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Kids In High Heels Stir Parent, Doctor Debate (POLL)

First Posted: 03/18/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 04:10 PM ET

Kids High Heels

BY JAMIE STENGLE, ASSOCIATED PRESS:

DALLAS — A pair of sparkly, peekaboo shoes with heels 2 inches high are favorites of 6-year-old Helena Bell ever since she got them for a wedding.

"She's worn them to the point where the jewels have fallen off," says Helena's mother, Dana Bell of Woodland Hills, Calif. "It's not my preference, but I've stopped fighting it."

The heels aren't allowed at school, but the first-grader slips on her white treasures first thing when she gets home and wears them to church every Sunday. "I think if it's within reason, it's OK," her mom says.

Quick Poll

Kids In High Heels:

Totally inappropriate.

Totally adorable.

As images of 3 1/2-year-old Suri Cruise out and about in blingy heels recently hit magazines and the Internet, reactions to the grown-up look for not-so-old kids have ranged from cries of inappropriate to defense of a little girl's right to be girlie. Suri's mom, Katie Holmes, told Access Hollywood she considers the kitten heels supportive because they were made specifically for kids learning ballroom dancing.

Samantha Fein of San Jose, Calif., says her 6-year-old daughter has attracted some double-edge remarks – "My, look at your big girl shoes" – when she wears her knee-high boots with a 2-inch chunky heel or her brown wedges with only slightly less height. Fein notes that her child wears sneakers 90 percent of the time and heels on special occasions, like birthday parties.

"It's not like I'm sending her to the park in them," she says. "I think there's a time and a place for everything."

The San Francisco Bay area is pretty fashion forward, so it's not unusual to see girls that young wearing heels. Fein says they've helped her daughter learn to walk like a lady. "They're definitely not suggestive at all. Suggestive to me is inappropriate."

The phenom falls in line with other trends in clothing, books, music and movies once reserved for older audiences trickling down the age ladder.

As Christina Vercelletto, senior editor of Parenting magazine, has been putting together the spring fashion edition, she's noticed shoes for girls as young as 5 and 6 sporting heels as high as an inch.

"I am seeing these heeled shoes, shoes that would be considered a little too grown up typically for a girl that age," she says. "I think it's definitely a trend for 5- or 6-year-olds."

In years past, Vercelletto says, heels usually stopped at sizes for 8- or 9-year-olds. She unsuccessfully tried to nab a pair of stacked heel boots that arrived in a bag of hand-me-downs for her own 6-year-old but wasn't quick enough. Now, Vercelletto tries to keep them out of sight in the back of a closet.

"I do feel that it's rushing it a little to put a girl 3 years old in shoes like that," said Vercelletto, among those who fear the physical perils.

Unlike other trends, heels pose physical risks that include a tightening of the heel cord and changes in the growth plate.

Matthew Dairman, a Suffolk, Va., foot and ankle surgeon and a spokesman for the American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons, urges parents to limit wear to once or twice a week for four hours at a stretch – if at all. Another important factor, he says, is difficulty in keeping kids from running, which could make those in heels more susceptible to ankle sprains or broken bones.

"You put a kid in a heel and someone touches them and says tag, they're it – they're off," Dairman says. "Moderation is key."

Michael Penrod, a sales representative for children's footwear with a showroom at Dallas Market Center, a wholesale merchandise marketplace, says adult styles began surfacing in children's footwear a decade ago. While manufacturers do offer heels in sizes small enough to possibly fit a 3-year-old, stores are more likely to carry sizes meant from age 5 and up.

Heels for young girls get mixed reactions from buyers, with more interest from the coasts and bigger department stores.

"In the South, there's still a very traditional store owner that prefers the younger looking silhouettes," he says.

Jennifer Thomas, one of the owners of two Chicago-area children's shoe boutiques called Piggy Toes, says she doesn't carry heels for young girls.

"I just don't think they're age appropriate," says Thomas, who has a 10-year-old daughter she doesn't want to see in them. "As far as the customers, girls for sure love them. Mom usually doesn't want them."

Dr. James W. Brodsky, a Dallas orthopedic surgeon and past president of the American Orthopaedic Foot & Ankle Society, says healthy shoes for kids are similar to healthy shoes for adults – not too high a heel, plenty of width in the toe box, soft natural materials to conform to the shape of the foot and good support.

Dairman does see some value in girls around 12 or so learning to wear heels, when their bones have developed. And while he doesn't think younger girls wearing heels is that widespread, "as kids seem to be aging quicker, it's something that should be addressed."

Lisa Spiegel, a counselor and director of Soho Parenting, a New York City parenting resource center, says worry about kids aging too fast is often on the minds of parents today. She says she hasn't noticed a prevalence of young girls wearing heels but does know parents contending with young girls wanting to wear makeup or dress in too-skimpy clothes.

"We really, really try to help families hold onto their better instincts that kids should be children and not little adults," she says.

