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In May, Amy appeared in the flows of over 25 million Tictoc users with a video that documented the dramatic results of her breast reduction. The attention was surprised her.
It was “completely out of this world”, Amy, 24, tells people exclusively over Zoom.
Amy, a psychology student and health administrator living in Brisbane, Australia, tells people that a breast reduction was on her mind for “most” of her life. She explains that her breasts began to develop when she was about 14 years old and grew rapidly ever since.
Everything about the size of her breast weighed her emotionally and physically for about a decade.
Not only did she fight with chronic back pain, but job interviews and excursions with friends were transformed into moments “which were covered by being unsure how big my chest was,” she says.
“As much as I would wear minimizer or sports bra to try squash (my breasts) no one hid them. I felt they were all that people would see when they would look at me. It was something that held me back.” ”
In addition, vitro -fertilization (IVF) “exacerbated everything”, and it came to a point where she needed her partner’s help to dress and shower.
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Her physical and mental health worsened in 2020, when Amy’s struggles with anorexia and habits with binge eating and cleansing resulted in feelings of body dysmorphia. “It became very difficult to be able to look past my breasts,” she explains, adding that her frame of 4′7 ″ reinforced how she felt her appearance.
So it was about 18 years of age when Amy finally took steps towards getting a breast reduction. She weighed her options to see private doctors (which would cost her up to $ 20,000 in Australian dollars) or to get the operation free through Australia’s public health care system (according to Australian Ministry of Government for Health and Aging Care WebsiteBreast reductions can be covered by Medicare if performed for medical reasons).
Going through government insurance was eventually what Amy was working on, but her referral was rejected four times. “I just continued to submit it because my condition deteriorated.”
With the state of Amy Hills
Eventually, she qualified, but still had to wait a year to consult with a surgeon, and after another two weeks’ launch from her original surgery, Amy was finally set to go with her “life-saving” surgery on April 7, 2025- and without any costs in advance) (she says “all”, from her visit and her visit and her visit and her visit and her visit and her visit and her visit and her visit and her visit and her visit and her visit)
For her surgery, it was planned to take her from an H -cup to a D -cup and make a nipple lift to reshape her breasts. She would also have about 3 kg. tissue is removed.
“I felt this real feeling of just peace. Pain finally ended,” reminds Amy of how she felt before going under the knife. Although nothing prepared her for complications with the coagulation medicine she had to take after the operation.
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“I constantly vomit, so they started giving (the drug) to me intravenously. It’s not fun immediately after you have had an operation on the chest. The first few days (after surgery) was definitely quite painful, and the feeling felt very narrow and compressed.”
When she got over the hump, Amy describes her recovery as “much better than I expected.” She went on bed rest, performed daily tasks with the help and began to go up and down her driveway on day four.
Amy is now about ten weeks after the operation and feels that she has a “new lease.” The physical symptoms have not only dropped, but she enjoys the simple pleasures of having a smaller breast now.
“I went bra shopping for the first time (after surgery) and it was crazy because I got a bra for $ 5 when earlier each bra that I had bought was at least $ 100,” she says. Shopping clothes has also become a more fun experience. “I’m so excited by fashion and clothes now. The biggest thing is that I look in the mirror and I feel like a human again.” Earlier this month she had also laid out a Tiktok video of her Tries with his “dream dress” with his new breast.
When he shares his story, Amy hopes to create an uplifting society for women with similar travel while working to grow her social media platform, something she had known “self -doubt” about before her surgery.
At the same time, she has also had to learn how to handle unfriendly – and sometimes raw comments. Although “it just doesn’t disappear me,” she says. “Because my life is so much more full and exciting. My happiness is not based on the fact that I used to have really big boobs.”
At the moment, she is set to enjoy her new life, which, by the way, does not include cosmetic improvements anymore, “unless there is no other medical that emerges. There is real beauty in just being who you are.”
If you or someone you know struggles with an eating disorder, The alliance for eating disorders Provides a fully staffed auxiliary line of 1-866-662-1235, as well as free, therapist-led support groups.