I also remember the hell of a shirts vs. skins game. Common theme between us, right? I went to a basketball camp when I was 11 or 12. Yeah, I went through extreme lengths not to play in a tournament. I got skins with my terrible luck and everyone started taking their shirts off. I went to the coach, lied and said I had a skin disorder (eczema), so I couldn't take my shirt off. He believed me for some reason and I sat on the bench with this cute girl. We talked a little, but I believe she knew why I didn't play that day.
My parents also forced me to attend another camp in high school. We all had to dress alike. It was awful: thin white t-shirt, white shorts and white shoes. I didn't have any money to buy a compression vest, so I figured out that a super, super tight undershirt would manage to compress my chest. It was so tight that it took me 10 minutes to get it on some days. I only had one undershirt like that, so I had to wash it daily while I was there or it would smell really bad. I felt like hell those entire two weeks, but I got through it. No one mentioned my chest at all.
My daily wardrobe consisted of shirts 2x my size that were buttoned up. Yes, they had wacky patterns on them and I always wore jeans. My parents always complained about me wearing the same thing over and over. In actuality, I really owned about 70 shirts that all looked alike. It didn't hit me until one day my shirt ripped against a desk in high school. I kind of freaked out and a girl commented on it. "Why do you wear the same shirts everyday?" The other girls agreed and I felt like, well, I felt terrible.
Now that I think back, other than those few instances, I always managed to hide my chest considerably well. I always got out of situations where I had to undress or change clothes. I constantly avoided physical contact, which was necessary back then. It turned me into a decent liar as a child. I knew how to get out of situations before they even occurred.
To all the guys who are questioning surgery: DO IT! It will change your life. I've had relationships, I can play sports, go to the gym and do all the other activities I avoided as a kid. If you find a way to have the surgery, then DO IT! If not, then exhaust all options. I fought insurance companies for two years. I failed, but through the fight I found a loan company and that's how I got my surgery. Never give up.