PSA: please don't comment on my tall child's height (vent)

ALL 3 of my kids are tall but my husband and I are both tall. Why is it acceptable to comment to my family on our height but if we were to walk up to someone and comment how short they are it would be considered rude? Also, why do people assume just because we are tall that we play basketball.ugh
 
Oh for goodness sakes, and you accused ME of taking things to an extreme :rolleyes2

No, of course, I would not pat myself on the back is a child's face fell in response to any comment I made. But I would not feel it meant the comment was an issue and I should ever comment on a similar thing to another person. I would think the child seems very insecure, or petulant (depending on the face) and not generalize it to others. And, I CARE but I do not think I (or anyone) should be required to try to guess what random things people might be insecure about, things that are not normally issues for normal people with halfway decent self esteem. How could I possibly guess them?

Interesting example you picked about unusual names. Mine is Hadley. Until about 5 years ago most people had never heard of it. Most people comment on it being unusual. Many ask where I got it from or ask if it is a boy's name or whatever. I never mind at all and am happy to explain that i am named after Hemmingway's first wife.
My kids have unusual names too (Marika and Rio) and both get comments on them and neither has ever seemed to mind.

My husband is 6'5" and very broad shouldered and people comment on his size all the time, he takes it as a compliment and has no issue with it. Oh, and lately people tell him he reminds them of the actor who plays Marshall on How I Met Your Mother. Again, he is fine with it and plays it up.

The concept of being upset with someone for commenting on an obvious feature, unless the person was just really rude and said something like "what an ugly name, why on earth would your parents give you that" or "OMG how horrendous to be so freakishly tall" is just completely foreign to me--and the concept of justifying that type of reaction if my child had one and wanting others to stop making normal conversation is even more so.

I understand what you are saying but some of us just aren't programmed that way. I'm jealous of those who are. :) Of course we aren't expected to guess what people are insecure about, but I try to be kind. I also try to teach my kids to let things roll off their backs, don't worry about what others say, try to look for the good, they're just making conversation, etc., even though it's a hard lesson for me to internalize (I'm working on it!) I don't expect people to watch every word but I do think people need to be responsible for what they say. Sometimes the line between a conversation starter and the examples in your last paragraph is a fine one.

In regards to the OP, though, I would try not to comment on someone's height. It just seems trite. And after reading this thread, some people are sensitive to it and some people aren't. I'd rather err on the side of caution.
 
Speaking of names and comments, I have the most ridiculous last name that I hate. I hear comments abt it all the time, which is annoying, but I am not offended. I just try to be nonchalant when someone says something and be matter of fact. It almost always goes the same way, "omg, what a happy sounding last name!" Which is fine. What irritates me is the follow up of, "you must be happy ALL the time!" Followed by giggling. I just say, "yeah, I know" and move the conversation along.
 
Speaking of names and comments, I have the most ridiculous last name that I hate. I hear comments abt it all the time, which is annoying, but I am not offended. I just try to be nonchalant when someone says something and be matter of fact. It almost always goes the same way, "omg, what a happy sounding last name!" Which is fine. What irritates me is the follow up of, "you must be happy ALL the time!" Followed by giggling. I just say, "yeah, I know" and move the conversation along.

I had a super Irish last name before I got married. Around st. Patrick's day the Irish jokes would get awful. But now that I have a very plain last name I sort of miss it!
 

In regards to the OP, though, I would try not to comment on someone's height. It just seems trite. And after reading this thread, some people are sensitive to it and some people aren't. I'd rather err on the side of caution.

:thumbsup2 This is how I feel. I wouldn't say it to someone - I grew up with a sister who's 5'10 1/2, she heard about it all the time, and hated it. Still does. I am glad I'm not that tall, so if I said to someone "my gosh you are tall!", (really specifically to another woman or to a really tall child), I wouldn't be saying it as a compliment. So, I don't say it.
 
So what is the issue? :confused3

Are no comments on physical characteristics allowed? In my family that would mean no comments on DH'd height, or how i am a foot shorter than him, or DD's height until recently (she topped out at 5'9"), how much DD looks like her dad, DD's hair, DS's big feet or long eye lashes or how thin he used to be or how tall he is now, my hair, my eyes, how short i am compared to my family, etc

and let's see, complimenting clothes leads to materialism

and commenting on someone's name might bother them--maybe they don't like their name.

asking where they go to school? Maybe the child has severe anxiety and has to be homeschooled or use an online school and the question will make them uncomfortable (FYI--you think that is a stretch? This IS one of my kids, but she knows how to politely answer and knows it is just a small talk thing nad not meant to make her uncomfortable and she is working on not minding it at all).

Seriously, some of you people would leave virtually nothing for people who are not very close friends to talk about--and you;ll never MAKE very close friends if you cannot talk to people.

Extremely well said. I couldn't agree more.
 
I understand what you are saying but some of us just aren't programmed that way. I'm jealous of those who are. :) Of course we aren't expected to guess what people are insecure about, but I try to be kind. I also try to teach my kids to let things roll off their backs, don't worry about what others say, try to look for the good, they're just making conversation, etc., even though it's a hard lesson for me to internalize (I'm working on it!) I don't expect people to watch every word but I do think people need to be responsible for what they say. Sometimes the line between a conversation starter and the examples in your last paragraph is a fine one.

