You're acting like you actually know what it feels like to be a woman. Most people are fine with their breasts, including me?? Stop acting like you're the only one who's right when you haven't even had a single period cramp.
You also said women cooking is sexist
So does that mean when a man does it, it’s no wrong, but when a woman does it, it’s suddenly a problem?
Seems kinda sexist to me to assume only men should cook
So by saying only men should cook, you’re implying another sexist stereotype, because you want females to be more powerful rather than equal to males
That’s literally the definition of sexism
Wtf are you talking about? Target the men objectifying the boobs, which is the real problem, rather than advocate for a cause neither you nor I have real knowledge of.
So you would rather force every woman to have breast reductions against their will (which is literally just misogyny) instead of actually help remove objectification by taking care of the real problem?
When you realize breast reduction isn’t mandatory…; Straps dig trenches into your shoulders; Back pain becomes your full-time job; Your posture starts looking like a question mark; Running turns into a physics problem; Stairs feel like a boss fight; Underboob sweat becomes a climate zone; Heat waves become personal; Finding a bra becomes an archaeological expedition; “Your size is out of stock” becomes a lifestyle; Every bra costs like it’s handcrafted by monks; Nothing fits: shirts gape, buttons beg for mercy; Dresses become “tent or crime scene”; You can’t buy clothes—you negotiate with them; Sports bras either fail or suffocate; Sleep positions get reduced to “flat on back, don’t move”; You wake up sore from existing; Headaches join the group chat; Neck pain says good morning; You can’t sit at a desk without hunching; Seatbelts cut across like a guillotine; People stare like you’re a public exhibit; You get blamed for other people’s eyeballs; “Must be nice” — no, it hurts; Doctors say “lose weight” even when it’s not the issue; You need years of paperwork to “prove” pain; Insurance acts like comfort is a luxury add-on; Meanwhile: a simple reduction could fix most of it; Quality of life improves overnight; Confidence returns, movement becomes normal; But access is treated like a vanity choice; So yeah… why isn’t it mandatory already?