When the Great Shift hit, I was stocking shelves in a hardware store. One blink and Stephen was gone. In his place stood Stephanie—me. I used to joke with my buddies about being a boob guy. Nothing could compare. So imagine my cruel luck when I woke up in a new body that barely filled an A-cup bra. At first I was furious. If I had to be a woman now, the least fate could do was give me something to work with.
Those first few days, I couldn’t stop staring at myself in the mirror, tugging at my shirt, wishing for what wasn’t there. But slowly I began noticing other things. My stomach was flat, my legs toned, my arms lean but strong. And when I turned sideways, when I walked past the mirror without meaning to look, I saw something else. My ass. Round, firm, alive in a way Stephen’s body had never been. People noticed. Women complimented me, men stared. For the first time I felt like I had a weapon of my own.
I leaned into it. Tight leggings, cropped shirts, movements that drew eyes without me even trying. At first it felt like a performance. Then it started feeling like me. I used to think breasts were everything. Now I know better. The confidence I get from my body isn’t about what I lost, it’s about what I learned to value. Every sway of my hips reminds me that attraction isn’t a formula. It’s attitude, it’s presence, it’s how you own what you’ve been given.
I’ll always laugh a little when I think about the irony. Stephen, the boob guy, turned into Stephanie, the woman who made peace with having almost none. And the truth is, I don’t miss them anymore. I’ve got something else that makes me smile every time I catch my reflection. Something that’s mine.
I used to love boobs. Now I love my booty.
And honestly? So does everyone else.
With an ass like this, who needs boobs?
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