In regards to the OP, though, I would try not to comment on someone's height. It just seems trite. And after reading this thread, some people are sensitive to it and some people aren't. I'd rather err on the side of caution.

But that is just the point! SOME people are, but some (many) are not. And SOME are sensitive about their names. And some are sensitive about their hair color. And some are sensitive about their accents. and on and on and on. So if we can;t talk about anything that someone might possibly be sensitive about, then there is nothing left to talk about.
 
Speaking of names and comments, I have the most ridiculous last name that I hate. I hear comments abt it all the time, which is annoying, but I am not offended. I just try to be nonchalant when someone says something and be matter of fact. It almost always goes the same way, "omg, what a happy sounding last name!" Which is fine. What irritates me is the follow up of, "you must be happy ALL the time!" Followed by giggling. I just say, "yeah, I know" and move the conversation along.

OMG I grew up with the last name Friendship. I got comments on it all the time and I mean ALL the time. I actually loved it. Then I got married and got a regular old boring last name and nobody ever commented on my name again. I still loved my last name so much that I named my youngest daughter Autumn Friendship. I was set on using Friendship as a middle name and the only first name me and my DH could agree on was Autumn. So while it does sound a little like a hippy name we love it and more importantly she does too:hippie:, besides I am a true hippy at heart:rotfl:
 
So what is the issue? :confused3

Are no comments on physical characteristics allowed? In my family that would mean no comments on DH'd height, or how i am a foot shorter than him, or DD's height until recently (she topped out at 5'9"), how much DD looks like her dad, DD's hair, DS's big feet or long eye lashes or how thin he used to be or how tall he is now, my hair, my eyes, how short i am compared to my family, etc

and let's see, complimenting clothes leads to materialism

and commenting on someone's name might bother them--maybe they don't like their name.

asking where they go to school? Maybe the child has severe anxiety and has to be homeschooled or use an online school and the question will make them uncomfortable (FYI--you think that is a stretch? This IS one of my kids, but she knows how to politely answer and knows it is just a small talk thing nad not meant to make her uncomfortable and she is working on not minding it at all).

Seriously, some of you people would leave virtually nothing for people who are not very close friends to talk about--and you;ll never MAKE very close friends if you cannot talk to people.

AMEN....
IMHO, this just nails it.
 
I married into my last name. I remember seeing my now husband's business card when I first met him, and shuddering a little lol. My maiden name was mispronounced by almost everyone except for my college professors or people from Germany. I have a shy personality and don't like drawing a lot of attn to myself, so I don't appreciate my married name lol. It could be worse, and at least it isn't butchered in pronunciation.

The second thing I get comments on, almost constantly, is my accent. The comments can get banal, but I'm not sensitive to them or bothered much. I am excellent at moving the conversation along & smoothing things over without making anyone feel uncomfortable.

My daughters are 2 yrs apart, and almost the same height. My youngest likes to tell people she's a "big giant" when they remark abt how tall she is.
 
I must admit, I get a bit wistful when I read things like this.

I would LOVE to be tall - even for just one day.

I could see over other's heads in a theater without having to tuck my legs under my bottom.

I could reach grocery items on the top shelf without having to ask a stock boy to help me.

I could drive my car without having to push my seat all the way up so that the steering wheel is in my abdomen.

I could kiss my husband without having to be up on my toes and without him having to bend over.

I could dance cheek-to-cheek with him, instead of cheek-to-midchest.

I could put away dishes on the top shelf of the cupboard without having to use my step stool.

But since I stopped at 60 inches (that's 5 feet), I'll never get comments about being tall . . .
 
I must admit, I get a bit wistful when I read things like this.

I would LOVE to be tall - even for just one day.

I could see over other's heads in a theater without having to tuck my legs under by bottom.

I could reach grocery items on the top shelf without having to ask a stock boy to help me.

I could drive my car without having to push my seat all the way up so that the steering wheel is in my abdomen.

I could kiss my husband without having to be up on my toes and without him having to bend over.

I could dance cheek-to-cheek with him, instead of cheek-to-midchest.

I could put away dishes on the top shelf of the cupboard without having to use my step stool.

But since I stopped at 60 inches (that's 5 feet), I'll never get comments about being tall . . .


It is all a matter of perspective! As a way above average tall woman....

I still get blocked in theaters because my height is all in my legs. Sitting, I'm really not that tall.

People ask me all the time to help them get things off shelves at the grocery store, which can be annoying after a while.

Car seats don't go back enough for me to ever be truly comfortable.

I will never know what it's like to actually look "up" at my husband for a kiss. We are the same height.

Being tall has its disadvantages, especially for women. It limits the dating pool by about 75% for one thing, unless you want to be with a shorter guy. And then you get comments about THAT! You can also never "blend in" to a crowd. You will always stick out. People are always looking at you with curiosity. It does make you feel a bit self-conscious!

The only real advantage I can think of is for concerts, fireworks, parades, etc. My view is rarely obscured!
 
