– How tall are you?
– What did you eat to be tall like that??
– Are you a model?
– Do you play basketball?
– Do you play volleyball?
– At least you don’t miss a thing at concerts!
– Hey! The tall girl! Move! I can’t see a thing!
– It must be very difficult to find a man your size.
– Did you grow up since last time??
And the simple and classic :
– You are SO TALL!
What? I’m tall? Are you sure?
Yes. I’m Tall. No no, Tall is not my name. I have a name. I even have a surname with the whole genealogical tree to go with it. But it seems like nothing comes before that. Before the fact that I am TALL. It’s my main occupation.
Oh I see. You thought I hadn’t noticed. That’s why you apparently told yourself : “Maybe I should go and tell her, just in case… Like… In a FYI kind of way…”
And there you go : – Hey! You’re TALL!!! And then : – How TALL are you?? Why wouldn’t you ask me after all. You don’t ask his weight to a big man, you don’t go to someone with a big nose and say : “What a biiiiiiig nose!”, but saying to a tall girl that she is tall, that’s fine. Being tall is not a flaw. You can say whatever goes through your mind to a tall girl, she’ll be fine with it, because being tall is like being part of Claudia Schiffer’s family. And we looove Claudia Schiffer… People who think like that never stood in a tall girl’s shoes.
I should make some special business cards.
It would feature my surname, my name, my phone number, my email address, and, above all, my occupation : Tall. I’m a professional tall person. And I’m GOOD at what I do.
Anywhere I go, I NEVER forget to be at least a head taller than everybody else only to grab everyone’s attention. By the way, girls, it’s useless to put your high heels to compete with me, I never go out without my extra-long tibias.
Oh yeah, I almost forgot. When people talk to me, another part of my job is to not listen. Actually none of what you say gets my attention, that’s why I put my Tall Girl Costume everyday, so I can look over your head straight to the horizon and ignore you intentionally.
Yes. Tall Girls are so pretentious aren’t they? Always there standing high above everyone else, looking into the distance, showing themselves, looking down on everyone… Well I have a scoop people : if we look down on you, it’s only because technically, we are above you.
We would looove to look you straight in the eyes, from a 5’5″ to another 5’5″, be part of the gang and all, but that would implies that we bend our knees and our backs just to be sure we don’t upset the misses, who believe we are only trying to steal the show, nor the misters, who simply believe that we are showing off. We can’t even bat our eyelashes from below for God’s sake!
I tried not to be tall… but it didn’t work
In my family, everybody is tall. My mother, my father, aunts and uncles from both sides… If I was to calculate the average size of my family, I would probably get something like 5’11.
Actually, thinking again, I am even quite average… compared to my family members only!
Compared to the population’s average size, I’m sooooo way beyond it, with my 5 feet… Here we go again. I was gonna say I’m 5 feet 10. As I’ve been saying it for years.
– How tall are you?
– 5’11.
– 5’11? Are you sure? Because my brother is 5’11 and he seems shorter than you…
– Well have him measure himself again. I’m 5’11.
Well NO. Today I say it out loud and proudly : I’m not 5’11. I’m 6 feet. So I’ve said it.
Usually, girls like to glean a few inches here and there. Those who are 5’4″ will say they’re 5’5″, those who are 5’2″ end up at 5’3″, and the 5’6″ girls even manage to reach the modeling 5’11” size… with heels!
With Professional Tall Girls, it’s just the opposite.
The 6’3″ are 6’1″, the 5’11 and 1/2 aim at 5’10” – anything to stay as far as possible from the 6 – and for some, well… it’s simply impossible to know how tall they are. They don’t even know it themselves, right girls?
Everything depends on to what degree the shoulders can bend when the measurement occurs.
Or on to what degree the lower back can curve in, way more discreet under a wide t-shirt.
