The Downside of Huge Boobs : Back Pain

The “norm” in American society is for men to like women with large breasts, right?  Well, it’s probably a mixed bag, but that’s certainly the impression most women have, which shows in the fact that thousands of women a year get breast implants to make their breasts bigger in hopes of attracting more male and female attention and envy.  But do women ever really consider what it’s like to be on the flip side of small breast sizes, where the breasts are so big that they almost get in the way, and actually can go so far as to cause pain and back problems?

There are a few celebrities we know of that have had breast reductions, and have loved the results.  Lots of women who have smaller breasts and always wanted to have bigger ones, feel envious of women with larger breasts because they think they get a lot of male attention, they can fill out their clothes better and they just look more feminine, but women with those naturally large breasts tend to find that they are on the side of wanting smaller ones so they don’t need to literally carry around the burden of large boobs.

Large breasts, in the D cup arena, are notorious for causing back pain, and are often the primary reason cited in breast reduction operations by the women that seek them.  Heck, even some women who have gotten breast implants the size of say a Pamela Anderson double D cup, have asked for reductions because they couldn’t work out the same, couldn’t walk around for long periods of time without excrutiating back pain, and almost feel as if their large breasts are a curse rather than a “sexy” blessing.

Not only that, women with extremely large breasts often feel they are not taken as seriously by colleagues, and they may be right.  They feel as if their breasts are something they’d like to hide as tastefully as possible so that people will look them in the eyes rather than at their chest when they are speaking, and they will get the professional and personal respect they deserve.  This tends to happen a lot with women in the professional arena who work in an office environment and would like to have the most respect they can from male and female coworkers.   

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