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angela mollard 380x213 Whats with all the breast implants?

Angela Mollard

In the interests of research, I once squeezed a woman’s breasts. Yep, a full-on fondle – with both hands – up under her pink bra. Well, that got your attention, didn’t it? Hi, fellas!

I’d been sent to a lap-dancing club by an editor keen to stroke, sorry, stoke the usual media outrage that occurs whenever a sexual establishment sets up in suburbia.

But far more interesting than the girls getting their kit off for a bunch of bankers (honestly, they were happily coining it) was their bodies. Or, more specifically, their breasts. Because, while I’d been cruising through the ’90s thinking shoulder pads were the most offensive blight on my generation, a score of women had been secretly upholstering their boobs so they were as plumped and shiny as the vinyl seats on a Ford Escort.

Anyway, Debbie let me have a good squish. Well, as much as you can squish a rock in a sock. She said her new breasts made her feel “empowered”. Certainly, the stash of notes in her garter was proof of a worthy investment.

Fifteen years on, I’m seeing Debbie’s boobs everywhere. They’ve spilled out of strip clubs and into our supermarkets and family beaches. I surf with a mother-of-three who works a Lara Croft look in her wetsuit.

I’m not in the business of telling other women what to do with their bodies. Not usually. Tatts, piercings, extensions – go for it, sister. But hacking into your boobs is different. As author Caitlin Moran writes, “Are the men doing it?” Men aren’t bolstering their penises with banana-shaped implants, so why are we butchering our beautiful breasts and stuffing them full of sofa-grade silicone? How did the skyward-nippled, cantilevered coconut look get so popular? And who likes these taut, angry, veiny, unyielding bazookas anyway? Aren’t there enough ball sports?

Let me be clear, I’m not talking about post-mastectomy surgery. No, I’m concerned about the 21-year-olds who, instead of saving for a car, are working overtime for a D-cup. These girls aren’t vain, stupid or bullied by their boyfriends; rather, they were raised in a culture where the celebrated female aesthetic of big boobs atop a tiny torso has burst out of the porn industry and into the mainstream. And while nature rarely bequeaths such a combination, science has given us the means to achieve it and society has given its say-so. Why? Because, apparently, we’re worth it.

Some facts: aside from the PIP scandal where 40,000 women were stitched up with industrial silicone, breast implants have a shelf life. Most last 10 years before they shrink, move, harden or leak and you need new ones. Imagine major surgery, risk of infection, general anaesthetic, scarring – not to mention the cost – five or six times during your life. How did we become so scalpel happy?

Oh dear, I’ve gone all finger waggy. Girls, we’ve been peddled a lie by an increasingly sexualised society. And only we can change it. Boys may bang on about boobs but men – good men – don’t care. And some are scared witless by a pair of manufactured melons.

If you’re doing it for confidence, then think less about how you can acquire it and more about why you lack it. As my A-cupped friend says, “Women drivel on about needing bigger breasts to feel empowered. A bigger intellect will do that. And a nice blow-dry.”

Confidence built on artifice will crumble. Remember, our bodies are where and how we live; they’re the only thing we truly own.

Angela Mollard is a Sydney-based journalist who has now combined motherhood with writing for magazines both in Australia and the UK. You can follow her on Twitter here.

This article was originally published on The Punch here and has been republished with full permission from the author.

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212 Comments so far

  1. Mumintheburbs

    I used to think I might get my boobs done one day, but after having 3 caesareans I wouldn’t consider having surgery that wasn’t medically necessary, basically because recovering from surgery sucks.
    Also while I was breastfeeding I went from an A cup to a D cup and I found big boobs to be more of a burden than fun. (people constantly talking to your cleavage, tops look more revealing on bigger boobs, going running is painful etc)
    A few of my friends have had theirs done which is good for them, but it does irk me that there’s such a cultural expectation to have big boobs on a tiny frame and that anything else is abnormal.

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    • freemel

      had the same problem with the A cup to F cup pregnancy-enhanced clevage… I used a word starting with f when my milk came in too – frightening! Husband was quite impressed, but I was so relieved when each of my pregnancies were over. It certainly did not make me wish to have a permanently larger cleavage, and I am happy to have what suits the rest of my body!

