Ssbbw Teen

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Ssbbw Teen
LIGHT WEIGHT I get slammed for having my Christmas decs up early - but I have a good reason
RUDE FOOD I work at McDonalds and people's ridiculous requests always baffle me
KNOCK & RUN I'm an ex-delivery driver... why we take blank photos & don't bother knocking
HOUSE THAT I live in a council house & people always ask me the same weird questions
Fiona Hornby, 25, from Bolton, says she can only stand up for five minutes at a time
A MUM says she has been left housebound because her 48J boobs won't stop growing.
Fiona Hornby, from Bolton, watched in horror as her C-cup chest grew during puberty - leaving her breasts covered in painful sores, spots and purple rashes.
The 25-year-old can't stand up for more than five minutes at a time because of her crippling back pain, meaning she's trapped in her house, and struggles to find clothes which fit her.
Fiona, a payroll clerk, said: "My huge breasts have ruined my life. They have affected everything.
"My self-esteem has hit rock bottom, I can't find any clothes that fit and can't wear the same things as people my age.
"I have terrible back pains caused by the weight of my breasts. I can't hoover or sleep properly.
"If I do washing up I have to take a break halfway through because the pain is terrible.
"I find it difficult to go out in public because people think I've got big boobs because I look fat. Some people have even asked if I have had a boob job as they're that large."
Fiona was diagnosed with a condition called macromastia, which causes abnormal enlargement of the breast tissue, in 2015.
She said: "Everything I wore put my boobs on show. When I was still in primary school I was a C-cup.
"I'd be called a 'slag' because it always looked like I was trying to show them off but I wasn't, I just wanted to wear the same things as other girls.
"The pain can be horrendous. I once got really terrified because I was getting in the bath and I looked down and my breasts were purple.
"People say 'I wish could swap with you' but I say 'you don't,'.
"I once went to get a bra fitted and I went to the changing room and the lady in the fitting room turned to me and said 'we don't do your size'. It was very, very upsetting."
The intense pain means Fiona barely sleeps and can't go to the gym anymore.
She said: "When I'm in bed it's like I'm suffocating. I can't lie on my front because they're too heavy.
"It's like having a huge weight on my chest. Getting to sleep can be a real struggle sometimes.
"In 2013 I used to go to the gym and I weighed just seven-and-a-half stone but since my bust has continued to grow it has been impossible to work out.
"My boobs just didn't stop growing and just got bigger and bigger and droopier and droopier.
"If I wanted to wear something the same size as other girls I'd have to get it at least five sizes up so the clothes would at least fit.
"I used to work in retail but I can't stand up for long periods of time now so I need to have a desk job. If I go on a 25-minute walk, I'm just in absolute agony.
"I want people to understand how hard it's been, I've put weight on because I can't move properly because my boobs are so large. It's a vicious circle."
Fiona welcomed her first son William in November and says she struggles to care for her newborn because of her boobs.
She's desperate to have life-changing breast reduction surgery but claims she has been told she can't get it on the NHS, so she's raising £5,500 for a private op instead.
She said: "I can't hold my baby close to me because my boobs are so big I can't even see him and he could suffocate.
"I wasn't able to breastfeed him as a baby. I was terrified I was going to suffocate him because I couldn't hold him properly because i was having to hold my boobs. I couldn't even see his face.
"If I had the operation I'd feel like a new person. I'd be starting life again, I'd be able to go shopping for blouses and clothes I've not been able to wear.
"I've considered moving to have the surgery because it seems like there's no other option.
"Having the surgery will give me the ability to live normally."
A spokesman for NHS Bolton Clinical Commissioning Group said they were unable to comment on individual cases.
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Kirstie Mouncey put on a huge amount of weight for her boyfriend.
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A teenager who gained 238 pounds in two years to please her boyfriend has managed to shed more than half her body weight.
At 18 years old, Kirstie Mouncey, who lives in England, tipped the scales at 490 pounds and was virtually housebound, with her now ex-partner Alex claiming benefits to be her official caretaker.
