Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Definitely get her involved in a sport where her height is an advantage (Swim, volleyball, basketball, even lacrosse) and the confidence will come. Never make her think she has to date only men taller than she is. You'd think this would go without saying, in a world where plenty of people are trans, there is the entire LQBTQ, but in straight life there is still a tremendous stigma against a tall woman. Make sure she always wears high heels if the outfit calls for it and remembers that a good partner in life has nothing to do with height.
Only on DCUM. I’m a 5’10” woman with a tall mother and sister and lots of tall friends and have seriously never experienced nor heard about any stigma outside of this place, where women are hell bent on tearing each other apart. If anything, short women have told me repeatedly throughout life how much they wished they were tall.
I'm the PP who said there is a stigma, I am also 5'10. You don't think men want to date a woman shorter than they are? Or that women in general find it more socially acceptable to date a taller man? Sure, there is nothing bad about being tall except in dating, where you have about 10% of the dating pool to consider given social norms. I think the social norms are preposterous given where we are as a society but I think in heterosexual culture., it's still a thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Definitely get her involved in a sport where her height is an advantage (Swim, volleyball, basketball, even lacrosse) and the confidence will come. Never make her think she has to date only men taller than she is. You'd think this would go without saying, in a world where plenty of people are trans, there is the entire LQBTQ, but in straight life there is still a tremendous stigma against a tall woman. Make sure she always wears high heels if the outfit calls for it and remembers that a good partner in life has nothing to do with height.
Only on DCUM. I’m a 5’10” woman with a tall mother and sister and lots of tall friends and have seriously never experienced nor heard about any stigma outside of this place, where women are hell bent on tearing each other apart. If anything, short women have told me repeatedly throughout life how much they wished they were tall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Definitely get her involved in a sport where her height is an advantage (Swim, volleyball, basketball, even lacrosse) and the confidence will come. Never make her think she has to date only men taller than she is. You'd think this would go without saying, in a world where plenty of people are trans, there is the entire LQBTQ, but in straight life there is still a tremendous stigma against a tall woman. Make sure she always wears high heels if the outfit calls for it and remembers that a good partner in life has nothing to do with height.
Only on DCUM. I’m a 5’10” woman with a tall mother and sister and lots of tall friends and have seriously never experienced nor heard about any stigma outside of this place, where women are hell bent on tearing each other apart. If anything, short women have told me repeatedly throughout life how much they wished they were tall.
Anonymous wrote:My 8th grader just passed her 6'1" father in height (I am 5'9"). We totally celebrated and took pictures. She definitely is self conscious especially since her sister is 14 months older and 5'7" so everyone assumes the "baby" of the family is older. Don't say anything. They are all such weird beasts at this age, even if you think you are saying something nice she will bite your head off.
Anonymous wrote:Definitely get her involved in a sport where her height is an advantage (Swim, volleyball, basketball, even lacrosse) and the confidence will come. Never make her think she has to date only men taller than she is. You'd think this would go without saying, in a world where plenty of people are trans, there is the entire LQBTQ, but in straight life there is still a tremendous stigma against a tall woman. Make sure she always wears high heels if the outfit calls for it and remembers that a good partner in life has nothing to do with height.
As a tall woman myself, I agree with PP that ultimately, it's an advantage in life, for both men and women. But definitely can feel conscious, especially in MS when not everyone (especially boys) have caught up.
OP in talking to her about it, I would approach as you do all aspects of her growing and changing body. Some of this will be better coming from your wife, obviously.
Just be sure to keep an eye on her posture. The last thing you want is for her to start slouching as a way to compensate.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is 5' 10" in middle school. She is brilliant and is very athletic. She is now six inches taller than her mom and is starting to become self-conscious about it. I've passed on as much dad wisdom that I've been able to (she can change a tire and filet a fish) but I don't know how to approach this issue. And I don't want complicate things by heading in the wrong direction. She is a confident kid, but I'm seeing that start to waiver with a bit of self-doubt. I'm wondering if saying nothing might be the best path. I just want her to be happy in her skin.
Thanks for any input![]()