Hi there,
I feel like an interloper by joining this forum, but I did so because I feel the need to share my story and didn't know where else to go. I hope this is an open and safe environment for me to do so.
I am a cis male. But three years ago my body suddenly (over a period of about 6 months) grew fully-developed breasts. I know that cis-guys can develop pseudo-breasts ("man boobs") due to a variety of reasons—weight gain and steroid use being the chief culprits—but none of those reasons applied to me. I was a slim, fit, non-drug-using, non-heavy-drinking guy.
Nevertheless, at the age of 27, due to *some* quirk in biology/hormones, my body revolted against me and I developed very prominent breasts.
This sudden change destroyed my confidence, plunged me into a deep, long-lasting, suicidal depression. I felt as if my body was this poisonous thing, separate to myself, and that my chest was this pair of tumours that existed solely to destroy my life. I would slouch and round my shoulders to try to hide the problem, but nevertheless I knew people could tell.
I desperately scoured the Internet trying to find some explanation for what was going on, both with my body and inside my head. And that's how I found the trans* community. The day I found a YouTube video of a trans* guys describe his chest-related dysphoria, I couldn't stop sobbing, because he was articulating what I felt.
I’m not trying to equate my experience of body dysphoria to the experience of a trans* guy, because I fully-appreciate that—despite how awful my experience felt—what I went through is a drop in the ocean to what trans* guys have to deal with.
But I nevertheless felt liberated, because the trans* community gave me the language to articulate the horror I was feeling towards my body. The trans* community also empowered me with the confidence to seek medical help and to ultimately choose a surgical option to correct the problem.
I am now happy again. Despite my scars, I feel like I am now living in a body that is mine. I no longer fear stares when I walk down the street and I no longer spend every waking moment obsessing over these things growing on my chest.
So, this rambling message is basically a thank you to the trans* community and to forums like this, for providing such amazing resources to help guys through the dark times to become the men they’re meant to be.