Where do I start with this?
I guess it is here.
Not all Jews are short.
Of course, not all Scandinavians are blond. It just seems
that way. It’s the same thing with Jews
and “short”. My friend Morrie is tall. That is my entire personal list.
Looking back, the foregoing concern is never entirely absent
from my mind. In my Sociology class in
college, I imagined a sociological experiment, a comparative study examining
the relationship between crime and height.
(I discovered a direct correlation.
Although, coming clean, I may have unconsciously
skewed the statistics.)
Jumping chronologically ahead, during my toast at Anna and
Colby’s wedding, I suggested, since Anna’s new husband was six-foot-four that “Colby
is a welcome addition to the ‘Pomerantz Gene Pool’.” Gratuitously adding, after skillfully timing the
subsequent laugh, “Six foot-four is a Pomerantz standing on a chair.”
What can I tell you?
The truth is funny.
Though we are admittedly not a tall family, I myself never
felt particularly challenged. That’s
because, at five-foot-seven, I am taller than my older brother, which is the
only relative comparison that matters. (With
humble apologies for the “relative.”)
Here’s the thing.
American culture values height. Of course, it makes a huge deal about skin
color so what do you expect?
In a study concerning the heights of presidential
candidates, cultural scientists – who appear to have an inordinate amount if
time on their hands – observed that since 1900, the taller candidate has
captured the American presidency nineteen times, while the shorter candidate has
prevailed eight times.
The only noticeably short winners (on the list I looked up)
were presidents elected in our country’s earliest era. James Madison was five-foot-four. I have no idea who Madison ran against, but I
can’t imagine the guy was shrimpier than that.
Who knows? Maybe back
then, five-four was a reasonable height. (What’s interesting is that they bothered
measuring the candidates at all. Somehow, height has always seemed to be important, voters drawn reflexively to the
taller competitor.
If George Washington had been five-three-and-a-half rather
than six-two, it might have altered the course of American history. Word is, George the Third himself was lineally tall. Although cursory research suggests that
nobody ever went up and said, “Excuse me, Your Majesty, do you mind if we
measure your height?” That appears more an American concern. Plus, it is terrible manners to approach a Divinely
ordained monarch with a tape measure.)
Anyway…. I’m stalling.
I could have easily removed the previous
paragraph were I not trying to delay the inevitable. And this disclaimer is hardly indispensible itself.
TAKING A DEEP BREATH
Okay. I’m ready.
While acutely aware of the vertical continuum, I have been
relatively content being five-foot-seven, probably due to my winning the “Head-To-Head
Brotherly Height Sweepstakes.” Though no one has ever unironically called me
“Big Guy”, the “Familial Advantage” set me off on a confident trajectory.
Then, not long ago, visiting my cardiologist for my annual
checkup, the office nurse measured my height…
You likely now know where this is going. But in the name of getting there no sooner than
necessary, one last strategic digression.
Why the fu… sorry, I have intense feelings about this…
Why the heck do
cardiologists need to know how tall
you are?
ANXIOUS
CARDIOLOGIST: “I can’t reach his
heart!”
Anyway, for some unfathomable reason, they dutifully calibrated
my height. And for the first time since
puberty…
I am no longer five-foot-seven.
No, Wise Guy, I am not taller. I have dropped down, to the top echelon of
that measurement but still…
The high five-foot-sixes!
(My salvaging consolation being that my older brother is
shrinking commensurately, so I continue to be “the taller one.”)
It was a traumatic revelation. All my life, I have been hovering within
“shouting distance” of the “National Average.”
Now suddenly, I am shriveling into the abyss.
And that is all I have to say about it.
This post may be somewhat shorter than it usually is. But now, apparently…
So am I.
3 comments:
If it bothers you too much, you could try what Barney Fife did when it was time for his physical and he found he, too, had gotten a little shorter.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=19UlUJvcQxo
If it's any consolation, I am an inch shorter than I was at my highest point.
Jim Dodd
When I was 17 I broke my foot. After X-rays at the hospital the doctor came out and asked "Do you like how tall you are?" I answered "Weird question but never gave it much thought" and he said "Get used to it, your growth plates are almost closed so you'll maybe grow a 1/2 inch to an inch more". I ended up growing an inch more so ended up at 5'02". Didn't bother me, come from a short family and actually split the difference between the height of my mom and dad. Flash forward a few decades and a broken neck appears on the scene. After they take bone from my hip and jam it in my neck to fix the broken part I end up being 5'05". 15 years later I am now doing my "Incredible Shrinking Man" impersonation and losing height and am now down to 5'04". I'm assuming that at that rate I'll be back to my teenage height in 30 years or maybe expired before that happens.
Guess I'm fortunate to have a Dr. that doesn't check my height each year, just my weight.
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