| Worked for my son. He was 39” at 2 and is now 6’5” at 18. |
| No. did not work for us at all |
Why are only whites allowed to use this? |
No idea what the science is behind it, but the research states that it is only accurate for white children. Anyone is “allowed” to try it, but apparently it might not be accurate if you’re not white. |
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Didn’t work for my kids’ eventual heights (not mine which I had checked out of curiosity).
My family has a tendency for big babies/toddlers, both of my kids 90th percentile until about 4 or 5, but then drop after that. As I did too as a kid. |
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Interesting but this follows for my son too. He was 99 percentile at age 3 for height and is now 6’1”and still growing. According to this he should end up growing another inch…
My daughter was 50 percentile at age 3 so should be 5’5” which she is almost. |
| If I were you I would ask to have him get X-rays to see how open his growth plates are. |
It’s a different formula for females. So far genetic research is showing that height is 80% genetics. They’ve also found many genetic mutations that can cause extreme height or extreme lack of height. It’s not as simple as mother’s height or father’s height. Not with thousands of genes involved in height. Imagine in the future they manipulate every fetus’s genes to make all males the same height and all females the same height. Creepy thought. |
Mine was the same. doesn't work that I can see. |
| Doesn’t work for crackers |
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Mine's taller than the formulas predicted. 5'8" is what we expected (which would have been in line with the tallest men on both sides of our family) but he's currently 5'10" and still growing.
When I (female) was a kid my parents were told I would never grow beyond 5'2", but I ended up 5'7". My brother is shorter by a couple of inches. |