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  2. Sammie

    I have always wanted new boobs. My boobies look like pasties from the side (the top is like a ski slope, with all the boob underneath – even in a bra)
    I’ve never had ‘perky’ boobs. I don’t want stripper boobs, I’d just like them to sit in a bra properly – you know, with the underwire actually touching where my boob meets my chest, not further down from there. Oh, my boobs aren’t small either. I’d be happy with littler boobs, or with better shaped boobs. Either or :-)

    On a side note, why are maternity bras the most unsupportive bras ever created? This is when I need MORE support, not less!

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    • Victoria

      (Re: maternity bras) Ugh, totally! I feel like I’m forever buying new bras, searching for something supportive. Any tips ladies?

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    • Papaya

      I wear sports bras! double layer elastic.. the most supportive i’ve had on my chest by far

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      • Sammie

        Do you have to take the whole thing off to breastfeed? Or are there maternity sports bras?

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        • Papaya

          nope! I pull it down. very stretchy. I improvise a lot.
          they also have the option for crossing over at the back for more support which is good. the only thing I have in my drawer are sports bras now

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  3. jingwen

    As a woman with F/G breasts, my usual response to any of my girlfriends declaring that they want breast implants is: “Please, just take some of mine. Then I won’t have chronic back pain, and you’ll have some boobs”.

    I couldn’t care less if someone wants to get breast implants…I just hope that they’ve considered all the physical, emotional, mental, financial, whatever effects of going through with such surgery.

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  4. caris

    Why do young women want breast implants? I’ll tell you why I used to dream of them!

    I endured comments as a teen about being flat chested from both boys and girls (I had a small B cup). Then the concept of ‘real women’ came out in the media – and the ‘skinny backlash’ begun. All of a sudden women were not considered ‘real women’ if they had the ‘boyish’ figure or were tall, thin with small breasts like me, and it was like being in highschool again where a certain girl teased me for “not having any shape”. Fun fact: I didn’t choose that shape, it is what was natural for me and I was a healthy young woman who didn’t diet

    As I got older (mid twenties) I filled out my hips and breasts but I still remember what it was like to be that young woman.

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    • Laws for Clouds

      I think you and I might be the same age – I remember that movie ‘real women have curves’ and feeling like crap, which I don’t think was the aim.

      I now have children and I get asked if I’m the nanny because I don’t have baby weight, or if I could breastfeed with my small breasts, or if I eat.

      As I’ve matured I’ve learnt how to dress for my shape, but I can’t help but wish that I had a different one at times.

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      • Kate

        I agree with you both.. Always been very slim and got teased just as much as the bigger girls in high school.. And now as a mum, I look like the nanny too!
        But I would still never consider breast implants.. Yuck!

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  5. Anna

    Do we feel the same way about women who have breast reductions to feel empowered? I have huge knockers, but am also an educated, professional woman, and often wonder if people would take me more seriously if I were a C-cup. Is that different? Is it still superficial?

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    • Motherofa3yrold

      No, That’s self preservation! The back problems suffered by ladies with breasts that are too big/heavy for their frame is crazy! A breast reduction has physical benefits as well as psychological ones and so are viewed differently by others

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    • Lauren

      I was going to ask the same question.

      As I’ve gotten older I’ve come to slowly accept my huge boobs but there are still days where I have a bit of a cry in front of the mirror because nothing fits me properly without making me look huge or pregnant (or a porn star).

      Would you judge a woman who has had a breast reduction for superficial reasons as above the same you would one that had a breast enlargement?

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  6. J

    When I meet a girl with fake titties, all I think is how insecure she must be if she was willing spend thousands of dollars to mutilate her body. Seriously, what sort of person would do this to themselves for cosmetic reasons? Lots of red flags emotionally. Would much rather meet an A cup lady who spend $10k on her education instead of fake titties.

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    • Kate Hunter

      Your use of the word ‘titties’ makes me cringe.

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    • Nico

      What about someone who spends $10k on her education AND $10k on cosmetic surgery?

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    • Mel

      How we feel about people having braces to correct their teeth? I had braces at 25 and my jaw corrected (which improved my look and was medically necessary also with the braces). I also had my nose corrected a few years later after I fell and broke it. Does this make me as superficial as those with breast implants? More? Less?