Or on the skeleton shrinking level. Yes ! The skeleton shrinking trick, every tall girl knows this. It’s a very commonly known technique where if you can manage to lean on only one leg, curving the lower back in while shrinking down your spine and bending your shoulders to the limit at the same time, you can make yourself believe that you’re not that tall after all.
Ok… I can already see some throwing up their hands in horror. “Is she kidding me? What is she complaining about ? She’s tall and she’s annoying us with her “problems”?” Well yes maaam I aaam.
This goes along with the widespread thought that you’re kind of lucky when you’re tall.
Being tall is beautiful. Being tall is elegant. Models are tall. “Everybody wants to be tall”!
But you see, I’m not talking about girls like “Oh how lucky, she must be what… 5’7″?” here! Noooooooo. I’m talking about US. The REAL tall girls! The GIANTS! The 5’9″ and up! Those who seem to get vertigo when/if they wear heels!
And let me tell you this : sometimes they do! NOT because the ground seems further NO. Because most of us have ALWAYS been tall, and believe it or not but it means A LOT. Let me explain.
As far as I can remember, my extra inches have always been a way for others to single me out.
At 5, in kindergarten, the teacher put me in the back for the class photo. “Small ones in the front row, tall ones in the back!”
The word “small” instantly became a quality when “tall” suddenly appeared as a fault. Why would have I found myself pushed in the back otherwise?
At 8, other kids started to give me “friendly” nicknames : giraffe, ladder, skyscraper… But that was before the way more creative “tall asparagus” and “empire state building” of when I was 10.
Then, at 11, while every other little girls were still buying clothes in the Walt Disney section (we didn’t have Lady Gaga or Rihanna to teach us about G-strings for babies at that time) I was the only one wearing a size 14 and pants that hardly managed to reach my ankles because my legs had decided to grow at their own pace while the upper part of my body was on hold.
And then came the wonder years of high school.
Do you know what charming power extra inches have on teenage boys? None. Nada. Niet. Zero.
So although I was the very first to be picked in gym class when it was a matter of playing basketball, I was simply left on the bench at school parties because no prepubescent worthy of its name would ever want to be seen dancing with a girl who could put her chin on top of his head.
And while other teenage girls dreamed of dressing like Janet Jackson or becoming an actress, I had much simpler dreams : wearing a size 6 for shoes and weigh the same as my girlfriends.
I wanted to be PETITE. Delicate. A feminine and endearing little thing anyone would want to protect and who could break like glass if you weren’t gentle enough… Instead of this I felt like a dislocated football player with abnormally long ungraceful members that didn’t seem to be certain of their purpose yet.
Who would have thought that this insecure teenage girl always hiding under her hood and wearing 0,01 inch heels not to make her case worse would become, at the end of high school, a threat for the ladies and beyond most of men’s means?!
And there she was, the same girl who used to anxiously wait for the moment to stand up in the subway, praying to cut short the unfolding process she had to go through before getting off at her station, here again was criticized and the target of prejudices and biases of others. But the other way around.
For the ladies, she no longer was that tall undefinable thing no man would ever want to come across, who, at the parties, spent the whole slow-dancing time straightening her skirt. No. For the ladies, she now was supermodel extract. A threat to oust as fast as possible.
For the men, she no longer was that big girl looking like nothing, to whom you addressed as if she was a representative of the third sex. Nope. In the eyes of men too, she had become supermodel extract. You know, those pretentious girls walking above us and apparently so confident? (Yes, because if they weren’t so confident they wouldn’t ALLOW themselves to be so tall.) Who would dare to talk to THAT? Sigh.
I know many tall girls will recognize themselves in these words. Like me, they know they need to smile a lot when they meet new girls – #1.defusing – and like me, either they try to be witty to show they also have brains (something we have in common with the blonde ladies maybe) – #.2 anchor – or they do not yet have enough confidence and are most of the time reserved and quiet, looking like everything they’re not : stuck-up b*tches – #3. hara kiri.
