The Scottish creator first noticed her body changing when she was just eight years old, after her cup size jumped almost overnight to a C. At the time, that was already a huge change for a child, but it would later become only the beginning for her 4’11” frame.”
Robert, now 28, says her bras are currently an R-cup because of macromastia, a recently diagnosed condition that causes excessive breast growth. In the past year alone, she said her bra size went up by 11 cup sizes.
Despite all of that, she did not get a clear diagnosis until she was 25. That was when a doctor finally identified the condition as macromastia, giving a medical name to something she had been trying to understand for years.
The delayed diagnosis left her dealing with both the physical weight of the condition and the frustration of not knowing exactly why it was happening.
Breast reduction is often discussed as the main treatment because it can reduce the weight and pressure in the short term. However, in people with this disorder, the breast tissue can grow back, meaning surgery may not be a one-time fix.
Robert has spoken before about how macromastia affects her daily life, including the way it can make everyday tasks physically difficult. She said activities like walking for a long time or cleaning the house can require a brace, which also makes exercise much harder.
Why surgery is not a simple answer
From the outside, breast reduction surgery might sound like the obvious solution. But Robert’s case is more complicated because doctors have warned her that the tissue would likely return.
That means she would not only be choosing one major operation. She could be facing the possibility of repeated surgeries through her life, each with its own recovery time, risks, and emotional cost.
For someone who has already spent years being dismissed, stared at, and judged, that makes the decision much more personal than simply choosing whether to change her appearance.
Speaking to TMZ, Robert explained why she has decided against getting a breast reduction, even though the condition still affects her body and routine.
Her answer is tied to years of medical appointments, rejected surgery requests, and a change in how she sees herself after building a platform online.
She tried again at 17, but was turned down once more. That experience became part of a wider pattern as she continued trying to get help for macromastia into adulthood.
“They would say that my BMI was too high,” Robert shared.
In other words, the numbers used to judge her body did not fully reflect what was happening. Her breast size added weight to her small frame, which made her BMI appear higher than it might have been with average-sized breasts.
That left her in a difficult cycle. The condition was causing the problem, but the physical result of that condition also became part of the reason she was told surgery was not suitable.
How OnlyFans changed the way she saw herself
Robert’s views on surgery also changed after she started creating content on OnlyFans. Before that, she said she had thought about getting a reduction for most of her life.
Instead of only seeing her body as a source of pain, embarrassment, or unwanted attention, the platform helped her feel more in control of how she presented herself. That does not erase the physical struggles, but it has changed how she feels about her body.
She has also spoken about the way the condition affects other parts of her life, including how macromastia can make dating harder when people focus on her body before seeing her as a person.
‘My differences make me beautiful’
Robert has criticized the UK’s National Health Service for not approving surgery, though she says the operation would likely need to be repeated during her life. The health system, she explained, did not see the growth as ‘extreme’ enough to justify a life-threatening procedure.
At this stage, Robert said the surgery does not feel worth it anyway, because she believes her breasts would ‘just grow back in a year or so’.
She also explained her thinking in an interview with UNILAD, saying: “There is nothing much known in the UK, when I got diagnosed I got handed a Wikipedia page and sent on my way.”
“I considered a reduction my whole life up until I started OnlyFans, it was only after then that I began to love my body and realized that my differences make me beautiful. I wouldn’t get one now.”
For Robert, the decision now appears to be about more than avoiding surgery. It is also about accepting a body that has caused her pain, stress, and public judgment, while still recognizing that it is part of what makes her different.