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BY JAMIE STENGLE, ASSOCIATED PRESS: DALLAS — A pair of sparkly, peekaboo shoes with heels 2 inches high are favorites of 6-year-old Helena Bell ever since she got them for a wedding. "She's wo...
BY JAMIE STENGLE, ASSOCIATED PRESS: DALLAS — A pair of sparkly, peekaboo shoes with heels 2 inches high are favorites of 6-year-old Helena Bell ever since she got them for a wedding. "She's wo...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PoliticalJunkie65
"Buzzinga!"
06:56 PM on 01/17/2010
My only thought really on this is it's a slippery slope. First these tots are wearing high heals, then makeup (out in public), etc.

They will be made to look "sexy" (only word I could think of quickly) at too young an age...image when they get to their tweens what they will want to wear.

Glad I don't have kids, I would be in over my head with all these decisions.
02:58 PM on 01/17/2010
I really think its dangerous for the child. They should not be out shopping in them! If they have those little dollar store heels and they are just playing dress up in their house thats a different story.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LittleRedHenSez
01:19 PM on 01/17/2010
Wearing heels all the time will definitely reshape her calf muscle and her feet and cause her problems later in life. Cute and to be expected but children shouldn't be wearing them all the time. Mothers should be able to say no.
12:53 PM on 01/17/2010
"LITTLE GIRLS HAVE ALWAYS LOVED TO PLAY DRESS UP. WHEN I WAS A LITTLE GIRL I LOVED TRYING ON MY MOM AND AUNT'S HIGH HEELS. IT IS THE SAME THING."

AS LONG AS THEIR PARENTS DON'T HAVE THEM WEARING HIGH HEELS ALL DAY, IT ISN'T A PROBLEM. (IF THEY WEAR THEM ALL THE TIME, THEY COULD INJURE THEIR FOOT BONES.)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PoliticalJunkie65
"Buzzinga!"
06:53 PM on 01/17/2010
Why are you yelling at us? :-(
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
defdes
09:20 PM on 01/16/2010
"I fail to see how it affects ME!"
Says the blindly indulgent woman who lets her little girl wear high heels. Why don't find this surprising?
Have you read the rest of the posts in this thread? You are clearly out gunned and out brained.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
defdes
09:19 PM on 01/16/2010
"I fail to see how it affects ME!"
Says the blindly indulgent woman who lets her little girl wear high heels. Why don't find this surprising?
Have you read the rest of the posts in this thread? You are clearly out gunned and out brained.
06:56 PM on 01/16/2010
Way too creepy.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
03:07 PM on 01/16/2010
High heels force you to rebalance.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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03:42 PM on 01/15/2010
High heels' effects on your body:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/graphic/2007/05/07/GR2007050700484.html
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03:34 PM on 01/15/2010
I can still see my maternal grandmother's feet, who wore high heeled shoes with tiny little toe boxes her entire life. She couldn't walk barefoot because her achilles tendons were shortened from never having her heels on the ground, and her toes were snaggled and crossed together, the nails nothing but callouses, because the heels kept her feet shoved down into those tight little shoes.

Have a ball, girls!
considerthis
I try my best
12:52 PM on 01/15/2010
oh come one - haven't any of you heard of playing dress up? It's a classic for little girls.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlueinVA
03:11 PM on 01/15/2010
Dress up is one thing. Wearing high heels to church and school is quite another. Thankfully, pre- and elementary schools don't allow high heels, but I see lots of girls
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlueinVA
03:12 PM on 01/15/2010
(the rest of my message was cut off).... as I was saying, I see lots of girls
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlueinVA
11:57 AM on 01/15/2010
Parents need to be parents. These kids can't buy these shoes unless their parents take them to the store and fork out the cash.

My 11--year-old pestered me for 1-2" heels starting around age 6, I said no, and meant it. Finally, for her First Communion, at age 9, I let her get a pair of white patent leather shoes with a about a 1/2" heel. She was over the moon.

Chunky and high heels are completely inappropriate for young, growing feet. As I've told all my kids, if you get everything you want as a kid, what do you have to look forward to as a teenager? I didn't think they were listening until I heard my 18-year-old say the same thing to her 11-year-old sister about a Christmas gift little sis wanted.
07:01 AM on 01/15/2010
>> "Fein says they've helped her daughter learn to walk like a lady."

I don't think one needs heels to learn to walk like a lady. And if you do, maybe you have other issues.
02:56 AM on 01/15/2010
As with many things, considering the issue of "heels" for very young girls in isolation, rather than in the broader context of what a healthy childhood consists of, makes it easy to shrug and say, "what's the harm?" I read Neil Postman's excellent little book, "The Disappearance of Childhood," before my children (both of whom are now adults) were born, and I'm grateful that I had that broader historical frame of reference traced out for me before I was forced to make the sort of "small" judgement calls--today "high heels" for little girls is one such--that in sum do indeed shape a child's world. Childhood is eroding at an alarming rate, and I urge Postman's book for anyone, parent or not, who finds him- or herself wondering if childhood per se is worth preserving. At a recent party, my older son was asked what sort of catch phrases of mine he remembers from when he was younger. He replied that, second only to "people in hell want ice water," was "childhood is short, adulthood is long." I have Postman to thank for the starch in my spine it took to take that position and make it stick..
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
01:30 AM on 01/15/2010
Gotta start em early to get bad feet, keep em in their place and keep em buying.

Sad really.