Cankles and Hip Dips: How Bullshit Buzzwords Are Weaponized to Make Women Feel Defective

And how corporations manufacture insecurities to profit from “fixing” them

Stephanie Leguichard
6 min readApr 1, 2022
Photo by Graphic Node on Unsplash

This piece was originally published in the now-defunct and sorely missed Wear Your Voice Magazine in January of 2020.

In our culture, we’re constantly bombarded with the idea that any degree of “excess” fat or signs of aging are pathological and shameful. Fortunately, it’s become a bit more popular lately to call out blatant ageism and fatphobia. But it’s easy to overlook how deeply embedded these biases are in our language, particularly in the form of increasingly popular buzzwords such as cankles, crow’s feet, hip dips, (lack of a) thigh gap, gummy smiles, laugh lines, bunny lines, etc.

These buzzwords are often popularized by corporations and social media marketers (or “influencers”) who invent “flaws” that they can then “treat.” The mere existence of these ridiculous terms causes (mostly) women to internalize the idea that these completely natural and inevitable phenomena make them defective.

Although people often assume that women have been insecure about “problems” like thigh gaps and hip dips since time immemorial, many of these insecurities have been manufactured only more recently.

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Stephanie Leguichard

Writer, editor, leftist activist. Endlessly fascinated by the complexities of human minds and cultures. Completing my MA in Anthropology. sleguichard@gmail.com