Author Topic: Do you feel more or less conspicuous in a bra?  (Read 5658 times)

Offline qwerty6

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I would definitely feel more conspicuous if I weren’t wearing a bra (which I do every day)

I only have small boobs (maybe between an A and B cup) , but wearing a bra keeps the inevitable bounce at bay and because they have a little padding , gives a nice shape to them . Once I put one on in the mornings , not only do I forget I’m wearing one, but I don’t think about my breasts. This gives me the confidence to wear even fitted womens tops and not worry about the straps being visible underneath - I simply don’t care if someone notices.

Offline Busty

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I feel more confident in a bra. A more polished look with everything held in place, shaped and lifted.   I agree that bras tend to make your breast look more prominent on your chest, but once you reach C cup I don’t feel that matters, as no hiding anyway. 

Plus, I believe, when going braless, the movement on your chest as well as nipples poking through your tops draws more attention than if you are wearing a bra. 

On top of that, there is the comfort factor of being well supported. Again, I think once you reach a C cup you really need that support.

 At B cup or smaller,  I feel wearing a bra can make your breasts appear more conspicuous. However, if you are a C cup or bigger, everybody can already tell you have breasts like a woman, so you are better off wearing a bra like one.  

Offline 42CSurprise!

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Although my breasts have not been pronounced most of my life, I don't have a flat chest and for most of my life I've worn an open shirt over my tee shirt or turtleneck.  I'm fair skinned so part of the rationale has been to protect myself from the sun but in reality it has been in part to hide my chest.  Recently my breasts have become more prominent but no more noticeable simply because of the way I dress.  I'm not experiencing back pain or nipple sensitivity, so I don't feel the need to wear a brassiere.  But after trying a few brassieres over the last year and a half, I am finding pleasure in wearing one and they definitely enhance the appearance of my breasts.  This morning I wore a brassiere while visiting a couple of stores, very aware that my breasts were held by unpadded brassiere cups.  I didn't get any stares but it would be hard to notice them in the corduroy shirt and polartec vest I wore.  I'm not sure I'm ready for full-time bra wearing.  As I've mentioned before the gynecomastia is taking me some places that I'm not certain I want to go...  My breasts certainly won't go away, but my fixation on them might... :o

Offline SideSet

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It is not attractive to see men with more significant gyno go braless. Too much unsightly movement.
We should maintain that polished look of wearing a bra, plus there is modesty to think of

Offline blad

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But after trying a few brassieres over the last year and a half, I am finding pleasure in wearing one and they definitely enhance the appearance of my breasts.  This morning I wore a brassiere while visiting a couple of stores, very aware that my breasts were held by unpadded brassiere cups.  I didn't get any stares but it would be hard to notice them in the corduroy shirt and polartec vest I wore.  I'm not sure I'm ready for full-time bra wearing.  As I've mentioned before the gynecomastia is taking me some places that I'm not certain I want to go...  My breasts certainly won't go away, but my fixation on them might... :o
You don't need a fixation to want the comfort and control a bra brings. 

Managing breast development with a bra for support can be looked at simply as a logical garment to wear, the same way most women view putting on their bra every morning. They are looking for support, containment, presentation and modesty much of the time. If you also enjoy you breasts and enjoy a bra then that may further enhance your acceptance but it is not a requirement to manage the fact that you have breasts.
If the bra fits, wear it.

aboywithgirls

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A good bra is the perfect marriage of function and yes, fashion. The function of the bra is of course, support and to some degree, protect our breasts. Have nipples that protect through our tops and rub against our tops can be uncomfortable. All of us here are "blessed " with breasts to all different sizes and shapes. A bra helps give our breasts shape and reduce the jiggle that draws unwanted attention. In this day and age, we don't have to opt for a plain and simple bra that meets our needs. We can be wear different colors, patterns, or materials like lace. A bra is not made for a woman. It's made for a person who has breasts.

Offline MychalBloodwing

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A good bra is the perfect marriage of function and yes, fashion. The function of the bra is of course, support and to some degree, protect our breasts. Have nipples that protect through our tops and rub against our tops can be uncomfortable. All of us here are "blessed " with breasts to all different sizes and shapes. A bra helps give our breasts shape and reduce the jiggle that draws unwanted attention. In this day and age, we don't have to opt for a plain and simple bra that meets our needs. We can be wear different colors, patterns, or materials like lace. A bra is not made for a woman. It's made for a person who has breasts.
Amen!

Offline Piglet

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Western Society cleaves very strongly to the concept of   "Women's clothes"   and   "Men's clothes"  but it has always seemed to me that it would be far better to think in terms of a continuous spectrum of   "garments"  -some of which are routinely worn by ladies and those at the other end of the scale being sported by men.  Obviously then this allows for some overlap and this is what we find in daily life.  Western society smiles on ladies who sometimes choose to put on, and publicly display, clothes which are routinely reserved for the male gender.

