![]() ![]() ![]() “It is hell, but I am lucky, as I work from home in a tiny village where I have a car and don’t have to get public transport.” Lucy also says her breasts make a long list of everyday tasks a struggle – from sleeping to cleaning and cooking. Most women out there with bigger boobs can’t do that. ![]() “I am privileged to be able to afford that luxury. I have to have a massage every two weeks to help my back. She said: “I have back pain every day, but some days, I physically cannot walk because I am in agony. "But in the end I had to, because I kept spilling over the top of the cups.” Aside from the stares and judgement, the physical pain of having such a large bust cannot be underestimated, says Lucy. I stayed at a K-cup for ages because I was in denial and couldn’t accept I was an L. “I started to think, ‘Oh my god, they’re not gonna go back to how they were’. Then, when I tried, I had to keep going up a size. “After coming out of hospital, I wasn’t really wearing bras at first. “Molly wouldn’t breastfeed, so they were just getting bigger and bigger,” she said. Then, when Molly refused to breastfeed, Lucy’s bra size soared to a 38L. “I get it, the staring comes with the territory, but it’s the prolonged staring. I remember being a teenager and men walking past staring. “It would get me attention when I was younger but having massive boobs is not all it’s cracked up to be. Breast cancer survivor brings first UK range of luxury lingerie for people dealing with the condition.'Humiliated' teacher who had to express milk in school toilets or car park wins tribunal case.“It was awful at school, I would get chased to the bus stop by a certain lad who was obsessed with me. “I have always felt like a freak to be honest,” she said. "They are so supportive.” Even as a youngster, Lucy had a large bust – with puberty boosting her cup size from a B to an E when she was just 14. These people have made me feel so comfortable going out, that even if I do get anxious, they don’t hold it against me. ![]() "They encouraged me to come to the park after school and do more things with Molly and them. But when Molly started at her village school, I met so many lovely parents. "I would literally get in the car, go to the house, then come straight back again. “I couldn’t even walk down the street without people staring at me.” For a good two and a half years, I didn’t go out unless it was to care for an elderly family friend at the weekend. Lucy also receives constant encouragement from her partner, Mark, 50, who she runs a waste management company with, saying: “After I gave birth to Molly, I didn’t feel like myself anymore. The videos have now gone viral, which is a confidence boost for the worried mum. Lucy started posting videos documenting her daily struggles living with L-cup breasts on TikTok in March. Lucy slowly made connections with fellow mums who persuaded her to start venturing out again. Things started to change when Molly, five, started school in September 2021. When her breasts reached a 38L after her daughter Molly was born in 2016, she became so anxious she would not even brave the supermarket. Wearing a 38G cup for most of her life, Lucy Luxor, 35 – her TikTok name – says she was used to weathering uncomfortable stares and vulgar comments. A businesswoman who felt like “a freak” because of her 38L breasts is now able to socialise thanks to support from fellow school mums and a confidence-boosting 2.9m views of her first TikTok video. ![]()
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