relentless self-surveillance. However, back in the day, regarding my heiny, I was on high alert. Every reflection, every fitting room, every full-figured photo –there was a running mental tally of whether my butt was too flat, too round, too something.  

There you go – this week’s confession and one more layer peeled off my body UNshaming assignment. What are your thoughts about this piece? Do you recognize some of these same patterns? Drop down to the comments section and let me know.

With Love,
Becca

Leave a Comment