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  7. Cait

    Admittedly I thought plastic sturgery were a pretty standard personal choice/decision which i was indifferent about until i read this article (which I would recommend to anyone considering cosmetic surgery for vanity reasons)…

    http://www.xojane.com/it-happened-me/ihtm-i-had-plastic-surgery-went-horribly-wrong

    Yes its probably a rare occurance (and the implants werent the bit which went wrong), but its also something that I would wager that no prospective patient is prepared for. This was a reputable surgery etc, she did all the right things, and it still went wrong.

    Seriously, I would rather deal with body hangups than go through what this woman went through through (and still sees) every day.

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  8. Kylie L

    I’m a life-long A cup and have never been tempted- but then I went through my teen years in the 80′s when the supermodels we were always seeing were natural (Cindy Crawford, Claudia Schiffer and Elle McPherson spring immediately to mind). I honestly think that makes a difference, and that not every woman featured in video clips,movies etc. had enormous funbags, so we knew that variety was OK- now a set of EEs seems de rigeur.

    As an aside, there is an older woman who swims where I do who has clearly had implants. From her hands and face I would guess she is in her late 60s or her early 70s- but when I see her naked (which I do when we get changed together or she’s coming out of the shower as I arrive) her boobs- full and pneumatic and pointing up- just look weird and so obviously artificial on her body.

    If she likes it, more power to her… but personally I’ll be telling my daughter that implants are like tattoos. You may well live with them all your life, not just your 20s and 30s, so think carefully.

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  9. Happymum

    Really I couldn’t give a stuff if women get implants, it is their choice to make.

    But…. in the case of the women with the leaking implants the government should not be funding the removal.

    You chose and paid to put that foreign object in your body, you can pay to get it removed.

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    • Jenna

      AGREED!

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      • Pseudo

        Erm – except that it’s a health risk and some people can’t afford it? When people overdose on drugs we don’t deny them access to a public hospital. If people choose to have their babies out via elective surgery we find that. If people choose to eat a dodgy pork roll and get food poisoning they can get a Medicare rebate on the doctor trip.

        Humans make choices. Some have unfortunate consequences.

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        • Motherofa3yrold

          What public hospital funds elective c-section? my understanding is that the only c-section in a public hospital are the ones done for baby or mother’s health… If you want a c-section by choice you pay for it in the private system!!!

          and I don’t think ANYONE would CHOOSE to eat a dodgy anything that is crazy!!! and personally if you take drug and overdose well… the reason we save them, is no one knows if you did it or had it done to you…

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          • MJ

            huh?
            People who overdose will always be resuscitated and treated, regardless of if they’ve had their drink spiked or they’re in hospital every weekend after shooting up.
            It is absolutely irrelevant if they did it to themselves or not, we treat them because they need help…

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            • Anonymous

              Yes. That is what I am saying – regardless of the choices people make, we treat them.

              If someone chose to get implants and they turn out to be faulty and risking that person’s life, we treat them. We don’t say, “tough luck, you gotta find the money because you chose to do this”.

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        • Anon

          Breast implants don’t last forever, they move and can degrade over time. The new saline ones are better but no one really knows that they will last until you are 90.

          Risk factors are movement of the implant over time, capsular contraction (abnornal response of body to foreign object), rupture etc. I agree that these women have been unlucky and feel that any exchange of implants in this situation should be supported by Medicare.

          However, women who have breast implants inserted should prepare themselves for the cost of having the implants replaced at some stage during their life. Particularly if they have them done a quite a young age. This is something they should be told by their surgeon prior to the procedure.

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    • tiff

      Agree completely, as with ( & i can say this as i am overweight) obese people & smokers. you choose this you fix it ! i dont expect anybody to pay for me to lose weight except myself! ( & maybe my husband cause he wont stop eating lollies LOL)

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  10. Anon

    I hear what you are saying, but at 40 and after 3 children, I had breast implants. Quiet honestly, they have changed my life. I barely filled an A cup before kids, but I looked like a 10 year old boy after 3 kids (and a deformed one at that after breast feeding).

    I am a smart, educated woman, but yes they have improved my self esteem. I didn’t do it for my husband. I did it for me. I didn’t even go extreme – I just have a bust to suit my frame and most people haven’t even noticed my boob job. But now I can wear dresses that fit me and feel comfortable in a bikini.

