I am having issue about being a girl

Ok so I am 23 (waiting for a diagnosis) and I was born female, but something I’ve noticed is that throughout my life I’ve always hated my chest. I wouldn’t say my breasts are big or anything but I really have always struggled with having them there in general. I don’t like how they are there for “no reason”. Obviously I’d love to have children one day, but why do I have them now? Why can’t they just go away and come back when I am one day in the position to become pregnant? Why do they move when I move? They are they different from each other? Why do they stick out? Why do I always feel the need to contain them in tight bras? Has anyone else here struggled with this? I think I’d have the same issue if I was born a boy. I’ve heard penis’ jiggle around and move somewhat independently from bodies kind of like breasts do on girls. I identify as a girl and don’t believe to be trans or non binary or gender fluid as far as I am aware.

Parents
  • Apes do not have human-like breasts, they obviously have mammary glands, but not the fat deposits that make human breasts larger and more projecting. The evolutionary theory is that they act as sexual signals and 'releasers' (releasers are stimuli that trigger specific responses or actions, often seen in the context of attachment or instinctive behaviors - in this case male sexual interest). The theory goes that when humans became bipedal and coitus (yes, Sheldon Cooper) started to become more frontal, breasts became buttock mimics. Blame human evolution over the past 6-7 million years and Darwinian 'sexual selection'.

Reply
  • Apes do not have human-like breasts, they obviously have mammary glands, but not the fat deposits that make human breasts larger and more projecting. The evolutionary theory is that they act as sexual signals and 'releasers' (releasers are stimuli that trigger specific responses or actions, often seen in the context of attachment or instinctive behaviors - in this case male sexual interest). The theory goes that when humans became bipedal and coitus (yes, Sheldon Cooper) started to become more frontal, breasts became buttock mimics. Blame human evolution over the past 6-7 million years and Darwinian 'sexual selection'.

Children
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