Anonymous wrote:Being tall is hard when you are a teenager. Tell her she is beautiful, and not like the other kids. Otherwise, she will want to slouch and make herself shorter. And, don't let adults treat her as if she is so much older than the other kids, she is not.
My mom wanted me to be "normal" so even with my dad encouraging me, it was hard to be a tall female teenager. I didn't date until college. And you may want to eventually prepare her shorter guys being much attracted to her than taller guys. ~a tall woman
Anonymous wrote:Hi, kind of like weight...say nothing. Just keep telling her how much you love her and how beaufiul she is....you have a special role to play as the main male figure in her life right now. I think it's so wonderful you tossed this out there. Also, putting her in situations where her height is an advantage is great. Start up volleyball or basketball? Dance class where her long arms will be praised for their extension? And make sure she is around really successful tall women.....in an internship, whatever it is......thanks again for asking this question!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks to both of you. I try to be a good dad but I feel like I'm out of my depth on this subject. I guess I'll see how this manifests and go from there. She is a great kid, I'm just trying to not to say the wrong thing.
Make sure you invest in clothes that fit her well. I was very self-conscious about my height and having ill-fitting clothes made it a lot worse.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks to both of you. I try to be a good dad but I feel like I'm out of my depth on this subject. I guess I'll see how this manifests and go from there. She is a great kid, I'm just trying to not to say the wrong thing.
Anonymous wrote:Boys are very, very, very insecure around tall girls. They also feel threatened.
She will mostly have to deal with this all of middle school and the 1st 2 years of HS. But after that she will get an intense flood of interest from boys which might be hard to navigate after years of negative attention.
Also, warning, grown men will think she is 18 and will hit on a 12/13/14/15 year old when they are tall. She needs tools to deal with that… like hey creeper 👀 I’m 12.
Anonymous wrote:Boys are very, very, very insecure around tall girls. They also feel threatened.
She will mostly have to deal with this all of middle school and the 1st 2 years of HS. But after that she will get an intense flood of interest from boys which might be hard to navigate after years of negative attention.
Also, warning, grown men will think she is 18 and will hit on a 12/13/14/15 year old when they are tall. She needs tools to deal with that… like hey creeper 👀 I’m 12.
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![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Im serious as PP about geographic arbitrage, have lived in various US cities and heights are SO different. Please do not have her go to Philly, as a 5'7" woman I had trouble dating-esp college educated men, tall guys were 5 8 LOL, Seattle very tall males/females, agree with MN.
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My daughters turned out shortish--predicted 5'7" but had early normal puberty and only 5 2/5 3...always complain about it,,bottom line as long as you have good self esteem, good body image, decent weight without fluctuations you will be happy and attract happy healthy friends and dating partners...not everyone will be into everyone...and thats normal.
+1. Too many short Italian genes floating around in Philly.