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Oh dear… I too experienced a shrinking boob after breastfeeding my two kids, I would have loved it to remain big but no chance, lol bestandworst. Breastfeeding definitely ruins your boobs. I had a boob job years ago and they were fine until I had my first daughter who I fed for 9 months and she sucked every bit of fat out my boobs until I was left with droopy looking boobs. Not a good look! Ironically I still got Mastatis. Hopefully they will both even out again when you eventually stop breastfeeding.
I am currently very lopsided and hoping the same thing when I stop too! Sending love to your boobs from my boobs, may they wish for future perkiness ha!! Thanks for linking up bestandworst. Ohh, as a non breastfeeding mum I never had that issue, mine are bith still stupidly large. I do hope you even out soon. I hated having big boobs when my milk production was at its peak — they just kept getting in the way!
Back again for effitfriday. The miracle of boobs. My nipples are permanently bigger after breastfeeding.
Hope the deflated one catches up soon. Maybe it just needs a rest! I have never been a big chested lady but after breastfeeding four kids in a few short years including twins- bye boobies. Good god…I know what mine look like after one…but three…there is always the hope that they will find some balance with that.. Thanks for linking up to coolmumclub lovely x.
Even after breastfeeding my youngest for 2 and a half years. Oh you have me worried for my poor boob that is the only one he will feed from…. Will it ever be the same again?!? Yep, these are my boobs. My face also slides slowly south as the day goes on. I am totally blaming the sprogs for that too!
At least you can hide your boobs. Thank you for linking up to ablogginggoodtime. My boy would only feed on one side fir a bit so I pumped like a crazy person on the other side to try and keep things even. I hope your boob reinflates soon!
Leave this field empty. Notify me of follow-up comments by email. When Louise goes below deck for beer, a strange cloud on the horizon passes over the craft, leaving a reflective mist on Scott's bare skin. Six months later, Scott notices that his shirt and slacks are too big for him. Scott, Louise, and Scott's physician, Dr.
Bramson, try to dismiss this as ordinary weight loss. As the trend continues, however, Bramson has X-rays taken.
X-rays taken a week apart prove Scott is getting smaller. Bramson refers him to the California Medical Research Institute, and after weeks of sophisticated tests, Scott and his team of new doctors determine that the mist to which he was exposed was radioactive. This, combined with an exposure to insecticide four months later, set off a chain reaction that is mutating Scott's cells, causing him to shrink.
Scott tells Louise in light of his predicament that she is free to leave him. Louise promises to stand by her marriage vows; however, during the conversation, Scott's wedding ring falls off his shrunken finger. Unable to keep his job, Scott resorts to selling the rights to his story to the press, and becomes a national curiosity.
The media and sightseers camp out on his lawn, and Louise requests an unlisted number to end the constant ringing of the phone. He begins writing a book of his experiences. Humiliated by his condition and the public spectacle he has become, he lashes out at Louise, who is reduced to tears of despair.
The doctors develop an antidote for Scott's affliction, arresting his shrinking when he is However, a new treatment will be needed to return him to his former size.
In a moment of self-loathing, he runs out of the house, his first time being outside since he sold his story. At a neighborhood coffee shop, he meets and becomes friends with a midget named Clarice, who is slightly shorter than him. She is appearing in a carnival sideshow in town and persuades him that life is not all bad being their size.
Inspired, he begins to work on his book again. Two weeks later, however, he notices he has become shorter than Clarice, meaning the antidote has stopped working.
After shrinking enough to fit inside a dollhouse, Scott becomes tyrannical with Louise, and contemplates suicide. Leaving on an errand, Louise accidentally lets inside their cat, Butch. Raked by Butch's claws, Scott flees into the cellar. However, as he tries to push the door closed Butch forces it open, sending Scott flying into a box of rags. Returning to find a bloody scrap of Scott's clothing, Louise tearfully assumes that the cat ate him, and his grisly death is announced to the world.
Concluding he cannot scale the stairs, Scott undertakes the task of survival in the cellar, which at his current size is a cavernous, inhospitable world. Spotting a spider twice his size, he raids a sewing kit to arm himself with a straight pin and grappling hook constructed of thread and a bent pin.
The Curious Case Of The Shrinking Woman - Kindle edition by Kitty O'Day, Jo Penson. Download it once and read it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or. Buy The Curious Case Of The Shrinking Woman by Kitty O'Day (Paperback) online at Lulu. Visit the Lulu Marketplace for product details.
He uses them to ascend to the cellar window in search of food. A screen prevents him from leaving through the window. Charlie persuades Louise to move out, and they go down to the cellar to get her luggage. By now, however, Scott is so small that they cannot hear his screams for help. Determined to at least be master of the cellar world, Scott challenges the spider.
He ties his grappling hook to a pair of scissors and harpoons the spider, but when he pushes the scissors off the edge the thread catches and breaks. He battles on with his pin, finally stabbing the spider through its head. He finds that he is now so small that he can walk between the wires of the window screen.
Scott accepts his fate without fear, and is resigned to the adventure that awaits him in even smaller realms. He knows that he will eventually shrink to atomic size, but no matter how small he becomes, he concludes that he will still matter in the universe because, "to God, there is no zero". The plot was something new for Universal Pictures , which had to approve a story that did not have a neatly resolved ending. Matheson's novel ends with the character shrinking to infinitesimal size. No last-minute rescue occurs; the man keeps shrinking.
With the successful Creature from the Black Lagoon and its sequels to his credit, he was able to convince the studio to agree to a preview. The test audience was startled at the film, but they liked it; the ending was not changed. Matheson regretted having his character shrink one-seventh of an inch per day in the novel, according to an interview with Stephen King in King's book Danse Macabre. Most of the film's special effects were supervised by Clifford Stine , head of the studio's special-effects department.
Jack Arnold solved the problem of simulating giant drops of falling water by use of a treadmill dropping hundreds of water-filled condoms.