    It seems to be something a lot of people can’t understand, but now I feel like a woman and I am very happy. Try as I might to love my deformed flat chested self, I just couldn’t. If my face was disfigured in an accident, people wouldn’t question cosmetic surgery, for me, getting a boob job was just that.

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    • Lottie

      Good for you! I totally get why you did this :)

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    • Jenna

      It sounds to me like you did it for exactly the right reasons, especially as you don’t care that many people haven’t noticed and you chose a size to suit your frame. The best cosmetic surgery is where no one notices – it means you look like “you”, albeit a slightly improved version.

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    • Me

      My situation is exactly the same as yours. After breastfeeding 2 children I lost any trace of having boobs (and I was only an A-cup before). Most of my friends and family haven’t even noticed I’ve had breast implants but I feel so comfortable with my new C-cups. I can actually shop for clothes in my size and have them fit me!

      It certainly wasn’t some barbie doll aspiration that inspired me to have them. I think people need to realise that all of the “real women have curves” comments and the statements that men prefer women with a bit of meat on their bones, actually has as much affect on those of us that aren’t curvy as the photoshopped images in magazines. Everyone has been so concerned being politically correct toward curvier women and making them feel better about themselves that they’ve not noticed the comments also affect those that don’t fit into that category.

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      • Anon

        I did the same thing! After breastfeeding three children, I didn’t even have enough left to fill an A Cup, and as I am quite skinny anyway, felt and looked like a boy. I’m now a C cup and am perfectly happy with my decision. No-one has even hinted that they think they look fake, and I really have no regrets. After the way my boobs did look after kids, I like to call it corrective surgery.

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      • Anonymous

        Okay, a genuine question:
        If you had no trace of boobs left after breastfeeding, how is it that your friends and family did not notice your C cups post surgery? There is a very visible difference between an A cup and C cup so I’m just curious how no one noticed.
        I ask this because I have no trace of boobs left post breastfeeding (not that I had anything resembling A cups to begin with) – seriously, I am flat-chested. Look at me from the side and all you see is the nipple. So, I am sorely tempted to get implants – I don’t want huge knockers, just something to fill an A cup bra (I am currently wearing push up bras so I would love to have boobs that fill up a normal t-shirt bra that are A cup sized). the only things stopping me are: the possible scarring (I have keloids), possibly having to replace them at a later stage, recovery period (esp. if you want them under the pec muscles) and people finding out. Hence I’m curious as to how you are getting away with no one noticing.

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        • Me

          Hi Anon,
          I always wore a padded, push up bra – even though I didn’t really have anything to push up. I also wore chicken fillets in my bra to fill out my tops just so they would fit properly. And doing this, I obviously couldn’t wear lower cut tops so it was really just the shape of my bra under my top that people would see. I suppose the padding/fillet may have given the illusion that I was more of a B-cup anyway so going to a C-cup isn’t that much of a jump.

          Now that I am a C-cup, I still don’t have them on display or pushed up and my clothing choices haven’t changed except for the occassion where I may show a slight cleavage now if I’m wearing a dress. Because I’m not putting them on display, I don’t think anyone has really noticed.

          I did tell one of my close friends a couple of weeks ago (I had them done about 2 years ago) and she was totally surprised. After I told her she said “you know, I commented to my husband one afternoon that your boobs looked great in your top and we were both wondering if you were pregnant again. We never got any pregnancy announcement so I just assumed you had a good bra on”. So they had noticed an increase but it never occurred to them that I might have had a boob job.

          People’s boobs change shape and size so often with weight gain/loss and wearing different bras that I don’t think anyones initial reaction would be that you’ve had a boob job (unless you have huge implants and do put them on display.

          Also, I originally only thought I would go to a B-cup just because I also didn’t want anyone to notice and the surgeon talked me into going bigger. He said a B-cup would look more fake as they would be smaller round balls on my chest whilst going to the C-cup would be more in proportion to my frame and would look more natural on me. And they do! I’ve been in my underwear and bathers around my firends and no-one has noticed anything. The whole round, shiny boob thing only happens if you go too large and mine don’t look like that at all. I’m so happy with my decision to do it.

