11-08-2024, 20:44
(This post was last modified: 11-08-2024, 21:09 by ShelaVenna.)
(11-08-2024, 18:12)breast4success Wrote: Sorry for the late update. Just wanted to say that I haven't had any shrinkage since my last post - confirming once more that it is breast tissue gained and not just edema/fluid retention. I compared pics I took yesterday to the last set and then to the initial set I took before starting evebra.
I still can't believe the difference between my pre-evebra pics and post-evebra pics. Granted it's not as dramatic as one would get from fat transplant or implants but it is definitely a positive improvement.
I think I'll do a second cycle on both breasts after the time change this year to help even out the smaller breast. I'm afraid if I just do one side I may end up with the same issue but with the smaller breast being on the opposite side.
Since I know it won't be a huge change in size and shape and I know from my charts/notes exactly when to stop for me (i.e., 12 weeks), I think I'll have a better result this way and can better gauge the end result. I will just stop pumping the large breast at week 10 or 11 rather than do an extra week on the smaller breast.
As always, I will let everyone know the results.
So has it been about 4 months since you completely stopped? What amount of growth did you retain? One cup? Edit: 3.5 inches, holy shit
You say you don’t think you would have grown much more if you continued (not that you need to), but maybe you would have. Before average adult weight increased by a whole lot in the US, the average adult breast size was 34B. US bra sizing has changed since then, so that’s a equivalent to a current 30B. Female puberty tends to average around 4 years. I mention all that because it means that most girls (within the healthy weight range) grow 3 cup sizes during 4 years of puberty (AA, A, and then B). So they average about 0.75 cup sizes per year. In reality, the growth is probably nonlinear, but that’s beside the point. The point is that, even if you grew only one cup size year, that would still be faster than puberty. I imagine one cup size per year is the absolute minimum rate of growth that most people who pump would tolerate. Also the more months you pump, the more the risk of scarring, nipple stretching, etc goes up. You can do things to reduce the risk, but I don’t know if it’s possible to completely eliminate the risk.
That was long winded AF. TLDR: I imagine the rate of growth slows a lot after the first cup or two, but even so, it probably still continues at a rate faster than puberty for a good while. Whether or not that’s fast enough to be worth the effort, is a personal choice. I hope some brave soul continues for like a whole year and posts about it here, just to satisfy my curiosity, but I doubt that’s gonna happen lol.