However, there is a powerful social force acting in the other direction, against those males who would choose  -for whatever reason -   to don garments traditionally thought of as being female.   Of course, the wearing of bras falls into this category, even if it's for medical reasons and thereby justified.
It is interesting to speculate on just why this unspoken ideology is so powerful, so permanent and so all-pervading.  I have heard friends describe female underwear departments in big stores as being "ring fenced with steel"   because they were so ill at ease with the thought of possibly entering such surroundings or being invited to inspect, handle and maybe comment upon the items on display. Yet these same embarrassed friends were quite happy to let their wives/partners examine, choose and purchase their underwear for them, -which service their female companions happily performed with no embarrassment or hesitation whatsoever.
I wonder whether a part of this reluctance rises from the association of femininity with smallness, helplessness and all things diminutive.  Although these factors can add greatly to feminine attractiveness, perhaps the overriding instinctive feeling in most men seems to be  "why would you want to throw away all the wonderful advantages that maleness brings, and replace it with that reduced world of feminine dependency and contraction,   -and advertise that fact by donning female attire"?
However, I'm sure you will agree, there is a great deal more to it than that and I would be interested to read other readers thoughts on just why society frowns on males who go down this road.  I also wonder whether it is just Western society that has this hang up, or do other cultures exhibit this same powerful reluctance??
I was actually very lucky with my Gynacomastia.  It was brought on as a side effect by drugs taken to relieve a genetic cardiac problem.  Although I am only a "C" cup, I have been surprised at just how much the breasts swing about and bounce up and down in all sorts of situations.
The reason I say I was lucky is because a few months after starting said drugs I found myself talking to a lady doctor at one of my follow-up consultations.  By sheer good fortune, she was one of those people to whom you could say anything and she would instantly understand you and be on the same wavelength.  She had a real gift in this way.  I was describing to her how much breast bounce and swing I was experiencing and straightaway she said   "why don't you use a bra"?   I sort of did a double take and after a few seconds of slightly embarrassed confusion while I digested the fact that a health care professional had seriously suggested this possibility to me, manged to stutter the reply  "but bra's are for women".  Again she gave me an instant answer which was,  "No, bras are for people with breasts". 
I can, of course, remember this moment as though it were yesterday.  It really gave me cause for thought.  You won't be surprised to learn that I have since taken a great deal of good feeling from this simple exchange and have kept it in mind ever since. It has brought me both comfort and courage when contemplating going out to some social event wearing a bra.
Then again, it seems to me that we can maybe get another handle on this whole situation using just logic alone.  For example.........in an average household of a man and a woman, it's usually the man who undertakes all the heavier, more demanding jobs, if only because he usually has the greater strength.  Therefore, if said male has Gynacomastia, then surely he is the one more entitled to be using a bra since he will be the one doing all the lifting/carrying/swinging/ working and so on.  Obviously the ladies do an equal amount in terms of lifting and carrying shopping plus babies and children and dealing with their endless varied needs, so a bra is appreciated by them, but surely it's only fair that the male in the partnership enjoys the benefits of this garment too.
In fact, given the sometimes greater physical labour and daily effort of the male compared with that of the female, it seems possible to me that quite a good case could be made out for the male being as equally entitled to enjoy the use of a supporting garment as the female, if not more so. 
Finally, I must say I honestly believe that those of us who choose to go down this road of bra wearing are being very brave and mature.  We all know it's not every man who could manage this thing. It's easy to get bogged down with considerations of   'what are people going to think'  or  'how am I going to manage this',  and thereby lose sight of just how courageous and forward-looking and bold we are being.  


                                                              Piglet.
 
 
 
 

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An eloquent argument Piglet and one that deserves its own thread.  Perhaps you would think of posting this a second time under a different heading.

Those of who are "brave" need to try and find ways of forming an alliance of people with breasts, female and male. People who need to wear a bra.
We need to find ways of separating bras from the normal gender association so that it comes to be  regarded as functional purely asexual item of clothing. 

Many of us here wear other items of womens clothing, mainly for comfort and fit but we need to find ways of totally separating bra wearing from this in the public eye otherwise we risk being totally confused with groups that risk alienating women  who gynecomastic men desperately need as allies.

I have often thought that we ought to start lobbying bra manufacturers

Offline Evolver

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Many of us here wear other items of womens clothing, mainly for comfort and fit....
Regarding outerwear I don't, but I have sometimes thought that there should be far more unisex clothing on offer for those that need to.

Instead of plus size or petites etc. there should be unisex clothing for pear shapes, hourglass, straight fit, front bum etc. regardless of gender. Tone down 'feminine' detail but enhance trim and color compared to traditional male items. Underwear could also be unisex - stretch cotton, mid rise boyleg briefs with a wide gusset would suit everyone! Cami-tops with wide shoulder straps and decent support instead of compression vests or dainty straps, etc. Bras made with wide set cups sold in a gender neutral section of the department store alongside the aforementioned.

I get that men with 'involuntary feminization', or rather those that are proactively dealing with it, are just a small minority and not worth worrying about by the garment manufacturers. It is annoying that manufacturers keep enforcing the one way traffic of coming up with menswear designed for women however. 

