The Myth of the “Problem Body”
- Posted on January 9, 2026
A common explanation given for male attention, lust, and even sexual harm is that certain female body parts “cause” it. The logic is familiar: men are visual, therefore women with noticeable curves—especially breasts or buttocks—must cover themselves to prevent male desire. This explanation is not only false, it collapses under even minimal scrutiny.
First, attraction is not universal or mechanical. Men do not all desire the same body type, fixate on the same features, or respond predictably to anatomy. If they did, women without exaggerated curves would be largely invisible. Yet many women—including myself—receive frequent compliments on sex appeal from both men and women despite not having a large butt or large breasts. This reality alone disproves the claim that specific body parts are the cause of attraction.
Second, human beings are visual by nature—all of them. Men notice women. Women notice men. Women notice other women. Visual awareness is not inherently sexual, nor does it automatically lead to desire, lust, or loss of self-control. Noticing a body is a neutral human function, not a moral failure. Treating perception itself as sinful confuses awareness with intent and responsibility.
Third, modesty culture wrongly assumes that attention originates in the body rather than in the observer. But attention does not disappear when bodies are covered. People notice faces, voices, movement, confidence, energy, and presence. Attraction is holistic and interpretive, not anatomical. This is why regulating women’s clothing has never eliminated desire, harassment, or abuse—it merely relocates blame.
Fourth, reducing attraction to anatomy creates a dangerous moral framework. It teaches that women are responsible for managing other people’s thoughts and actions, while men are excused as helplessly reactive. This narrative lowers moral expectations for men and places impossible burdens on women. It also creates the illusion that safety can be achieved through compliance, rather than through accountability.
Finally, this myth distorts the concept of lust itself. Lust is not the act of seeing. Lust is not noticing beauty. Lust involves desire detached from respect, agency, and self-control. When the church treats the female body as the trigger for lust, it misidentifies the problem and protects entitlement rather than confronting it.
The truth is simple: bodies do not cause harm. People make choices. Attraction does not erase responsibility. Self-control is not optional morality. Any framework—religious or cultural—that places blame on women’s bodies instead of human behavior is not protecting holiness; it is excusing injustice.