Mouncey says that she gained so much weight by scoffing down 10,000 calories and drinking over 5 gallons of Lucozade — a sports drink similar to Gatorade — a day. She also regularly ate up to four double McDonald’s cheeseburgers at a time.
By 2012, Mouncey was so big that she struggled to fit on seats on public transportation, became out of breath while walking, and felt so worthless she became suicidal.
Terrified she was eating herself to death, her grandparents and aunt offered her $10,500 in 2014 to have a gastric band fitted.
Within the first six months, she lost 112 pounds and started to get her confidence back. However, her changing lifestyle also cost her her relationship.
Now, Mouncey weighs 210 pounds and wears size 16 clothes, having previously squeezed into a size 36 and spent her days in dressing gowns. She’s never been more confident and happy.
Mouncey said: “I have to pinch myself. I never in a million years thought I’d ever be a size 12-14. I was that size when I was 12 years old!”
Mouncey, 23, explained how she’d always been self-conscious about her weight and was bullied at school.
At 11 she weighed 210 pounds and was wore baggy clothes because nothing fitted.
“When I was eating it was a distraction from how miserable I felt because of the bullying at school,” she admitted.
“I loved my grandmother’s cooking. She’d make chicken casseroles and huge roast dinners which she’d serve with three types of potato – boiled, mashed and roasted.”
“I would eat all mine and everyone’s leftovers. Money was tight and I wanted to make sure nothing got wasted.”
When she met ex-boyfriend Alex, 28, online she was thrilled when he told her he liked bigger women.
Mouncey said: “I was a decade younger but he got me. He didn’t want me to slim down.”
“I thought, I can finally stop battling weight issues – finally a man who likes me for me, a big girl.”
“I gave up the diets in favor of eating to keep him happy. He was a good guy. We fell in love straight away.”
“He gave me confidence, purpose and he showed me I was beautiful. In the first two years, I put on 238 pounds.”
She admitted the pair would regularly eat up to two takeout meals a day and thought nothing of having a Burger King meal followed by a pepperoni pizza with sides of garlic bread, potato wedges and chicken wings.
“I was eating up to 10,000 calories a day,” Mouncey admitted.
“Alex and I lived on takeout. I’d have a bag of chips and cookies for breakfast, a whole chicken for lunch and McDonalds for dinner.”
“I’d eat four double cheeseburgers, two bags of fries, two strawberry milkshakes and countless doughnuts. I’d also down at least 5 gallons of Lucozade a day.”
Mouncey even entered a super-sized Big Beautiful Woman pageant . At the time, she was 17-years-old and weighed 375 pounds. She was the youngest and biggest contestant.
“Alex was so supportive and proud,” she recalled.
“I was a size 32 – many of the other girls were plus size, but not super plus size like me.”
“They carried their weight so well. I pretended I was proud of my figure and that I wanted to show teens that they should be happy no matter what their size, but I was actually mortified by all the attention.”
“I was trolled and that knocked my confidence. People said I was fat and ugly, and one person said I should kill myself. It was horrible.”
As Mouncey’s weight increased, her health declined.
She suffered high blood pressure and couldn’t dress herself or walk down stairs without help.
“I started feeling worthless again and became suicidal,” Mouncey admitted.
The turning point for Mouncey came when her little sister Cody, 10, came to visit her.
“I couldn’t take her to the park or even play with her and I worried what example I was setting,” she said.
“I realized I wanted to be there for her and I wanted to make her proud.”
Feeling bad she’d be taking a person’s place if she had it done by the National Health Service, Mouncey accepted her family’s offer of private gastric band surgery.
Doctors warned Mouncey about the huge risks involved and that she might not survive.
“I was dying anyway so it was worth it for a chance at having a life,” she said.
“I was killing myself with food. I worried Alex would be disappointed, but he was supportive and told me he loved me for me and not my size.”
The operation was three hours long and afterward, Mouncey immediately felt the benefits.
But as she shed the pounds, she and Alex grew apart and broke up in February of 2016.
She said: “Alex was my first love so I will always care about him.”
“As I lost weight and found the real me, we became different people. I think he wanted me to stay bigger, but that is not what I wanted to do.”
