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Reply to "(Yet another) Question about boy’s puberty "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]My 16yo ds is 5' 6" and done growing and I assure you he is doing great too. [/quote] Thank you for saying this. We're a tall-ish family so maybe it's easy for us to say, but the emphasis on height is exhausting. When I go to the gym, I assure you that no amount of my height makes me more attractive than some of the far shorter kings wandering around there. If you're worried about a shorter kid being unable to play certain sports, just pick a different activity - there are plenty out there. [/quote] It is easy for you to say. All the short men are doing great and also it's an advantage, particularly for a man, to be taller. A documented advantage. So people think about these things. If it's exhausting don't open the thread.[/quote] Good call. As the parent of a young boy, I should avoid threads with titles like " (Yet another) Question about boy’s puberty " that sound relevant to my interests on the off chance that they're feeding into a superficial societal preference that hasn't been rational for centuries, if ever. If it makes you feel better, being tall isn't always a positive. Sitting in the 99/100% for height, from preschool through high school I was always assumed to be a few years older than I was. Which meant that, during my formative years, I enjoyed far less latitude for childish behavior than my peers. I have countless stories of me being branded as the aggressor in a physical playground situation simply because I was the bigger participant. Extrapolate that to nearly every kind of interaction with adults - even though I was the youngest kid in my grade. And I see the same thing happen with my son who is 5'3" at 9yo. Is that worth the minimal extra lifetime earnings or the extra 0.00001% I can be a CEO? I don't think so, but it was my fate and I'm fine with it. Just as I hope your child is fine with theirs as long as they don't pick up on your perception of them as somehow less than others. But please. Continue gnashing your teeth about how average and short men are doomed to a substandard life despite all evidence to the contrary. [/quote] Wow. I have a tall son. Always tallest in his grade. Off the chart the day he was born and never once on it. My tall son seems to have made it out just fine. He was never once branded the aggressor. Never an issue for him and he's now an older teen. He's a gentle type and never got himself in those situations. Might be you and your DNA as being genuine, you are sounding irrationally angry and slightly hysterical. [/quote] Or maybe I have more direct experience or simply different experience. Point being, being tall isn't some golden ticket to a perfect life like people seem to think. And it's generally out of your control anyhow, so if you're intent on providing your child with the best life possible, why not focus on what you can actually influence?[/quote]
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