| Between the ages of
four to seven, the foot binding process occurred, and young girls would
have to sit as a strip of bandage ten feet long and two inches wide was
wrapped tightly around the foot. The four small toes were broken
and bent under the sole. The arch of the foot was indented to make
the foot appear smaller, a symbol of beauty and wealth. The
bandage was tightened each day and a girl's foot was put into smaller and
smaller shoes until the desired three-inch feet were formed. The
process took two years, and by the time it was finished, the foot was
useless for walking.

The foot binding ceremony usually took place in the
presence of the girl's mother, grandmother, and sometimes her aunts.
After two or three years of this binding, the girl's feet could fit into
the three-inch shoes called "lotus shoes," which were
decorated with silk linings and embroideries. For upperclass women, leisure
time was spent making these lotus shoes, and the embroidery often told a
story. The most popular symbol was the lotus flower, a symbol of
balance and fertility. These lotus shoes were known as "gong
xie" in chinese.
In the Chinese culture, a
woman could not get
married unless her foot was bound. Oftentimes a woman's value was
measured by the size of her feet. Bound feet also became a symbol
of chasity, for once a woman's feet were properly bound, she would
never be able to walk again on her own. If she wasn't carried,
then the woman would have to resort to crawling on her hands and knees.

Lotus shoes were never taken off, even when the
woman slept. It was not uncommon for a woman's feet to get
gangrene, or even cause the woman to be paralyzed. Sometimes toes
would fall off from the constriction.
A woman's beauty was measured by the size of her
feet. The Chinese culture subscribed to a matchmaking process in
the interests of marriage, and matchmakers would want to know how big a
girls feet were. A badly bound foot was a sign of
laziness.
When a woman would walk, she had to do it with her weight
distributed on her heels, causing the muscles of the vagina to
tighten. Chinese men claimed that
having sex with a woman with bound feet was like having sex with a
virgin.
Today, some women did have, or still have bound
feet. In a study of osteoporosis in China by the
UCSF, it was
found that about 18 percent of the women in the 70s age group, and 38
percent of women in the 80s age group from the sample had footbinding
deformities. Women with bound feet fall prey to lower hip and
spine bone density, rendering them more prone to hip and spine
fractures. The practice was banned in 1911 under the new Chinese
Republic, but this followed hundreds of years of binding.

Bound Little Girl http://www.sfmuseum.org/chin/foot.html
Lotus Shoe http://www.crowmagazine.com/footbind.htm
Bio of Footbinding http://www.crowmagazine.com/footbind.htm
Girl Being Carried
http://www.sfmuseum.org/chin/foot.html
Side View of Foot
http://library.thinkquest.org/J0111742/footbinding.htm
Front View of Foot http://acc6.its.brooklyn.cuny.edu/~phalsall/images/bndfeet2.gif
Corsets and the Effects of the Wasp Waist

A corset is a garment worn around the waist to
make it appear smaller. The first incident of a group wearing
corsets is as early as 1700B.C. Minoan men and women wore them, as
well as people of Crete, Egypt, Rome, Greece, and Assyria. Women
of ancient Greece and Rome wore corsets that pulled the waist, as well
as everything from the hip to collarbone, in.
During the 16th Century, a time when women's
garments were heavier and wider, a smaller waist meant more wealth and
higher rank. Corsets remained a fashion and status symbol
straight into the 19th Century and were very popular in England and the
United States.

Corsets were introduced to girls at the age
of fourteen, and after years of pulling tighter and tighter, as the
waist was expected to be 18-19 inches around, several internal organs
were dislocated.
Corsets constricted the lungs and heart, put pressure on
the liver, pushed the stomach up, squeezed the small intestines and
bowels, and compressed the bladder.

The most devastating damage was done to the lungs
and rib cage. The corset caused the lower ribs of the ribcage,
which naturally have a space between the two sides, to come together
from either side, possibly causing the two sides of the ribcage to
overlap.
A woman who wore a corset could not sit down
straight, fainted easily, had heart ailments and digestion problems, and
had complications during childbirth due to organ failure.

Lady with Corset http://library.thinkquest.org/J0111742/corsetspage.htm?tqskip1=1&tqtime=0411
Sitting Lady
http://library.thinkquest.org/J0111742/corsetspage.htm?tqskip1=1&tqtime=0411
Bio of Corset
http://library.thinkquest.org/J0111742/corsetspage.htm?tqskip1=1&tqtime=0411
Corset Add http://library.thinkquest.org/J0111742/corsetspage.htm?tqskip1=1&tqtime=0411
Ringed Neck Stretching Among the Padaung

The Padaung are a tribe
found in Burma, and one of their traditions causes an alteration to the
anatomy of the female body. They use a series of neck rings to
push down their shoulders, making them appear longer.
A young girl receives her first ring at about the
age of five, and as she grows, rings are added.

These rings are symbols of wealth within a
family. A long neck was one of the ways that a woman could attract
a husband among the Padaung. The neck rings caused the stretching
of the vertebrae in the neck.

Women whose necks have been stretched by these
rings have very poor balance. If
these rings were removed, and there was no one to hold up a woman's
neck, then she would suffocate to death.
Today Padaung women do not all have neck
rings. Those who do have them usually do it for commercial
reasons, raising as a tourist attraction.

These types of body alterations were usually done
as status symbols, and many cultures have done other similar types of
body alterations. Once these alterations are done, there is no
turning back. The bones, organs, and muscles that have been
altered cannot support themselves naturally, and depend on the support
of the device, such as the lotus shoe, corset, or neck rings.
Removing these support systems cannot reduce the damage done, and in
some cases is dangerous, as with the Padaung women of Burma.
Neckstretching of Two Girls http://library.thinkquest.org/J0111742/neckstretching.htm?tqskip1=1&tqtime=0411
Padaung Woman
http://library.thinkquest.org/J0111742/neckstretching.htm?tqskip1=1&tqtime=0411
Neck X-ray
http://library.thinkquest.org/J0111742/neckstretching.htm?tqskip1=1&tqtime=0411
Tourist Rings
http://library.thinkquest.org/J0111742/neckstretching.htm?tqskip1=1&tqtime=0411
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