Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband wouldn't want me to have elective, unnecessary surgery either.
Same
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old is your youngest kid? I think you both have excellent reasons to do or not do the surgery. His are more sound but it’s your body and if you feel it’s important, work on giving him enough information to feel it’s a safe procedure. Although I will say I appreciate is POV and acceptance of your body. My DH would like me to get a breast lift or even implants postpartum and it annoys me. Having children changed them and I wish he made me feel comfortable about the change. I’m on the fence about a breast lift - against implants because of reports of autoimmune issues.
Youngest is 1.5. Nursed both him and his brother for 1 year each.
DP, Your breasts aren’t done recovering if you only weaned 6 months ago. Mine were sad little skin flaps when I weaned, the fullness came back over time. I think you should give your body more time before you worry about any cosmetic procedures, especially surgical ones.
Anonymous wrote:How old is your youngest kid? I think you both have excellent reasons to do or not do the surgery. His are more sound but it’s your body and if you feel it’s important, work on giving him enough information to feel it’s a safe procedure. Although I will say I appreciate is POV and acceptance of your body. My DH would like me to get a breast lift or even implants postpartum and it annoys me. Having children changed them and I wish he made me feel comfortable about the change. I’m on the fence about a breast lift - against implants because of reports of autoimmune issues.
Anonymous wrote:For a supposedly liberal and woman forward website, the number of people saying that OP should not get the surgery if her husband is happy with her breast is deeply concerning.
Anonymous wrote:OP, my husband is also not entirely supportive (but also not totally opposed) to the mommy makeover I'm interested in. I want a lift, small implant, and TT after having 2 kids. He also cites safety as the primary reason.
But, define "elective." So, if someone plays sports their whole lives, needs 2-3 surgeries to repair knees, hands, and ankles, etc., at what point are those surgeries "elective" versus necessary? If someone has weight loss surgery and wants the excess skin removed, who draws that line between what's necessary and what "elective"?
Define "vain" (or "aging gracefully" for that matter). It's not about looking good for others. It's about being proud of the body that you're in and not wanting to live the next 30-40 years upset about the post-partum effects. No one says someone working out 3-4x per week is vain. But if they want surgery to fix the parts that d/e can't, then that's vain? Makes no sense to me.
My point is that I think all these terms - elective, necessary, vain - are really self-serving and fail to grasp the complexity of these decisions.
I think you do the surgery.
Anonymous wrote:For a supposedly liberal and woman forward website, the number of people saying that OP should not get the surgery if her husband is happy with her breast is deeply concerning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's an unnecessary surgery for vanity purposes. I would not want me or my spouse to get it either.
While it's agree it's your body...what does it matter what your breasts look like as long as your DH is happy? Who else needs be looking at, judging, and liking your breasts?
It’s how I like to look. Not to brag but I had pretty great 38DD breasts. Not so much now.
So you desire more attention. Got it
I desire to feel comfortable in my own body. I don’t like the way I look naked and that’s a problem for me. Call me vain but it’s the truth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's an unnecessary surgery for vanity purposes. I would not want me or my spouse to get it either.
While it's agree it's your body...what does it matter what your breasts look like as long as your DH is happy? Who else needs be looking at, judging, and liking your breasts?
Huh? I like my body to look good for me, not for others.
Anonymous wrote:For a supposedly liberal and woman forward website, the number of people saying that OP should not get the surgery if her husband is happy with her breast is deeply concerning.
Anonymous wrote:OP, my husband is also not entirely supportive (but also not totally opposed) to the mommy makeover I'm interested in. I want a lift, small implant, and TT after having 2 kids. He also cites safety as the primary reason.
But, define "elective." So, if someone plays sports their whole lives, needs 2-3 surgeries to repair knees, hands, and ankles, etc., at what point are those surgeries "elective" versus necessary? If someone has weight loss surgery and wants the excess skin removed, who draws that line between what's necessary and what "elective"?
Define "vain" (or "aging gracefully" for that matter). It's not about looking good for others. It's about being proud of the body that you're in and not wanting to live the next 30-40 years upset about the post-partum effects. No one says someone working out 3-4x per week is vain. But if they want surgery to fix the parts that d/e can't, then that's vain? Makes no sense to me.
My point is that I think all these terms - elective, necessary, vain - are really self-serving and fail to grasp the complexity of these decisions.
I think you do the surgery.