Keep calm and be tall
The first thing I would like to say to our shorter female fellows is that we generally feel bigger next to them than they feel small next to us. And the fact that God was generous giving us extra inches doesn’t mean our biggest concern is to get noticed everywhere we go. The problem is that we DO get noticed everywhere we go.
To this problem, there are only two solutions : either we feel bad about ourselves and we try to hide – and let’s be clear about this : the probability to succeed is very low – or we’re at ease with ourselves and stand tall and proud, just like you, but a little higher.
Please stop considering us like threats or tigresses. Or please stop looking at us as if we were some kind of ridiculous alien species. Most of us needed our whole life to accept ourselves as we are, while many tall girls still don’t love themselves and would happily get rid of a couple of inches… Not mentioning the fact that unlike us, YOU can shop ANYWHERE.
To the gentlemen : we are not that different from other girls, except that some of us even have a bigger lack of confidence. Please be kind, and don’t be so shy. Tall girls will be grateful to you!
To everyone : when you meet a tall girl, I bet that 100% of the time, you will indeed notice that she is tall. Is it a reason to mention it ? Speak of something else, for this too, the tall girls will be grateful. Or not. At the least, you’ll have missed an opportunity to be annoying.
To you, the Giants, the Amazons, who like me can’t buy clothes on sale on the web because you fear to get too short sleeves or too short pants, who spend all your money in only one pair of jeans that will fit your stilts, who don’t dare to wear heels and who think wearing flat shoes you’ll get less noticed, who wear your hair long hoping it will bring you closer to the ground, or your hair short because you think long hair stretches you out, who sometimes feel manlier than your man and who hate dancing in a club because being on the dance floor is like being a tree in a mushrooms field, to you all : LOVE YOURSELVES!
Stand straight and walk with your head high! You won’t vanish because you slouch your shoulders you know. People won’t notice you less. The only thing people will see is that the tall girl, over there, who’s trying to hide, she feels bad about herself. And that sometimes draws attention even more.
Forget about ballerinas and flat boots! People say tall girls are elegant? Well I have a scoop for you : we’re even more elegant with a pair of high heels! You’re already tall, what risk are you running anyway?!
You’ve probably seen a tall girl wearing high heels before, walking proudly, maybe nonchalantly, not caring about what people have to say, and I’m sure you envied her, that tall, beautiful, elegant and above all FREE girl. Well BE that girl ! Your feet on the ground and your heads high in the sky! 😀
Listen to me, and next time, when you enter a room dreading people’s gaze, whether in the subway, in a restaurant or in the dentist waiting room… stand straight, stretch out, walk proudly. Then look at the people who are looking at you straight in the eyes. I can promise you all you’ll see in their eyes will be admiration. Tested and approved by me. 😉
To all the Amazons who enjoy themselves : JUST KEEP ON DOING YOUR THING!!! :DDD
Lastly, to all the young Amazons out there, those ones still struggling in school and highschool, feeling like aliens who don’t belong anywhere, do not worry, fear no more sweethearts and stay strong, because if you can manage to understand what I’ve just said and to give it the time to grow in your minds and hearts, you’ll soon see that things will only get MUCH BETTER. 😉
I’m short but everyone else in my family are really tall and I feel really out if place I know I’m 5.4 and you probably say I can’t relate to this but I do . I’m still young I’m only 15 but the doctor says I won’t grow anymore .
Im 23 5’11 an I could relate. I enjoyed reading this!! Thanks!!
Love this, it’s so true! I’m 6’1″ with curly hair and can totally relate. Love your writing style – keep it up!
Hi! I’ve just found out about your blog and, as a fellow tall girl, I cannot agree more! I went through all the phases that you discribed and now that I’m 25 and just finished university, I can say that I reached my confidence in being a tall girl. Whenever I see a tall teenage girl (and they seem to be more and more) I remember when I was their age and I know exactly how they feel. But there’s hope for everyone, puberty and teenage years are hard on everyone, I just think tall girls have one more difficulty to overcome 🙂
Dear Tall n Curly,
We are exactly the same height and we have exactly the same hairtype. I used to draw too, although my comics were never as good as yours and I ended up in a completely different workfield. I think you are my lost sister. Thank you for putting into words and pictures all tall n curly struggles and for publishing your work. Its like therapy, you feel better when you know there are other people out there who go through the same things as you.
