Those “two dimples” in the lower back are commonly called “dimples of Venus” (or sacral dimples). They are simply a normal anatomical feature, not a medical sign of health, disease, or personality.
They relate to small indentations over the posterior superior iliac spines—points where skin is tethered more tightly to the pelvis.
🧠 What they actually mean
✔️ 1. Normal body variation
- Completely natural anatomical trait
- Some people have them, others don’t
- More visible in leaner individuals
🧬 2. Genetics + body structure
- Determined by how skin connects to pelvic bones
- Often hereditary
💪 3. Sometimes associated with low body fat visibility (but not cause)
- They can appear more noticeable when there’s less fat covering the area
- But they are not caused by fitness or exercise
❌ Common myths (not true)
- They do NOT indicate fertility
- They do NOT show “good circulation”
- They do NOT reflect personality or attractiveness scientifically
- They are NOT a sign of disease in healthy adults
🚨 Important medical note
There is a different condition called a sacral dimple in newborns, which doctors sometimes examine. But in adults, the visible lower-back dimples are:
- harmless
- structural
- not medically concerning
💡 Bottom line
Lower back dimples are just a normal anatomical feature caused by bone and skin structure, not a health indicator or special body signal.
If you want, I can explain other common body “myths” (like veins, nail marks, or skin lines) that people often misinterpret online.