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Every once in a while, the internet gets together and declares that a perfectly normal aspect of the human anatomy is actually a huge issue. Enter into evidence the " " conversation of the 2010s (reinvented into the "leggings legs" trend of the 2020s) and, recently, the "hip dip" trend that's corroding social media feeds everywhere. It's easy to fall prey to the narrative that your body "should" look a certain way, but experts are here to tell you that (spoiler alert) hip dips are nothing more than ordinary for .

So what hip dips, exactly — and how can you learn to if you have them? Ahead, experts share the 101 on this "trend" — and teach you how to identify BS on your social media feed when you see it. , a psychotherapist and personal trainer, and the founder of Rachel Goldberg Therapy in Studio City, California. , DO, a supervising child and adolescent psychiatrist at , the largest virtual eating disorder treatment nationwide.



"Hip dips are inward curves on the sides of the body just below the hip bones," says psychotherapist and personal trainer , the founder of Rachel Goldberg Therapy in Studio City, California. "They are caused by the shape of the pelvis and how fat and muscle are distributed around that area." To reiterate, this attribute is an anatomical reality, not a flaw.

Criticizing hip dips is like criticizing wrist bones — which is to say, it's absurd; they're caused by your literal skeleton. "It's completely normal for someone to have hip dips," Goldberg s.

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