          Good luck with your decision, whichever way you choose to go.

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  11. Jenna

    A few years ago I worked for a very good plastic surgeon in Melbourne. What an eye opening experience that was! We had many young girls with a very romantic (read=naive) idea of what ideal breasts looked like come for a consultation. Unlike many “clinics” they meet the surgeon, not a sales person with nursing qualifications, and the good, bad and ugly is explained in detail. There were certainly a small number of women who wanted implants as part of a reconstruction, post cancer, or for major asymmetry. Sadly though, many young girls came with (dare I say it, photoshopped?) pictures of celebrities or sports models in bikinis and said, “I want to look like that!”. The surgeon often referred these girls for a consultation with a psychologist prior to taking their booking OR money. If the psych was happy they were doing it for the right reasons and didn’t have unrealistic expectations then it was all good. We turned away quite a few who thought, and I’m not kidding, they could leave hospital and head to the beach in their new bikini. There’s no raising your arms above shoulder height or min 3 weeks, no heavy lifting, wound cleaning to be done. And you do need to have them replaced every 8-10yrs. Do you have $10,000 stashed away for this or will you forever have a personal loan?
    And like any operation there are risks with wound infection, breakdown of tissue etc.
    Ultimately there are a small number of women who can benefit from this but for every one, there are nine others who will get them done in Thailand (a whole other issue) , get them way too big for their body type and size and who may find they’re still not happy after the procedure. Proceed with caution!

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    • Anonymous

      I have been thinking about getting breast implants for a while. I am very educated (2 university degrees and a post-graduate fellowship) and have done my research. I have great 12C boobs before kids – after 3 kids, each of which were breastfed for 2 years each (that’s right – 6 years breastfeeding total) I have shrunk to a small A cup. I exercise and have a god diet and have been able to loose all my baby weight but now I feel horribly out of proportion and other than breast implants, my only option is to accept my new shape. I feel like I want to fill out tops and swimmers and I can’t do that any more. I feel ripped off after all the good I did for my kids with breastfeeding now I have nothing left! My husband doesn’t care and I wouldn’t go back on my breastfeeding, but I do feel annoyed. I want at least some of my old self back (I would accept my c cup back even if it hung a bit lower) but I am very concerned about the risks, the money and what example I set my daughters. But I am sure that if men had kids and their penis shrunk by more than half after kids, they would all be having surgery. What does it matter to any other woman if someone else has breast implants – let them bake their own decisions and go and worry about something else. Part of my reluctance to have surgery is having to worry about judgements from other women – probably those that didn’t breastfeed much and didn’t loose their breasts after kids! Stop judging others for their decisions and worry about things you can do something about – like how you think about other people!!

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      • Motherofa3yrold

        Seems to me that the general consensus here is, each to their own, and those who are choosing augmentation to go back to what they were after child rearing are not judged any where near as harshly as those who are trying to look like someone else! I say go for it, do your research into all the possible side effects and if you think the risk is worth it, GO FOR IT!
        I think there is a big difference in late 30′s to mid 40′s having this surgery to the 18 year olds who have not yet finished development (which usually is about 23) getting the surgery done

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      • Jonni

        Apparently a noogleberry is a good option for post baby deflation? Heard a few success stories recently.

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    • Motherofa3yrold

      I think this should be the procedure in any cosmetic surgery office!!! after all there are many different reasons people want augmentation, redirecting those who come in with unrealistic views of the surgery, after care, or resultant feelings is a very responsible caring approach. I wonder how many of the girls who were turned away, just went elsewhere though?

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    • Alex

      Really!!??? Average annual cost of $2000 for the rest of your life and major surgery every 10 years!!!

      Holy mackerel! Why isn’t this the headline? I thought once they were done, they’re done.

      Imagine what you could do with that money over the course of your lifetime.

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  12. Shannon

    I’m pretty tiny all over and I used to want breast implants, but really…who would I be getting them for? Why would I toss thousands of my hard-earned dollars to be in pain for a few weeks with potential complications to rectify a “problem” no-one who matters cares about?

    That said, since I do have a tiny bit going on there (not a lot, but a tiny bit, and it can be improved with a good bra) I’m pretty OK. After kids, if they get smaller…well, I’m not going to pretend I know how I’ll feel then.

