To be honest, it kinda freaks me out that after all your body acceptance years, you were still affected by the exact same fear I have been talking about for a while now - only in my case, it's even more attention grabbing.
As you said, fat guys are, and have been for years, expected to have some sort of moobs, so it would only be the unusual sizes that would attract extra attention, and it sounds as if you fall into that category.
I have a normal build, and used to have a decent male chest, well proportioned and not flabby. Now, I have an obvious female chest profile in a t-shirt, so I'm sure it gets noticed a lot. I don't want to be noticed for being an oddball - or transgender, and I don't think the public at large should accept it as normal, because it's not, it's a medical problem, but 99% of people who notice it aren't going to think that, they're going to think freak. For those of you that have accepted the condition and would never treat it, more power to you, but the rest of us would probably like realistic options.
Society should not accept obesity, diabetes, or smoking as "normal" because they are health/medical issues, so why should any other health/medical issue be accepted as normal?
I would much prefer research, treatments, and/or cures for the condition, but that's not happening because it's considered cosmetic.
B
Hi Bummed,
To be honest, it kinda freaks me out that after all your body acceptance years, you were still affected by the exact same fear I have been talking about for a while now - only in my case, it's even more attention grabbing.Something I was trying to say that you didn't get. In 20 years of chronic illness I had perhaps a couple of months worth of normal life social interaction. When I traveled it was for business and I wore suits like everybody else. Forget the breast aspect for a minute. I can't wear off the rack suits. My chest suit jacket size is 12-14 inches larger than my waist. My arms need 37 inch sleeves. I have "tall" jackets and "short" pants. In any case in 20 years I had almost no experience and a loss of considerable memory during that period.
In the past 5 years of recovery I have had more social interaction than the previous 25 years in all. I had lots of time to think about things. People with CFS/FMS and CHF don't do things.
I live consciously. I don't let subconscious fears boss me around. I won't stand for it. Also, I've got D to DD+ (dependent on edema and fat levels) size breasts. During the past 12 years I lost 85 pounds of water, 40-50 pounds of fat and put on 50 pounds of muscle that had atrophied. All this by a change in metabolism partly caused by returning to meat eating from being a vegetarian and the right vitamins.
I sink in a pool even with half full lungs now. I used to float at all lung inflations.
I know very well what you are talking about. That's one reason I feel I can tell you the truth about these things, you will understand. People without this experience don't know it. I don't really know where it came from in my case. The PTSD resulted of jr high and high school experiences which you didn't have. I detailed it in my introduction
it's even more attention grabbing.WHY?
I'm not particularly fat, especially these days. I don't know what average weight is but I am below the new "fat" standard average. It isn't my stomach sticking out, it is much larger breasts than you have. And Hammer's are huge by any standard.
That fear is unconscious and is the remnants of watching out for all the avoidance opportunities all the time, days and weeks in advance. It was horrid. "What, me worry?" is much better. If I were in the right place at the right time I would do the Bay to Breakers nude ride. It wouldn't bother me in the least. I don't have malignant body shame. I don't limit my life in any way because of my breasts. However, getting up and singing a tenor solo is probably the scariest thing I know of now. My voice is gone.
I'm trying to put this in perspective. It seems ridiculous to me that the habit of "uh-oh" on walking out of the house in a t-shirt is still there. Otherwise it affects my life not at all. It's not stopping me from the Silver Sneakers (medicare gym benefit in some plans), swimming, nude activities with other nudists or anything. I'm over the PTSD and can pretty well laugh at the cosmic joke of bodies. I've never met a person who didn't have some major "flaws" in their body according to them.
"Realistic options" you speak of. At a small size, say up to B cup or so, the results often look pretty good with surgery. The bigger they get, the older the skin, the worse the results. From some nudist perspectives a bunch of scars itself isn't great. I don't consider any results I have seen from large breast surgical removal to be anything I find acceptable. It doesn't achieve the goal of looking even normal much less "good". The only realistic option there was for much of my life is "get over it and really still is.
Males breasts are not a health issue like diabetes. In a few rare cases they are indicators of tumors or whatever. As half the population has some chronic conditions health problems are the norm.
I would much prefer research, treatments, and/or cures for the condition, but that's not happening because it's considered cosmetic.
Research and prevention might occur. Generally it's not a "condition" that needs treatment. There is no condition. There is normal tissue growth with normal fluctuations in hormones but except in rare cases is there actually any medical condition that can be treated. Of course treating those things, like baldness, can increase the probability of gyne. I wonder what unwanted side effects treating gyne might have, penis shrinkage? Male and female breast sizes both follow normal distribution curves, shaped and skewed somewhat differently. Definitionally +- 2 standard deviations is pretty normal. That puts you right around modal size, everybody from D and larger are clearly outside the two standard deviations on the top end and the flat as a board, at the 1-10? percentile level is just as clearly abnormal on the bottom end.
One prevention for the tendency to develop breasts with age is to die young. Or who knows. Maybe they will come out with a drug that will prevent male breast growth with aging for $1000/month. Who will finance the billions of dollars of research without profitable return?
You appear to have a whole lot more faith in the medical system than I do. For reasons having nothing to do with gyne I was mistreated and maltreated for 55 years because of the way they thought about some disorders that they wouldn't believe were disorders.
That is all intellectual stuff. It doesn't get at the emotional. However, habits attenuate when not practiced. I'm not upset or restricting my life because of D-cups. They are visible in anything I wear especially with a large chest, so I might as well wear something comfortable and "good looking" in the eyes of my partner. She is the one I care about anyway. However, I have not let it affect my life, to refuse an invitation for swimming for instance, since 1975 or so.