I haven't done any NBE (natural breast enhancement) for a few months now. Not really discouraged, just lazy, I guess.
If I were you, I'd decide how long to heal and then wait another month or two. Remember, you're applying suction, almost a vacuum, over the breast and the last thing you'd need would be to reopen an incision. Some people over-pump and burst small blood vessels making the breast look like a gigantic hickie. And that's easier to do when you're first starting and don't really know how the Noogleberry will react to what you're doing.
Personally, I used to over-pump turning everything bright red and leaving a big red circle where the cup pressed against my chest. It took a day for the red to fade and 3 or 4 days for the red circle to vanish. But did that stop me from over-pumping the next time? Heck no. Then I read about the pump and release method many here use and tried that in combination with not over-pumping. If only I had the discipline to do anything consistently so that I could blame my lack of appreciable results on the system rather than on myself.
I don't know if this is common, but when I was using it for several hours continuously I found the suction "leaking" after a while and had to give the pump another couple of squeezes every 15 minutes. Of course, with the pump and release method, you're letting air in after 10 minutes then re-pumping after a minute or two, and that would take me maybe 5 pumps.
But don't worry, there's no way I could see anyone developing Popeye sized forearms from the pumping, no matter how long you use it each day or how much you have to re-pump.
To be honest, there were only two difficult aspects of the Noogleberry. First, trying to figure out what cup size to get (I think they seem to run small), and second keeping first cup from falling off while trying to get the second cup on.
I bought mine on eBay from a listing directly from the Noogleberry company. It arrived from England in about a week or so with no muss or fuss. I liked the security of the eBay Buyer Protection policy.
Good luck and please let us (ok, me as I have more curiosity than a cat) know how things go.
If I were you, I'd decide how long to heal and then wait another month or two. Remember, you're applying suction, almost a vacuum, over the breast and the last thing you'd need would be to reopen an incision. Some people over-pump and burst small blood vessels making the breast look like a gigantic hickie. And that's easier to do when you're first starting and don't really know how the Noogleberry will react to what you're doing.
Personally, I used to over-pump turning everything bright red and leaving a big red circle where the cup pressed against my chest. It took a day for the red to fade and 3 or 4 days for the red circle to vanish. But did that stop me from over-pumping the next time? Heck no. Then I read about the pump and release method many here use and tried that in combination with not over-pumping. If only I had the discipline to do anything consistently so that I could blame my lack of appreciable results on the system rather than on myself.
I don't know if this is common, but when I was using it for several hours continuously I found the suction "leaking" after a while and had to give the pump another couple of squeezes every 15 minutes. Of course, with the pump and release method, you're letting air in after 10 minutes then re-pumping after a minute or two, and that would take me maybe 5 pumps.
But don't worry, there's no way I could see anyone developing Popeye sized forearms from the pumping, no matter how long you use it each day or how much you have to re-pump.
To be honest, there were only two difficult aspects of the Noogleberry. First, trying to figure out what cup size to get (I think they seem to run small), and second keeping first cup from falling off while trying to get the second cup on.
I bought mine on eBay from a listing directly from the Noogleberry company. It arrived from England in about a week or so with no muss or fuss. I liked the security of the eBay Buyer Protection policy.
Good luck and please let us (ok, me as I have more curiosity than a cat) know how things go.