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Where do you live? I'd push college in the midwest or South where the men are taller than in the NE. Maybe Macalaster in Minneapolis, Northwestern, an upper midwest big ten school. More tall men, more dating opportunities. Stay away from colleges with high Catholic or Jewish populations (Italians and Irish are often short as are Jewish people).
Signed, Tall woman who has moved around a lot. Avoid NYC, DC, Boston. Maybe Colorado would be ok? Not sure |
| Get her off of social media for one thing, idiot. |
People don’t always check the accuracy on forums. Sometimes it changes to the wrong word and you don’t notice. Just fyi |
Those men are foul, divorced at least once with bad taste in women. They also like big cheap fake hair, plastic surgery faces and fake boobs from the late 80s. Who cares |
| I’m 5’10” in my mid 40s and my height has literally never been an issue. I have a 6 ft friend who gets the “you must play basketball” comments in the grocery store which is annoying but also not the end of the world. |
Unless your teen weighs about 115 - 120 lbs at 5’11” and her limbs have the right proportions you shouldn’t compare them to your daughter. No one should compare their child to some celebrity. |
Tall women look pretty dumpy too if they don’t take care of themselves. Looking like Julia Childs if you’re not careful. |
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My grandmother was tall, fun, elegant and she loved her heels. Her even taller husband used to laugh when she claimed to be 5’14” in her favorite pair. Because back in the day, a lady simply couldn’t be over 6’ tall.
They had style and charisma. Own the height!! People are attracted to people who are happy with themselves. |
Parents like you have a rude awakening when their kids start their own families. You'll probably get an earful then. |
Well they are closer than I am - 5'5" |
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Do you want to know what makes me sad about this thread? It’s that your teenager is in some weird algorithm that is anti-tall women. I don’t get that on sm and neither do my kids. Your daughter seems to be bombarded with that negativity and for that I’m sorry.
I’m an 80s 90s kid and teenager and growing up tall was desirable. I was short and what is now nicely called “curvy” and so “undesirable”. But luckily I didn’t have social media constantly bombarding that message. It was just something that I observed, but lived a happy life. I think you have some good advice on this thread. |
You can say all the sympathetic things when the issue arises. Make gentle suggestions. Continue to be complimentary. But if a kid is stuck obsessing about something, helping them focus on that obsession is ill advised. You can't help her be shorter or convince her she's wrong. So after months of her obsessing about her height, it's time to drop the rope. "Ugh, I'm too tall, I look terrible!" Me: "yep, you're still tall! And you look lovely. What would you like for dinner?" One of my kids has struggled with anxiety and obsessive thoughts, so I do view this through that lens. There are standard CBT techniques for dealing with these types of thoughts. OPs DD is so obsessed/anxious about this that she doesn't like standing next to a shorter boy. That's beyond a normal level of insecurity IMO. What CBT teaches is that entertaining obsessive thoughts gives them power. It's hard to figure out sometimes where the line is between sympathy and giving bad thoughts power, but it's worth working on. |