Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The more you don’t wear a bra, the saggier they get. Get a breast reduction if you don’t want to wear a bra
This is correct. After two kids, DW had a lift. The surgeon recommended wearing a bra as much as possible to counter the effects of gravity.
As a man, I far prefer boobs with a little/or more sag.
This is very gratifying to hear.
I am the PP who posted regarding the lift. In true DCUM fashion, there seems to be a subtle, snarky tone of disapproval to the subsequent posts. I'll say this, DW is an athlete who had to wear two bras after childbirth when participating in sports due to the sag. Her lift was for functional reasons, not aesthetic. I don't question her choice one bit and neither should anyone else.
Wow, defensive much? Was it paid for by insurance as medically necessary? If not, it was about form more than function.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Low saggy breasts are one thing...
But no man would ever be offended by a nipple. Only women are.
I say do whatever is most comfortable to keep breasts from dropping and flopping in public, without regard to visible nipple. A light wireless bra should be fine for C cup and comfortable
The problem is not men being offended. It is gross old married men getting aroused. that is why I wear a bra even though my breasts are small. men are gross.
Until you see one you want to sleep with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's so tiresome when younger generations think they are the first one with an idea and have no concept of where we've been as a culture.
OP, we've done this before. Google 1960s bra-burning feminism. Maybe it'll catch on the second time around. But the first time, the backlash was strong and the pendulum swung back again, giving us icons of "feminine power" like.... Paris Hilton... and Kim Kardashian...and Cardi B. Do we have to go through all this again?
Bra burning literally never happened in the 60s. It was a myth, perpetrated by the anti-feminist, woman shaming culture that makes up the mainstream United States. So basically, exactly the same cultural shame that's rife on this thread.
Ladies - listen to yourselves and actually think about what you're saying, and question WHY you have such visceral reactions to women not wearing bras.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Low saggy breasts are one thing...
But no man would ever be offended by a nipple. Only women are.
I say do whatever is most comfortable to keep breasts from dropping and flopping in public, without regard to visible nipple. A light wireless bra should be fine for C cup and comfortable
The problem is not men being offended. It is gross old married men getting aroused. that is why I wear a bra even though my breasts are small. men are gross.
Anonymous wrote:Low saggy breasts are one thing...
But no man would ever be offended by a nipple. Only women are.
I say do whatever is most comfortable to keep breasts from dropping and flopping in public, without regard to visible nipple. A light wireless bra should be fine for C cup and comfortable
Anonymous wrote:does anyone remember the fake nipples from Sex and the City?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ahem. I think a lot of people want to see breasts jiggling. And nipples.
Sure but those people stare and are creepy.
And are everyone single man. Some may be polite enough not to stare. No man has ever been offended by a nipple
Anonymous wrote:It's so tiresome when younger generations think they are the first one with an idea and have no concept of where we've been as a culture.
OP, we've done this before. Google 1960s bra-burning feminism. Maybe it'll catch on the second time around. But the first time, the backlash was strong and the pendulum swung back again, giving us icons of "feminine power" like.... Paris Hilton... and Kim Kardashian...and Cardi B. Do we have to go through all this again?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The more you don’t wear a bra, the saggier they get. Get a breast reduction if you don’t want to wear a bra
This is correct. After two kids, DW had a lift. The surgeon recommended wearing a bra as much as possible to counter the effects of gravity.
As a man, I far prefer boobs with a little/or more sag.
This is very gratifying to hear.
I am the PP who posted regarding the lift. In true DCUM fashion, there seems to be a subtle, snarky tone of disapproval to the subsequent posts. I'll say this, DW is an athlete who had to wear two bras after childbirth when participating in sports due to the sag. Her lift was for functional reasons, not aesthetic. I don't question her choice one bit and neither should anyone else.
Wow, defensive much? Was it paid for by insurance as medically necessary? If not, it was about form more than function.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Breast tissue can creep into your side and back if you don’t wear a bra. Then you have issues if you get breast cancer.
Wear a bra, ladies.
Yes. You can fight the pit tit by bending forward when putting your bra on.
You guys are making this up, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The more you don’t wear a bra, the saggier they get. Get a breast reduction if you don’t want to wear a bra
This is correct. After two kids, DW had a lift. The surgeon recommended wearing a bra as much as possible to counter the effects of gravity.
As a man, I far prefer boobs with a little/or more sag.
This is very gratifying to hear.
I am the PP who posted regarding the lift. In true DCUM fashion, there seems to be a subtle, snarky tone of disapproval to the subsequent posts. I'll say this, DW is an athlete who had to wear two bras after childbirth when participating in sports due to the sag. Her lift was for functional reasons, not aesthetic. I don't question her choice one bit and neither should anyone else.