Being Greek, I dont just feel like a giant, I actually am, compared to my rather short people (Although I know a handfull of Greek women who are as tall as I am, its kind of rare here. Whenever I travel to north Europe, I feel really strange not having to bend in order to talk to people and I am always amazed to see other tall women (often only to realize that the girl I am checking thinking “wow, she’s tall” is a little bit shorter than me). I did that squeleton shrinking thing subconciously for many years, until after therapy and dancing lessons. I finally stood in all my tall glory, showing my full height, just 7 years ago.
I still have to work to accept myself though. A few months ago my samba dance teacher (and fellow tall n curly n brazilian girl) told me during class: “Dont close your chest, dont be afraid. You are tall, you are beautiful, you are the tall samba queen that everyone will look at, so open your chest, be proud, use your long hands, step confident in your long legs.” And the child or the teen inside me whispered “So you mean being tall is a good thing in this case?” I would never imagined that.
So I wanted to say thank you my fellow Amazon (and btw Amazon is not an insult, they were amazing warrior queens in ancient greek mythology) and send my love to all the fellow tall n curlies out there. You are right we shouldnt try to hide ourselves, with THIS heigh and THIS hair its a lost cause anyway.
Your tall n curly Greek long lost sister
thanks for the confidence you have given me today I am feeling good about my height I am 5.5 and my age is 13 if u can plz tell me how tall will I grow know because most of the daughters will be influenced by their fathers height and my father is 5.9 so I Am scared whether I will grow more taller right now I am a bit taller than my mother and we live in India so please e mail your answer to the email address and once again tx fr ur support
If you can find out how tall you were when you were 4 years old, that could help. Idk about anywhere else but in the UK your final height will be close to double your height as a 4 year old. I was 3’2″ so they said I would be 6’4″. This happened to be the same as my dad, his father AND brother! But I’m not 6’4″. I’m more like 6’2″. Every body is different so the only way to really find out is just wait and see, and try not to worry too much about your height. Being young is way too fun to spend it worrying about how tall you’ll be in 5 years time 🙂
100% AGREED Chelle ! :))
Well, being a doctor, that IS the ‘so called’ standard here in US, too:)
I’m 6’1″, and wanted to know how tall my kids were going to be & my doc told me the same thing. Pretty on par for my oldest boy, almost 18. They said he was going to be around 6’8″ and he’s already 6’7″.
The general rule seems to be on the mother’s genetics though…but, you’re right, anything goes!! Ya never know:D
Hi Sany, you’re welcome and thank you very much for your message 🙂
I often get asked that question but… unfortunately I’m not a doctor 😉
All I can say is that in general, it is said that girls will grow a little bit more for the next 2 years after they start their periods, about 1 to 3 more inches. So wether you got yours already or not will clearly affect your future height.