    As an aside…

    “As author Caitlin Moran writes, “Are the men doing it?” Men aren’t bolstering their penises with banana-shaped implants[...]”

    Wasn’t it just last week (or maybe the week before) we read that fantastic article about a man embracing his small penis, with an accompanying video that showed that actually, men DO try to make their penises bigger and some do go so far as surgery in order to rectify the perceived problem? It’s certainly not as wide-spread as breast implants, it would seem, but I would say it may be an upward trend!

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  13. Kate Hunter

    I’m with you, Angela. While agreeing it’s absolutely the choice of the individual I think its a shame to want surgery when there are so many more fun things to spend money on. Things that have less risk of pain, infection etc

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  14. Laws for Clouds

    So it’s okay to get new breasts after a masectomy, what about after breastfeeding? If they’re different sizes? Sagging? Too big?

    This is a private decision, and a major financial undertaking. Women, even at 19 or 20 (when many are deciding what they want to do at uni, a major life affecting decision), are smart enough to know what they want to do with their own bodies.

    Also, men are doing it. They just don’t do it to their penis. Steroids, gym memberships, hair colour, hair plugs….

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    • Jenna

      You can’t really compare a mastectomy to breast feeding. A mastectomy involves partial or total removal of breast tissue. Breasts are largely composed of fatty tissue and easily fluctuate with weight loss or gain and whether they are storing milk or not. Yes, both may cause the person to want to change their appearance but are not comparable.

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      • Laws for Clouds

        The repair for it involves 4-5 operations generally too, not the one for regular implants.

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    • Snap!!

      No men aren’t doing it, hair dye & gym memberships aren’t surgery. And seriously your body changes when you have a baby & decide to breastfeed, deal with it. A mastectomy cannot be compared to breast feeding, how ridiculous.

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  15. Bec

    Breasts are not high on my priorities list, maybe saving up for an education would be a better investment in yourself, using the money to help pay for a house, or $10,000 would help pay for an amazing gap year holiday, giving you incredible memories and life experiences, or imagine how incredible you would feel making a donation to charity or helping someone in need. There are better ways to improve yourself, large breasts may get you more attention but they are not going to make you interesting at a dinner party. Surely being independent, educated and interesting would result in a longer term increase in self esteem, much more than the occasional admiring glance. Is being the girl with the large breasts really what you want to be know for?

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    • alyssakt

      Exactly! I met a young woman last weekend who has never left the state of Qld. Ever! Soon after telling me that she announced that she wanted to get fake breasts – despite already having a nice C cup.
      It’s my opinion that it would be an infinitely better investment for her to spend that money on travel!

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  16. Marissa Roberts

    Hang on a minute – their body their choice, right? Plenty of smart, gorgeous women out there with implants. Who cares why they got them as long as they are happy? Let’s leave them alone as I’m sure we wouldn’t want to be judged for our own appearances either. If I ever get implants, it will be my own decision, and I’ll thank people to keep their judgement to themselves.

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    • Jenna

      I have seen plenty of women get them and STILL not be happy in themselves. It is not a magical cure for self esteem.

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      • Marissa Roberts

        That’s a good point Jenna xx

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    • Ally

      Ok so when you get your fake boobs, please don’t tell me you did it because you wanted to look like a ‘real women’. Not getting them is my choice so please keep your justifications to your self.

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      • Marissa Roberts

        No worries Ally – That’s my point. My choice, so you don’t need to know why I would get them, and I won’t judge you for not wanting them.

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  17. Bek

    I agree Jess and Desiree. Im 21 and just because I decide to have breast implants does not mean I’m of low self esteem or intellect. My boobs, my choice and frankly It’s bloody sad that my fellow sisters ( of all ages) feel its okay to judge or make assumptions to that effect.

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    • Sal

      Bek, love your comment x a million!! And I don’t even have implants..

      There are some very judgemental people on this site. Granted everyone is entitled to their opinion but bloody hell, calling someone unintelligent because they’ve gotten a boob job, really?