Confused old man

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I could write pages on garment choice. My wife of over 40 years was a clothing buyer at a major nationwide department store. She has always maintained that all clothing is basically unisex. It’s about fit and style. What is your fit and what is your style. Even back then women shopped in the men’s section and even some men shopped in the women’s. Manufacturers and stores know who is buying what, pretty much. Manufacturers do not have to cater to men buying women’s clothes because they already know that women’s clothes can fit men. 
I wore wrangler jeans all my life. My doctor calls them stranglers. As we get older with that middle age spread we need elastic!.. so I started trying on men’s jeans with stretch. Did not fit. Could not find any that fit. Then my wife said let’s try on women’s jeans.
Lee stretch straight leg jeans fit me perfect. And can move around with ease all through the day. Back pockets a little smaller. Front pockets a lot smaller. I don’t use pockets anyway.
So if women’s clothing fits you and you like the style...wear it like it’s yours. Because it is yours. That goes for bras also. Wear what fits and style that you like. That includes your lower underwear also.
There will be always someone that wants to shame others for something. It makes them feel better about themselves.
So if someone sees your bra strap, notice that panties are sticking out the top of your jeans or just notice maybe, just maybe those are women’s jeans or top....who cares!..those types of people will find fault in everyone. In theirs minds that is their truth. It is not our truth.
So dress the way that makes you feel good with the fit and style you like. That is why there is such a huge selection of clothing 😃😃

Offline blad

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In managing our breast development;

First there is a growing awareness that we are falling outside of the normal male physique. Sometimes other people "help" us notice that our profile is changing from the classic male look.

Our development becomes significant enough that we become self conscious that we present as having breasts.

We may begin to notice the weight of our breasts in daily activities and thus increasing our self awareness.

Increasingly it may cross our minds that we may have enough breast growth to fit a bra. Comments from others may re enforce that thought.

Although we may be negative towards our breast growth we may be curious to whether we actually fit a bra or if wearing one will help control the weight and movement of our breasts.

In finally trying a bra we may be surprised at our woman like appearance while wearing one in addition to how it feels to have our breast tissue contained and controlled. We may have an aha moment that a bra works for our comfort, and perhaps appearance. We may find in an un expected way that we like wearing a bra.

Initially, our adventure into trying a bra has concerns of public exposure. This feeling of concern often diminishes with time as we learn to be covert with wearing a bra and just desensitized to what others may think. We may realize that many people are really not that aware unless we go out of our way to advertise we are wearing a bra.

The positive feed back loop of the comfort we derive from wearing a bra in combination with an apparent lack of public awareness re enforces our confidence and resolve to do what we think is right for our situation.

You milage may vary. Some just can't get past that a bra is for breasts and not just women. There are more than a few guys out there with significant breast development that look rather unsightly without a bra.

Confused old man

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I know this might be off topic but it concerns fit and unisex.
I wear a 10B boot. I have worn boots all my life. I developed problems in my feet.
Doc says to wear sneakers, you will feel better. Could not find 10b sneakers. 
I went to new balance web site. Men’s standard is a D, men’s narrow is a B.
Narrow was mostly unavailable.
So I called them. The y told be to order a women’s standard size which is B in men’s.
Same shoe!....they fit perfectly.
Go to the Nike website and it tells you the same thing...orders women’s!
So bras are unisex also, no since in going out of our way to hide it. If you feel and look better with a bra than without, then by all means wear it with pride!

Confused old man

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P.s...you have to go up 1.5 in size...I wear a 10b in men’s..so 11-1/2 in women’s standard

Offline MarcoB

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I have often thought that we ought to start lobbying bra manufacturers

I think it was Elisabeth Dale of TheBreastLife.com who said that there has been some effort to do that at lingerie conventions, but that so far the manufacturers are not very interested.  I suppose they have not been paying attention to the growing problem of gyne from medications and all the pesticides, weed killers, and other hormone imitators and disruptors in our food and environment, and they're too busy with the larger women's market.  How many more years will it take?  Why should we always be finding bras marketed as "women's bras" online?  So far, it is still assumed that bras are only for women; but if that is so, why even put the word "women's" with it?  It would be redundant.  I'm definitely not up there with some of you men with C, D, and larger breasts (and I hope I never get there); but why should it be so hard for this slim man to find something for a 37" underbust and an A cup to bring relief from the otherwise constant irritation?  I just want to be comfortable.  But when you consider the little that's available, and kick out the ones with flowers and other feminine decorations which I don't want, and go for something purely functional, there's nothing left.

As for the original question "Do you feel more or less conspicuous in a bra?", the first time I went out in one and jogged a mile to the UPS Store, I felt like everyone must be staring and gawking; but I was a little bit surprised to not see any evidence at all of what I thought had to be happening.  It was just a pullover-type sports bra without the lumpy hook area and adjusters, and i was wearing a striped shirt; but still.


 

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