Deborah Harrell wrote:
Gary Denton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


I hate fake boobs.  Some members on the female side
of my family have
also had breat reduction surgery and they are
happier and I think look better.


Since no woman has perspected (at least a few pages
ahead - I haven't looked at all mail inbetween; Julia
has quite a bit on her plate, what with the little
tykes sick and all):

I hadn't chimed in yet.

I was a B cup by the end of high school, and that was more than I really liked, actually. But I wasn't concerned about my looks as much as utility, and having this extra stuff on my chest was inconvenient at times.

I was a large B in my mid-to-late 20s. I started working out on a Bowflex sometime in 1999 or so, and ended up as a definite C before I got pregnant. At this point, the muscles were keeping things up and I was used to them, so this was OK. (And I'd figured out how to package them for best effect by this time, as well....)

Then I got pregnant. By the time I gave birth for the first time, I was a DD. Then I was nursing, and I haven't had them measured for cup size or anything lately, but in the Bravado nursing bras, I was a S++ until I was close to weaning Sam. Then I got pregnant again, and went through the whole DD sports bra thing again - but I had to get a couple of bigger bras, even, because the previous band size just wasn't quite cutting it. (My rib cage expanded a bit, and I'd been at the loosest option on some of those bras.) Nursing twins for awhile, the S++ nursing bras were a little tight at times, but they're down to nursing just once a day now, so things are a little droopy in those bras. And I need to hit the Bowflex regularly again -- that may help. (I have developed certain upper-body muscles from all the child-lifting I do, but the ones that help my breasts aren't in the most targeted group.)

I need all new bras now, but I don't want to do much of anything along those lines until I have the twins weaned. And I think that's going to be another month or two. And the timing of the daily feeding isn't conducive to easily cutting it out. Slowly moving it to another time is going to be difficult, as well, but that's what it may take.

        Julia

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