“I don’t blame him for my weight gain – I knew what I was doing.”
Mouncey still considers herself plus size, but healthy, and says she is getting a lot of male attention now that she is single.
“I still have excess skin but I won’t get rid of it until I am my target size,” she said.
“Food isn’t my life anymore. My dream is to be a size 10, but I’ll need surgery to get rid of the excess skin.
“I want to learn from my past and help others. I help Cody eat healthily and I talk to big girls online who want to lose weight and who need guidance advice and help.”
“I am blessed my gran helped me see the light and used her savings — now I want to make her proud.”
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Published: 16:52 BST, 14 May 2017 | Updated: 21:56 BST, 14 May 2017
A 25-year-old woman's before and after bikini photographs of her 30lb weight gain have gone viral after she shared them to celebrate getting heavier.
Hannah Foster from Sacramento, California , posted the images, one taken in 2012 and one in April, on Instagram earlier this month.
In the accompanying caption, she explained to her followers that the first was taken after a 100lb weight loss and when she was at her skinniest after years of dieting.
Despite being smaller, she was tortured by body hang-ups and was, for the most part, unwilling to have her photograph taken.
In the more recent photograph, she appeared beaming and with radiating confidence.
Hannah Foster shared two mages of herself in a bikini to show off her 30lb weight gain earlier this month. The first picture (left) was taken in 2012 and the second (right) was during a trip to Hawaii last month
'Transformations aren't always what they seem. Pic on the right is after losing almost 100 pounds in 2012. It was one of the first times I had ever allowed anyone to take a picture of me in a bikini (and only because it was my first time swimming in the ocean),' Hannah, who manages her boyfriend's rock band, explained.
'The girl on the left hated herself vastly more than the girl on the right, even though she weighed 30 pounds less than right-girl. She was in a nasty relationship, living abroad and lonely, and despite losing weight STILL HATED HER BODY. Losing weight won't make you love yourself.
'Pic on the right is after 25 years of realizing that losing 5 pounds won't make me a better person, it won't make me like myself, and most importantly it won't make me happy. I go to the gym, I eat healthy, but it's not for weight loss; it's because I only get one body and I want to use it as long as possible.
'Eating 800 calories a day isn't taking care of your body, even if it makes you skinny. (Eating that little is part of what made gain weight, I was starving my body.)'
Hannah began focusing on her body confidence when a friend told her how cruel she was being to herself by constantly trying to lose weight
The trip to Hawaii was the 'capstone' in her body image journey, she said, and was the first time she felt comfortable exhibiting her body in swimsuits without feeling the need to cover up
The Instagrammer regularly shares details of her new self-love regime which includes a healthy diet and exercise schedule to boost her skin as well
The second photograph was taken during a trip to Hawaii with her musician boyfriend which she described as the 'capstone' of her body confidence journey.
In an interview with Yahoo Beauty , Hannah revealed that the first photograph was taken while she was living overseas aged 20 and that she had recently lost a considerable amount of weight.
'I had been heavy since childhood; I matured very early and started ‘dieting’ when I was in about fourth grade. After losing weight, my seemed to pause for about four months, but that just let other image and personal issues come out that had been overshadowed by primarily hating my body,' she said.
Hannah is now an avid social media campaigner for bo-po, an online movement which stands for body positive
'I told myself, subconsciously and consciously, that if I could just lose a little bit more, restrict calories a little bit more, find a little more time to work out — that I could be happy,' she added.
The turning point came when she was discussing her negative body image with someone who pointed out how hard she was on herself.
'She said, "If you talked to another person the way you talked to yourself, you would seem like the most horrible, nasty person. You’re not a horrible, nasty person, so why do you treat yourself that way?" This just blew my mind.'
Since sharing the photographs on May 4, Hannah has been inundated with support from other social media users and positive body image campaigners.
She posts her images under the #bopo hashtag which stands for body positive, an online movement to boost confidence and do away with body image stereotypes.
'My posts were never intended to inspire other people; I just needed to release my vulnerabilities and Instagram just happened to be the medium I was familiar with.
'It started really helping other people and that was so wild for me. I never thought that was going to happen,' she said.
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