Yasu + Junko/Trunk Archive
JULY/AUGUST 2019 58 SHAPE.COM
bounce
BACK
New science says the size
of your breasts may dictate
how you exercise. We
look at the biomechanics
and beyond. By Mary Anderson
side, and backward-and-forward mo-
tions. (The latter is caused by a brief
deceleration of the body upon foot
strike, followed by an acceleration
when you push off the ground.) An
unsupported A cup might move an
average of four centimeters vertically
and two millimeters side to side; a DD,
by comparison, can travel 10 and five
centimeters, respectively. And there
are a lot of nerve endings in breast tis-
sue that can register pain and cause you
to pull back on your intensity.
ble up and wear two bras at once for
extra support, Lawson says. As for the
mental side? “You have to approach
bounce as natural and happening
to everyone,” says plus-size model
Candice Huffine, the creator of Day/
Won size-inclusive activewear. “I used
to think my body wasn’t made for run-
ning. Then I tried it. Sure, my breasts
require extra work and artillery to
secure them comfortably, but in no
way would I let them hold me back from
crushing my goals.”
aff ected the amount and level of activ-
ity they did, compared with 7 percent of
women with small breasts. Given those
stats, researchers found that “ breast
size is a potential barrier to women par-
ticipating in physical activity.”
Psychology comes into play too, says
LaJean Lawson, Ph.D., the director of
the Champion Bra Lab, who treadmill
tests women of all sizes. “One DD tes-
ter told me she never exercises in public
because she doesn’t want people look-
ing at her breasts moving,” she says.
Women with the largest breasts spent
this much less time per week
exercising than women with small
breasts, according to a new
Australian study.