Also I never heard of this rule you’re talking about, about daughters being influenced by their fathers height. I don’t think it’s true. My father was 6′ before he started shrinking due to getting older, so he was tall and so am I. But he had a daughter before he had me, with a quite average height woman, maybe 5’5-5’6, and my half sister is actually the shortest person in the family (barely 5’2), so you see, everything is possible 😉
Hi. First, I love your blog, I feel identified with most of the articles you publish. I am 6’0 and my hair is curly too. My hair was relaxed when I was 12 (because it was hard to manage and straight hair is “more “beautiful) I am 24 now and I stopped relaxing my hair a year ago, and I did the big chop a week ago. It was a difficult decision but I did and I am glad. I am from Dominican Rep., there is variety our race: black, white, etc. But most of the women in my country has african roots and our hair tend to be curly-afro. Unfortunately, the people are taught that the a long and straight hair is synonym of beauty only. I was taught the same. Also, the average height in DR is 5’5 for women and 5’8 for men. I felt like I was a freak. I hated my height, my hair and my body too because I was overweight. Basically, I hated all myself. It took me a while to realized I had to accept me the way I am because God created me in that way. I started with my weight by losing a lot of pounds but I was still unhappy. I thought being skinny would make feel more beautiful and get more boyfriends. I realized it wasn’t something about physical but attitude and self esteem, which both disappeared. When I accepted my new body, I accepted my height and fell in love with it. Mamy people love my height I receive a lot compliments. Although, I find myself receving hateful and derogatory remarks too, especially when I wear heels but “haters always gonna hate”. Finally and the hardest thing to accept about me was my hair. I was always preaching the importance of nature beauty and women must to accept the way they are but I felt hypocrite because I was still relaxing my hair; I was not embracing my nature beauty. So, last year after reflecting about it, I decided to start using my natural hair. The journey has been difficult many people try to let me down but I am stronger than when I was younger and I know who I am and what I want. Now, I understand the real meaning of love self. I am happy now. Very happy! After read a few of your stories and articles, I realized I am not alone and you get me. Thank for your inspirational words. I wish I found you when I was younger but the time of God is perfect I suppose 🙂
I’ve just found your blog and I swear every post has been written about me. I don’t know whether to laugh or cry because I don’t think anything has ever been quite this relatable to me.
I really admire how much you’ve embraced your height and your hair. I’m just getting through the hair acceptance (I gained my frizzy curls when I was about 11, so it’s taken me a while to adjust). Growing up surrounded by tiny asian ladies with small noses and poker-straight hair made me feel like I was the exact opposite of ‘normal’. So I hope one day I can quit the one-leg bend (except maybe for photos with the aforementioned ladies so they’ll stop standing on chairs), sort out my gammy back and just be happy with my full 5 feet and…14 inches. Haha!
Hi Chelle!
Thanks and welcome! :)) Did you grow up in Asia or did you just have a lot of asian girls in your school..? I went to Japan and S.Korea, I can tell you, I never EVER felt so tall in my entire life. Some people were stopping me in the street to take pictures with me! It was fun though 🙂
I hope you’ll walk to path to self-acceptance fast, life gets so much funnier 😉
Hi!
I was born and raised in the UK in a pretty whitewashed school, but with a strong Filipino community all around me after school and at weekends, where the average height is something like 5’5″. My grandmother on my father’s side is Welsh, and equally tiny. All the men in my family are 6’4″ so I guess it was inevitable, but it did make me feel…unnatural? Women were short and men were tall. So where did I stand?
I teach in an Elementary school in SK and not a day goes by when a student will stop, wide-eyed and make a “growing” gesture above their head. If they’re brave? “How tall?” “What eat?” so apparently it’s the international standard of question for tall people 😉
It’s interesting, because actually a lot of the younger Korean girls are pretty tall, some even push 6, but the other day I happened to be walking next to an old lady and oh god. She just about came up to my hip, like a crinkled toddler.
I’m trying to push at it! This week I had a lot of people say “oh you’re so tall!… is that why you hunch all the time?” Erk. The vain part of my brain exploded repeatedly at that. I guess it’s helped a bit though ;p
I love your work. I am 6.1 and I love my height but like most tall ladies the stupid stares and questions get on my nerves as well. Your posts always make me smile and go “oh yeah”!!!
Well your message made me go “oh yeah” too ;D Thank you so much Miriam 🙂
Hi! I’m 15 curly and 5’9 and according to my doctor still growing. I’ve been a competitive swimmer all my life and I’m proud of my height. I actually want to be taller. I went to my freshman homecoming and I was 5 inches taller than my date and still wore heels( there were no flats in my size) now I was 7 inches taller. I just want to any your blog is great! Tall curly and proud!