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    • Motherofa3yrold

      Yup judgemental and opinionated, but who really cares, you don’t actually KNOW any of us, and do you really CARE what others think? Oh hang on, maybe you do if you are thinking of augmentation…. but then maybe you don’t because your own breasts are just that – YOUR OWN! I am fine with whatever choice people make for thier own bodies, my main worry, is that getting it done so early becomes an ongoing cost to you, but mainly the cost of any elective surgery on the country. I know that sounds silly or maybe it sounds like I’m making Your choice into MY issue, but if you (god forbid) have a bad outcome, a flesh eating bug, terrible scarring, a dodgy implant that breaks, what is the cost then? To you, to medicare, to your family, to your employer…. as long s you have thought all that through, as I said to the mother of 3 kids with post breast-feeding A cups, GO FOR IT, everyone deserves to feel happy within their own body!

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  18. auscrawl

    Great article!!! It’s pathetic many women are chasing the fake plastic image promoted by the media.

    I used to be sick of being flat when I was very thin, but as soon as I read about the scar tissue capsuling and method to fix it, and how many need changing and break leaking silicone into the body cavity, any thoughts of considering it dissapeared.

    Since I have gone to more of an average body shape, I have the bustline I wanted and joke I traded a bit more arse for a bustline, lol.

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    • Bec

      Yes, so many young girls do not realise that the body they have at 16-21 is not the body they will have as a woman. At least wait until you have passed puberty and your teenage metabolism has settled down before making such radical changes to your body.

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  19. Sara

    I’m sure I’ve read this article a few weeks ago in a newspaper magazine.

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    • Kris2040

      So? Doesn’t mean it doesn’t deserve a run here. It does say it was on The Punch, and Angela does write for one of the Sunday paper mags. Plenty of us don’t read them! :)

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  20. Sara

    This article is fantastic!

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  21. One of the women I used to work with had one done. She had serious mastitis when she was feeding her little ones and her breasts were so badly scarred and damaged, she was even eligible for a small Medicare rebate on the procedure. I would certainly consider it if that was my situation as well!

    Another woman who I used to work with, informed me that her 19 year old sister (absolutely beautiful girl, I always gawk when I see her she’s so lovely looking) had them done for aesthetics and self esteem as she had “A” sized.

    She has now apparently developed much better self esteem as a result of the procedure and the errr, subsequent result. I didn’t say much other than ‘oh ok’ – but I was also informed during this conversation that you can borrow $10,000 for this procedure as a personal loan from the bank!

    I personally couldn’t fathom having it done (unless I was in the scenario I talked about above post serious mastitis) for purely aesthetic reasons like this lovely 19 year old girl. To each their own, I suppose.

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  22. Anonymous

    Yep 22 yr old here saving for a set of C/D’s.
    I am completely flat chested though, I’m not exaggerating either. I have absolutely nothing :(
    I gave birth, breast fed, and when I weaned I lost everything. I look like a 10 yr old boy.. It’s depressing.
    I don’t wanna look like a porn start, but I’d love to look like a women.

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    • Mel

      I feel your pain :) It was really a sad day for me when I realized my pre-baby boobs were gone… (thanks to 2 preganacies and 2 years of breastfeeding). Gone…. Forever! I was a full d cup and didn’t love or hate them, they were just ‘me’ and when they left me, I felt a sense of loss… I joke that I am going to garnish mt boys wages when they get older to pay for me to get a boob job (i am now a c cup).. And, I am kind of half joking, but not.. I try to explain it to my husband like this… Imagine you have the best suit in the world, you habe worn it everyday for years, then all if a sudden, you can’t wear it anymore.. You have other suits, but they arejust not the same as ‘that’ suit.. I think he understands… and secretly misses my plump rack ;)

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      • Kateateight

        Boobs don’t make you a woman.

        Some women are flat chested – do you think they all look like boys? Do you think that all women should have big boobs? Do you think there is no place in society for a variety of breast size, or are you just not strong/confident enough to be the one in the minority?

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        • Nico

          Ouch, that’s a bit rude, don’t you think? The last sentence.

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  23. Anonymous

    I know a girl who was given a boob job for her 21st birthday.. from her parents! a beautiful, normal healthy girl. Now she has that generic sexualised look that I think Angela refers to. Such a shame.
    Vive la difference I say. Self confidence is not skin deep.

