03/08/2023
If you are a person with breasts, when do you first recall receiving undesired attention for them? And by whom? When do we begin to receive messages that our breasts are something that are inherently s*xual, and thus something to hide, or be shameful for?
Having more body agency as an adult, or choosing to harness a sense of personal empowerment around our physicality can be an incredible healing experience, considering that many of us “learned” our bodies, and particularly breasts, are something to be ashamed of, or something to hide, or something that would make us a “slut” (and not in the self empowered honorific that some of us may have reimagined for ourselves). This messaging often comes as a surprise as we navigate adolescents and teenage hood. How might bodily shame, particularly for people with breasts, change, shift or even have the potential to be extinguished if *others* hadn’t taught us that our breasts were inherently shameful?
*xualization
Posted • Cultural policing of women's bodies starts early and only gets worse with age. Too big, too small, too old, too young —b***s are judged, inspected, grabbed, and censored.
Breasts are wonderfully equal.
No judgment. They’re just b***s.
Happy ✿—from one b**b to another
***s
And in personal accomplishment news—marking over 18 months of nursing :)