Anonymous wrote:I am the 5' 9.5" woman who still weighs 129 lbs in middle age despite having four children. I have observed that, especially as we age, taller women seem to distribute their weight more favorably. Perhaps it is my slight frame relative to my height, but femininity has never been an issue, men have described me as "sexy" and "hot", and I often get asked if I was as dancer or ballerina in my youth, the epitome of feminine arts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:5’0”-5’5” is ideal. I’m 35 and 6’0”. I like a short woman with a little waist and a nice butt. Perfect.
6' is not tall for a man, so it makes perfect sense that you would prefer shorter women.
average height in US for a man is about 5'10, so 6' is "tall".
average height in US for males is 5’ 9.3”.
6’ is objectively tall. In the US I think it’s only like 15% of the population that is 6 feet and over. Strangely, all of my girlfriends and I are married to men over 6 feet even though we range from 5’2”-5’4”ish. Opposites attract!
That may be the case but since my 6' husband and I (tall) have several sons measuring 6'1.5, 6'2.5" and 6'4.5, only 6' is now below average for the males in our household. Also, men in the U.S. have nothing on the Dutch, German or Belgium men.
Oh, my bad everyone, I didn’t realize we were using the men in this woman’s house as our reference point for height on dcum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the 5' 9.5" woman who still weighs 129 lbs in middle age despite having four children. I have observed that, especially as we age, taller women seem to distribute their weight more favorably. Perhaps it is my slight frame relative to my height, but femininity has never been an issue, men have described me as "sexy" and "hot", and I often get asked if I was as dancer or ballerina in my youth, the epitome of feminine arts.
I’m a dancer, and don’t really see how dance is the epitome of “feminine arts”. I don’t even know what feminine arts are.
It’s an athletic pursuit more difficult than most others. Hours a day of practice, daily exercise, insane amounts of strength and power. Dancers work harder than almost any other profession. And many “masculine” men, including athletes, rappers, and fitness pros, take dance classes to improve their athleticism.
If you ask any female dancer why they dance, none will tell you because if “femininity”. Plus, have you feet our feet? Blistered and bleeding feet are soooo feminine![]()
Let’s get away from this idea that feminine=thin/tall/curvy/whatever the adjective du jour is.
I understand your point. Dancers are athletes. I myself have taken many dance classes throughout my life. But ballerinas in particular tend to have a very willowy body type/frame that most would describe are lean, defined and feminine. That is all that I mean. It is my body type, so though I am tall (over 5'9"), "lean", "willowy", "small", "petite" and "slight" are words that other people have used to describe my figure. My size is in clothes falls between a 4-6, or a small, depending on the item. As I said before, my flexibility and my weight (which fluctuates between 121-129 lbs), makes others assume I dance or practice yoga, questions I am asked with some frequency. The intimate men in my life (including a Marine, a Grenadier Guard, and two college athletes, though my ex-dh is best described as a brainy nerd) have always been able to move me easily and freely during sex to any desired positions. I do not judge other women on the basis of their height and weight because I see the beauty in most of the woman around me -- (though I judge myself quite harshly) -- in different ways, in their confidence, success, ambition, their smiles, laughs, personalities, friendliness and supportiveness among other things. It has nothing to do with a perfect face or figure, though admittedly I am not evaluating women from a sexual perspective as a man would. I assume, and can observe, that many women who are much shorter than I am, particularly in middle age (45+), do appear to weigh more and be more broad of figure. And that is perfectly fine because being a beautiful person and attractive to others is not dependant on one's height, weight and beautiful face, otherwise men would only flock to Instagram models.
Maybe so, but tall women appear more and more masculine past middle age, whether or not they keep their slim figure (looks bonier as fat sags compared to middle aged slim petite women) or they put on weight (looks even more masculine).
I hope you retain your hotness to the intimate men in your life though pp!
The idea that tall women putting on weight makes them look masculine is just bizzare. Have you ever seen any Western Art for the past 3000 years or so?? The feminine ideal was NOT lean or slim. Basically any painting or sculpture of Venus/Aphrodite is a woman who is about 5''6 and wears a size 12
The average height of women back when those paintings were done was like 5'2". So, those women in the paintings were short and fleshy. People were a lot shorter back then.
-signed a short and now a bit fleshy woman
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lady Gaga, Kourtney Kardashian and Reese Witherspoon are all a short 5'1".
The latter two are not looking quite as feminine without the softness of youth, no.
most women start to look not as feminine as they age, irrespective of height.
True. irrespective of height or weight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lady Gaga, Kourtney Kardashian and Reese Witherspoon are all a short 5'1".
The latter two are not looking quite as feminine without the softness of youth, no.
most women start to look not as feminine as they age, irrespective of height.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lady Gaga, Kourtney Kardashian and Reese Witherspoon are all a short 5'1".
The latter two are not looking quite as feminine without the softness of youth, no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:5’0”-5’5” is ideal. I’m 35 and 6’0”. I like a short woman with a little waist and a nice butt. Perfect.
6' is not tall for a man, so it makes perfect sense that you would prefer shorter women.
average height in US for a man is about 5'10, so 6' is "tall".
average height in US for males is 5’ 9.3”.
It varies by race, so averages aren't the best representation, especially in the US where we're more racially heterogeneous than other countries. White males in the US average 5'10.5, according to the CDC https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_11/sr11_252.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Lady Gaga, Kourtney Kardashian and Reese Witherspoon are all a short 5'1".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:5’0”-5’5” is ideal. I’m 35 and 6’0”. I like a short woman with a little waist and a nice butt. Perfect.
6' is not tall for a man, so it makes perfect sense that you would prefer shorter women.
average height in US for a man is about 5'10, so 6' is "tall".
average height in US for males is 5’ 9.3”.
It varies by race, so averages aren't the best representation, especially in the US where we're more racially heterogeneous than other countries. White males in the US average 5'10.5, according to the CDC https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_11/sr11_252.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Cameron Diaz is one example of an aging 5'9". I leave it to posters to decide feminine or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:5’0”-5’5” is ideal. I’m 35 and 6’0”. I like a short woman with a little waist and a nice butt. Perfect.
6' is not tall for a man, so it makes perfect sense that you would prefer shorter women.
average height in US for a man is about 5'10, so 6' is "tall".
average height in US for males is 5’ 9.3”.