and as i told you before. given your very short initial height you shouldnt have lengthened 7.5cm.
even with baggy pants, you have this "dwarf-on-stilts" look. I cannot imagine you wearing normal jeans or god forbid slim fit.
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Honestly he looks great and I don't think his proportions are bad as a result of the surgery so stfu
How long after the surgery you stop walking in a weird way?
Quote from: Ghostfish on May 11, 2019, 02:11:41 PMHey ned
Please don't come to this forum anymore. You are just simply rude and do not have any respect to others. Just finish your lengthening and go home.
you damn right im leaving this forum once i finish legnthening. absolute state of this circus.
and i dont give a fk about gaining any of urs "respect". I am not here to kiss people ass. I am here to tell the fking truth as a LLer to future patients.
I am sure the first man to say earth wasnt flat didnt get any of the others "respect". Shove it up your ass you pathetic, characterless, spineless coward.
Yeah im "rude". Lets all pretend he looks normal in this stupid echo chamber. Just like in crazy+6s diary. We all know how it turned out.
Such a toxic climate here, a pack of sheeps shouting the same. Yes I am rude. Of course i will always tell the emperor is nked. This is a life changing surgery. Future patients who browse this forum will take decision based on what they read here.
You're such a wonderful guys lying out of your a**. The "blood" of all the butchered surgeries in future will be on your hands. Carry on being nice.
Quote from: ned_flanders on May 11, 2019, 11:57:36 AMplease, can you stop parading this video, it gives Stryde nail a bad reputation.
Stryde patients, including me, walk better than this already 2-3 weeks after surgery.
and as i told you before. given your very short initial height you shouldnt have lengthened 7.5cm.
even with baggy pants, you have this "dwarf-on-stilts" look. I cannot imagine you wearing normal jeans or god forbid slim fit.
he looks perfectly normal
because the camera is placed very low, his legs look much bigger then they are
Quote from: sylar94 on May 11, 2019, 03:51:59 PMhe looks perfectly normal
because the camera is placed very low, his legs look much bigger then they are
Its been a while since I have seen a post-LL walking video, refreshing 
I think you are right about the camera. Maybe the author can film again with camera placed a bit higher, at eye-level?
Proportions looks off on this particular video, but we all know cameras can distort what we see, so I am not gonna judge yet.
How tall were you before LL?
He looks fine to me, im sure he was looking much worse when he was shorter. Stop worrying about proportions when you allready are disproportionate, i dont know any guy below 170 that is not disproportionate.
Quote from: ned_flanders on May 11, 2019, 11:57:36 AMplease, can you stop parading this video, it gives Stryde nail a bad reputation.
Stryde patients, including me, walk better than this already 2-3 weeks after surgery.
and as i told you before. given your very short initial height you shouldnt have lengthened 7.5cm.
even with baggy pants, you have this "dwarf-on-stilts" look. I cannot imagine you wearing normal jeans or god forbid slim fit.
As you know each case is individualistic. So he is not giving it a bad reputation. He is doing the right thing by sharing his journey with us.
You claim you're here to tell people the truth well clearly telling someone else not to put a bad reputation on something is hiding the truth. If he stopped as you asked him to then people may not know the damn truth. People may expect a 2/3 week time like you if he did not share his journey. Which can impact people's plans. We already know how we have to organise our lives around the surgery. Not having a wide range of info on how long it takes to walk proper will change plans. Like I said I know each case is individualistic but the more cases we have the more likely we can put together an accurate picture of the whole thing.
So, you are wrong here. Like I've told you before the truth is always appreciated. Just a bit weird when you're being a hypocrite.
@IFS thank you for sharing your video. It looks great. You know the entire forum is routing for you. Please don't let Neddy boy over here tell you to stop "parading" the video. Like I said it shows us that Stryde is not going to give everyone a 2/3 time period to start walking. You provide us a more detailed, realistic picture of the process. Thank you so much for this. We are highly grateful.
Ned, you my man are a bit looney. You give us negative info about LL that we already know (or should know through research). Put up your own video of your "better" walk if you really wanna help us seek the truth. Tell us about your own experience... Are you doing well? Would you recommend it? Anything you wish you had known beforehand? Like I said the more info for us the better. That would really be helping us out.
Still wishing you the best cause nobody trying to hate out here.
All the best.
