Quote from: Medium Drink Of Water on September 19, 2022, 11:41:29 PMMakes no difference if you did or not. What matters is your neight now.
My friend is 6'2 and had poor diet and sleep growing up. Should he get LL to make up for "stunting his growth?"
No, it's just short guys who talk like this, trying to make an excuse to get LL. 
I get it, but I just feel so frustrated whenever I think that I could have been taller, especially 5'9, since that's the average, the acceptable zone, and I'm shy about 2 inches from it, and then thinking back all the times I might have stunted growth, it's hard to accept and move on.
Also not to mention I deal with a chronic liver disease, and then reading studies about how it stunts growth, that just makes it worse. Then walking down the street, being towered over, feeling small and ego crushed.
Yeah, everyone who does that with any problem is wasting time self-destructively.
Also, sorry but that previous ulnar measurement is for Caucasian. Here's the updated version depending on race if anyone is interested.
SOURCE:
I don't think you should make drama out of what've stunted your growth even if it really did because it's pointless.
What else can do you except mourning for your past?
Yooo we have the same height, ulna length, and wingspan. And coincidentally I'd consider my childhood very stress inducing.
I'm not too concerned about it though, I'm just trying to get my LL as quick as possible.
Impossible to know unless you know your genetic height by any means.
Anyway, what is the point of immersing yourself in the past?
There's certainly no way of quantifying subclinical cases thus making it impossible to prove if someone underwent this. It's mostly observed in toddler aged children. But it's well known in medical literature that cortisol inhibits longitudinal bone growth.
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