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    • Anonymous

      I’ve heard there is a trend in the USA of giving your daughter breast implants as a high school graduation present. Pretty sad.

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  24. Lana

    I read the results of a survey today that said 1 in 4 girls aged between 13 and 20 think plastic surgery is okay.

    60% of the girls did not think that they were beautiful.

    I worry that the standard of beauty that they look up to is unattainable. As is the breast size and shape that they are being presented with – unless they opt for surgery. How can we be happy with our bodies if we don’t see any “real” bodies in the media, on billboards and on our screens

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  25. MaryV

    I am wimp, I don’t like pain or go anywhere near needles, hospital or doctors unless I really need to. I think it is sad that a certain look (I find most girls that have their boobs done look the same, dress the same etc) is more important than long term health or actual achievements.

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  26. Jess88

    Awesome. I love it when women get all judgey-wudgey at me for having implants. Never mind the fact my breasts were different sizes & shapes. Clothes fit me better and I feel better about myself naked. Too bad this would only be considered ok if I was to have had a mastectomy.

    “Remember, our bodies are where and how we live; they’re the only thing we truly own.” – exactly, which is why I own my decision to have implants.

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    • Anonymous

      I don’t think you are being judged. I think we are being asked to look at a society where 21 year old girls with small boobs or even average boobs save up money to get double D’s – simply because they can

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    • Alice

      Jess, I think she made it clear that she was distinguishing between surgery for medical or corrective reasons (which yours would fall into) and surgery from nice A cups to D cups solely for the purpose of looking “hotter”.

      She was making a point about the culture of sexism and porn we live in, not saying that anyone who gets a boob job is a douchebag.

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      • Jess88

        People might argue that asymmetry isn’t considered a medical condition (my health insurer certainly did) but purely cosmetic.
        I agree with your comment about the sexualisation of our culture but in my experience there are extremes on both sides – girls who do it to appear “sexier” (I’ll admit I also made mine a little larger at the same time to give me an hour glass figure) and women who judge you so, so much if they find out you have implants, regardless of your reason for doing it (with the exception of cancer) I’ve been told that I should have worked on my confidence instead of “fixing” my problem with surgery. Caitlyn Morans comment is a bit harsh in my opinion “who likes these taut, angry, veiny, unyielding bazookas anyway” honestly, who cares who likes them as long as the person wearing them is happy?

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        • Motherofa3yrold

          Actually, this may have changed, I am sure I have read somewhere that psychologists have put forward that asymmetrical bodies can be a cause of psychological issues when there is so much difference that store bought clothes don’t fit etc… With written support from a psychologist or psychiatrist you may get some support from medicare/private insurance.

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    • Desiree

      I agree with you Jess. I have sadly sagging boobs after being pregnant and breastfeeding, and I would like my perky boobs back. While I don’t think she meant to offend everyone with breast implants, women who have them do get judged for being vain and shallow. And it is possible to have big boobs AND a big intellect :)

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      • Jess88

        Desiree, my closest friends have judged me for my choice, even knowing me prior to surgery and how I looked and now that I’m so much happier and more confident but I still get lumped in with the ‘Barbie doll’ girls in their opinion *sigh*

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    • MJ

      That sounds like you’re doing it for corrective reasons.
      There are lots of girls out there with a normal set of boobs who go and get implants because they have low self esteem and they think that’s what they’re buying. This article is saying that it’s the reason why they have low self esteem in the first place that needs to be addressed, not ‘fixed’ with the bandaid solution of big boobs.

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    • Anonymous

      I also have asymmetrical breasts and am looking into getting them done because it really affects my self esteem and love life! Could you rec a surgeon? I am in Sydney

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      • jess88

        I live in QLD but am originally from Perth so I went back there for a mini holiday to have mine done as the surgeon I chose has done work on my family and friends and his results are amazeballs. If you have health insurance and the surgeon deems your breasts to be atleast 15% assymmetrical you might be able to claim a small amount on your fund (you’ll still be hugely out of pocket) I can’t really reccommend a surgeon in Sydney but go to your GP and ask them for a referral, that’s probably easiest? And word of mouth works well too, if you’re not embarrassed to ask friends if they can recommend someone. All the best for what you decide though! I hope you achieve what you’re after. xXx

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