Thank you for the positive words you guys and of course your support. CLL is a difficult and challenging process. It offers a great reward, but in order to achieve these awards, you must cross rugged terrain, which includes dry land, high mountains to climb, and rough waters to swim through. The rugged terrain also includes serpents that may try to bring you down. You should ignore serpent creatures in life because they cannot help you achieve your goal. Serpents do not know success; they bask and feed on failure.
I want each of you to win at whatever it is that you're trying to achieve. It helps to have friends, family, and supporters like you guys by my side. I look forward to continuing to post the most accurate depiction of my CLL experience with the goal of helping others as my primary focus. I'll also post an updated video each month or so of my walking/gait and hopefully, this too provides a real example of what one can expect. It is always my hope that CLL patients before me and after me experience a process that is even smoother and that much more successful than my own. I only wish success on others. I have only experienced success and this experience will be no different. All in due time. I will keep going strong toward my goals and I will encourage others to keep going strong toward their own goals, my friends. That is the only way I know how to live my life.
All the best to the good in the community! Let's keep going strong.
IFS
Girls use 15cm heels and nobody says anything. You just leengthen 2cm more than him. He is obvously jealous.
Quote from: InFullStryde on May 11, 2019, 07:49:35 PMThank you for the positive words you guys and of course your support. CLL is a difficult and challenging process. It offers a great reward, but in order to achieve these awards, you must cross rugged terrain, which includes dry land, high mountains to climb, and rough waters to swim through. The rugged terrain also includes serpents that may try to bring you down. You should ignore serpent creatures in life because they cannot help you achieve your goal. Serpents do not know success; they bask and feed on failure.
I want each of you to win at whatever it is that you're trying to achieve. It helps to have friends, family, and supporters like you guys by my side. I look forward to continuing to post the most accurate depiction of my CLL experience with the goal of helping others as my primary focus. I'll also post an updated video each month or so of my walking/gait and hopefully, this too provides a real example of what one can expect. It is always my hope that CLL patients before me and after me experience a process that is even smoother and that much more successful than my own. I only wish success on others. I have only experienced success and this experience will be no different. All in due time. I will keep going strong toward my goals and I will encourage others to keep going strong toward their own goals, my friends. That is the only way I know how to live my life.
All the best to the good in the community! Let's keep going strong.
IFS
Well said mate. Keep going. You'll be walking back to normal soon I am sure of it.
Quote from: InFullStryde on May 11, 2019, 07:49:35 PMThank you for the positive words you guys and of course your support. CLL is a difficult and challenging process. It offers a great reward, but in order to achieve these awards, you must cross rugged terrain, which includes dry land, high mountains to climb, and rough waters to swim through. The rugged terrain also includes serpents that may try to bring you down. You should ignore serpent creatures in life because they cannot help you achieve your goal. Serpents do not know success; they bask and feed on failure.
I want each of you to win at whatever it is that you're trying to achieve. It helps to have friends, family, and supporters like you guys by my side. I look forward to continuing to post the most accurate depiction of my CLL experience with the goal of helping others as my primary focus. I'll also post an updated video each month or so of my walking/gait and hopefully, this too provides a real example of what one can expect. It is always my hope that CLL patients before me and after me experience a process that is even smoother and that much more successful than my own. I only wish success on others. I have only experienced success and this experience will be no different. All in due time. I will keep going strong toward my goals and I will encourage others to keep going strong toward their own goals, my friends. That is the only way I know how to live my life.
All the best to the good in the community! Let's keep going strong.
IFS
Hi IFS
Well spoken!! Ned, you are wrong about the the way to show or to tell the truth. You need to show the evidence like IFS who provides detailed diary, thorough replies to any questions, lots of pics and videos, while you don't provide any evidence. You are just saying bad things about CLL, while you are actually doing CLL WITHOUT complications. It is so obvious which word will be taken into account.
BeYourBest also pointed out the important thing. The more information this forum provides, the better the future patients will be prepared. IFS is trying his best to help those people. You are not the only smart one here. People are probably smarter than you thought. They will dig out enough information from here or other places and decide what to do.
Just one more comment on ned's talk, Ned, you said you and others with Stryde walk better after 2-3 weeks of surgery. It is absolutely true because you and others at that time have NOT lengthened even 1 inch. It is getting harder to walk as you continue to lengthen because of tightness and some discomfort. Once you stop lengthening, it will get better and better but it takes time.
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