People ask me all the time to help them get things off shelves at the grocery store, which can be annoying after a while.

!

So what should those of us who are "under tall" supposed to do?? :rolleyes:

I won't complain when I get something off the bottom shelf for you if you don't complain when I ask you to get something off the top shelf...
 
A family friend's son shot up in his teens to somewhere around 6'8" (If I remember) Anyway he was very tall. Everybody would comment on it.

E-V-E-R-Y-B-O-D-Y!!

It got so old so fast for the poor young man! Even friends of family would say something at almost every gathering. It's not bad to be tall, so why not be friendly? The problem is that it is the first thing everyone notices and so it is the first thing everybody comments on. He loathed it. Sometimes it seemed as if he felt people saw his height and didn't see him.

I made a point to stop saying anything about his height.

Imagine if you had some feature about you that was unique and 9 out of 10 of the people you met all day every day commented on it. How would you feel?

Imagine towering over everyone else and being shy? Do you know what that is like? Everyone, everywhere, stops to stare and then start to make comments.

Do you comment on people's shortness, wheelchair, strange scar? How do know the very tall aren't self conscious and see it as a negative?

Even if not a negative, it just gets SO TIRESOME. I can remember time and time standing next to this fine young man and cringing at comment, after, comment, after comment of the thoughtless...:crazy2:
 
What are you, like, 7 feet?

It is all a matter of perspective! As a way above average tall woman....

I still get blocked in theaters because my height is all in my legs. Sitting, I'm really not that tall.

People ask me all the time to help them get things off shelves at the grocery store, which can be annoying after a while.

Car seats don't go back enough for me to ever be truly comfortable.

I will never know what it's like to actually look "up" at my husband for a kiss. We are the same height.

Being tall has its disadvantages, especially for women. It limits the dating pool by about 75% for one thing, unless you want to be with a shorter guy. And then you get comments about THAT! You can also never "blend in" to a crowd. You will always stick out. People are always looking at you with curiosity. It does make you feel a bit self-conscious!

The only real advantage I can think of is for concerts, fireworks, parades, etc. My view is rarely obscured!
 
:offtopic: I had to share this. I just went to a eye doctors office a couple hrs ago to schedule an appt. the receptionist was checking my insurance info., and was giggling & laughing abt my "happy" last name (which she already did over the phone yesterday). I gave no reaction, and got preoccupied with my 5-yr old. She then got on the phone with a woman from the insurance co. And tee-heed w/ her abt my last name. She said, "yup, it is jolly, just like Santa Claus! You know, ho-ho-ho"! Lol! I don't know if she wanted a reaction, but I pretended I didn't hear, and became absorbed in looking at glasses. It isn't that I'm offended, but I honestly don't know how to respond to that. I'm a little stand offish, and not the best socializer if I don't know the person.
 
Wow, there is a difference in noticing and (albeit awkwardly) stating something obvious, and laughing and talking and mocking something as innocuous as that last name...

THAT WAS JUST RUDE!!!!
 
heatherleigh said:
:offtopic: I had to share this. I just went to a eye doctors office a couple hrs ago to schedule an appt. the receptionist was checking my insurance info., and was giggling & laughing abt my "happy" last name (which she already did over the phone yesterday). I gave no reaction, and got preoccupied with my 5-yr old. She then got on the phone with a woman from the insurance co. And tee-heed w/ her abt my last name. She said, "yup, it is jolly, just like Santa Claus! You know, ho-ho-ho"! Lol! I don't know if she wanted a reaction, but I pretended I didn't hear, and became absorbed in looking at glasses. It isn't that I'm offended, but I honestly don't know how to respond to that. I'm a little stand offish, and not the best socializer if I don't know the person.

Our last name is also one that is unusual for our area or really any area and one that has interesting definitions to say the least. We make fun of it more than others. So when it comes up, we are able to be good natured about it.

Life is too short to get offended by the obvious, especially when you can't easily change it.
 
I ordered some supplies over the phone the other day and the man answered the phone saying his name was Kelly. At the end of the call he told me his full name, "Kelly Green, just like the crayon." At that point I thought he was telling me his last name was spelled just like the color green. It wasn't until the next day when I got a confirmation email that I realized his name was Kelly Green. Just like the crayon.
 
:offtopic: I had to share this. I just went to a eye doctors office a couple hrs ago to schedule an appt. the receptionist was checking my insurance info., and was giggling & laughing abt my "happy" last name (which she already did over the phone yesterday). I gave no reaction, and got preoccupied with my 5-yr old. She then got on the phone with a woman from the insurance co. And tee-heed w/ her abt my last name. She said, "yup, it is jolly, just like Santa Claus! You know, ho-ho-ho"! Lol! I don't know if she wanted a reaction, but I pretended I didn't hear, and became absorbed in looking at glasses. It isn't that I'm offended, but I honestly don't know how to respond to that. I'm a little stand offish, and not the best socializer if I don't know the person.

PSA: Please don't comment.....

:mad:
Reminds me of going through the grocery check out and having the employee look and comment at the things I'm buying. Or open my People magazine to look and laugh at while I'm swiping my card. :mad:
 












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