Oh, I don't want to take way people's right to choose what they do or don't do with their own bodies. I am just a bit surprised at the amount of women who seem to have some sort of issue relating to their breast size, even those who ultimately don't get them augmented. I can relate to your statement of women linking breast-size to femininity, Heather. However, I think this idea again exist much more in the minds of women themselves than with men. Sure, there's men out there who live by the mantra "a real woman has curves", but I don't believe even those men expect all women to have C or D cups. I remember a documentary where they followed four women prior, during and after they got a breast augmentation. All of them started from a feeling of frustration with their own size. Most of them felt insecure about their appearance in general. But only ONE of them felt a lot better after they got the work done. The other three found out that the larger breasts were unable to solve all their feelings of inadequacy. But when they dug a little deeper, you could easily see that for some of those women, the breast size itself wasn't the problem. One of the women was the daughter of a former local beauty queen who resented the fact that her daughter wasn't as beautiful as she was. She had somehow instilled into her daughters mind that she was ugly, and it was very clear in the post-operation interviews with her that no amount of surgery would ever be able to take away that feeling.