
Circulating message claims that, due to its rules on nudity, Facebook keeps removing an image showing the intricately tattooed chest of a breast cancer survivor who had a double mastectomy. The ban caused a great deal of protest from Internet users. However, Facebook quickly backtracked and agreed to allow the image to remain on the network.
Apologies if this has been posted here before. I remember finding this website a couple of years ago and it made me very happy and even lessened some insecurities I had at the time about my breasts. Disclaimer: This post was written by a Feministing Community user and does not necessarily reflect the views of any Feministing columnist, editor, or executive director.

At 31, Sarah Whitney was diagnosed with stage-3 breast cancer. Twenty weeks pregnant with her third child at the time, the Florida mother had surgery to have one breast removed and soon after, began chemotherapy. Throughout her pregnancy, Whitney says her main concern was to have a healthy baby.
They create an unflattering comparison but also an unobtainable ideal. I wanted to rehumanise women through honest photography. Dodsworth interviewed each woman at length, starting by asking them how they felt about their breasts.
Sign in. Watch now. A cash strapped feminist filmmaker secretly takes a job directing a porn film in order to get her thesis film, "Feminism For Dummies" out of the lab.


Kylie Armstrong of Melbourne, Australia took a brave step last Monday when she posted a public photo on Facebook showing her breast. The reason: The three dimples on the lower part of her breast are a sign of breast cancer. The GP [general practitioner] felt no lump.
When facing a preventative double mastectomy, Katelyn Carey had no idea what to expect. Now that she is past her procedure, she wants to tell other women in her position: You're not alone. Carey, a nurse and mother of two, has a family history of breast cancer and underwent a preventative mastectomy at the age of
It's Breast Cancer Awareness Month, and Refinery29 is doing its part by bringing the world un-retouched examples of real women's breasts. Because while society may have a complicated relationship with the female anatomy — as evidenced by debates about everything from birth control to breastfeeding — the most important relationship is the one a woman has with her own body. What everyone else thinks is or at least ought to be irrelevant. Which is why, in the age of Photoshop and impossible beauty standards, it's great to see honest pictures of women and read their thoughts about their bodies.
Some of the incredible women featured in the project, called Mastectomy, are still undergoing treatment while others are in remission. Photographer Ami Barwell, whose mum also battled breast cancer, said she wanted to show that "despite what they've been through, these women are empowered" and that they are "strong, happy and sexy". Among those pictured is Gillian Trim, from London, who was diagnosed with breast cancer in
We often hear that someone is "fighting breast cancer. That is what Angelo Merendino and his wife Jennifer faced after her diagnosis. To help others understand what their world had become, Angelo began taking photos chronicling Jen's fight for survival. The result wasn't just a depiction of pain, but a testament to her amazing spirit and strength.
I know, to much of his ass in the shot. Just install another camera on the other end so we can see her face etc...
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I don't know about that. Ava is on another level than most. Ava has done stuff I doubt Alura would do.,