I really should try and bring it up to him. I just have to think of how to start up the conversation. And it would be a good idea to learn more about it, since I just found out what gynecomastia IS. Maybe he would take it well, and at least offer some help. And yes, the sad truth is that surgery is the only option...
I plan on saving up as soon as I get a job. That way I'll at least have the comfort of knowing that it'll go away eventually.
That makes a lot of sense. Maybe it would become more noticeable. I know it's not the best thing to do, but I'm sure you understand how stressful this is. I would do anything to just make it go away.
Thanks a bunch for your advice and I'll be waiting to hear how your surgery went!
Like I said, it certainly can't hurt to find out! The worst thing I did was stress over not knowing how to bring it up to one of my parents or anyone in general for years and years. I can't even begin to tell you how much I wish I just said something about it years ago.. but the bottom line is I didn't and I can't change that. All I can do is be happy that I didn't wait even
longer. Some guys wait till they're in their 40's... I'm glad that I'm still fairly young. You're even younger so now is the best time to be active about it. I 100% know the feeling, man. You'd do anything in the world to just wake up one day and have it be gone or find out some medical breakthrough that will get rid of it without surgery.. to have that flat, normal chest that you feel like all your friends have. I can't believe it's been 10 years now for me feeling that way. I'm so ready to get it all removed once and for all.
It is really hard to just bring it up out of nowhere, but once you do.. you actually realize that it's SO easy to talk about because it's something you've likely been keeping to yourself for years (just like for most of us!). Once you start talking about it, you feel the urge to just get all of it off your chest (pun intended!) and all of a sudden you find yourself feeling relieved that you're finally telling someone about it. I basically just told my father I needed to talk to him about something, so we went out for a bite to eat together and I just told him the truth... that when I was around 14, a mass of tissue developed under my nipples and that it almost went away completely on its own on one side but there was still a decent amt of gland on the other side and that for years I had to avoid certain situations, hated going to the beach, couldn't go in pools, couldn't wear a lot of t-shirts I wanted to wear... he completely understood and supported me completely.
A TON of people on this site post about their gyne and how stressful and uncomfortable it is.. and a lot of them that have the surgery, get the surgery and never post again. Likely because all of a sudden this issue that had been a burden for years and years is no longer an issue. Once they've been freed from all of the stress and shame they feel about their chests, they have no need to post here anymore. I'd like to be one of the people who DOES come back to talk about my experience after the surgery and hopefully encourage as many people as I can because I know first hand how miserable this condition can make us. But there is a light at the end of the tunnel, so to speak.. and I finally see it!
Hope this has all been of some help to you. I'll certainly be posting about my experience in about 2 weeks to let anyone who wants to know hear all about how it went. It's kind of nerve racking but at the same time completely exciting to think that something that has been plaguing me for TEN years now is finally about to come to an end for the rest of my life.