Anonymous wrote:My son is 5 ft 7 and it hasn't stopped him one bit. Girls chase him constantly. I've never understood the stigma. It seems like only the shallowest of shallow girls care.
Anonymous wrote:I’m the mom to a very short 14 year old son.
He’s adopted and I suspect his birth parents were very small based on where he is from.
A friend recently suggested growth hormones and I always thought this was for medical issues vs genetics.
Anyone have any insight here?
I looked it up but I’m not clear on whether it’s helpful or worth it.
Anonymous wrote:My beautiful 5’7” cousin is married to a guy who is maybe 5’2” tops. He’s super into CrossFit type fitness and successful professionally and well-liked. I don’t know him well enough to know if his height bothers him or if he ever struggled with it, just sharing as another positive outcome of a short adult man with a great life.
Anonymous wrote:A few of the short guys I knew at the Naval Academy became SEALS. They're the ones with the ideal body type for that rigor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teen, don't have him shop in the boy's dept. At least, not when that's obvious to him. Error on the side of doing whatever it takes to help him feel attractive. Make sure his clothes fit very well. Get them tailored. For very special occasions, get a custom made suit.
OP here, good advice. He looks great in skinny pants/jeans.
Anonymous wrote:I had a good guy friend who was 5'5" as an adult. It did bother him...but he had so much going for him. He was cute and had an awesome personality. Everyone liked him - guys and women. He was just super friendly and likable. He never had a shortage of women liking him. He worked out and was in good shape, so that helped probably both in feeling good about himself and being attractive to women. Confidence Confidence Confidence
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have 11 year old twin daughters. They are average height but still underweight since they were born so I can relate to the concerns you have.
I make sure that my daughters are very active (They ski, swim, play a variety of team sports). I tell them it doesn’t matter how skinny they are, their body is strong and capable.
That’s great! But it’s different for boys. Maybe it shouldn’t be, but it absolutely still is just different.