C
CountrySinger
Guest
For me, I have to wear things that “break up” my top (layers). A solid colour (as in a turtleneck) makes my chest look huge. I get hit on more when I wear a t-shirt, crew neck sweaters, hoodies, etc. Graphic t-shirts get distorted. A cardigan with a different colour cami underneath looks more in proportion.I think DL also mentioned being pretty curvy, yes? I developed early and am skinny but very curvy, and I think it does make a difference. Unless you dress in a sack, there’s no way to really hide your figure (not that you should have to), which can make your outfit seem more provocative than it really is. I end up doing a lot more layering than flatter friends, for example, but nothing non-drastic will shrink my chest. And then some guys are just jerks. I got street-harassed by migrants while 9 months pregnant.
Also the stuff about knowing better than to go into bad neighborhoods is a bit classist. Some of us have to live in or near them and walk through them to catch the bus or go to the store. I have to walk through one to get to church, too.
I get a lot of comments like “my wife is small, can I touch yours”, “I want to feel big boobs”, or just the slack-jawed stare. Or just men yelling BOOBS!
I thought having a child would stop the remarks. It didn’t. It made my chest bigger and in the words of one jerk “your kid shows you put out, so show me your ****”. And apparently I’m the bad one because I can’t take a “compliment”.
And I’m 35. And I’ve been cat called ever since I got breasts at 8. And I’m not getting surgery just because people are grabby. They are for my husband and I to enjoy. The greatest irony was that I couldn’t breastfeed. They are decorative, not practical.