I was parked today and I saw some young Asian guy walking a bit weirdly. It lok like his legs were slightly inverted inward. It wasn't a crazy limp but it was noticeable.
People walking towards him were a little bit repelled and moved further away from him.
Is this how you tend to walk after LL? Because it would certainly detract from the attractiveness of being 2.5 inches taller.
I saw some dude limping/walking weirdly. Is that how you walk after 5.5-6cm LL
Quote from: Ronman on June 28, 2021, 12:08:59 PMI was parked today and I saw some young Asian guy walking a bit weirdly. It lok like his legs were slightly inverted inward. It wasn't a crazy limp but it was noticeable.
People walking towards him were a little bit repelled and moved further away from him.
Is this how you tend to walk after LL? Because it would certainly detract from the attractiveness of being 2.5 inches taller.
short answer:NO
Someone could walk "a bit weirdly" for many reasons. LL is one of them, or maybe he was drunk.
It is impossible to say, but if all you noticed was a weird stride then odds are it is not LL simply because there are so many other possibilities.
Quote from: DonBones on June 28, 2021, 02:43:41 PMSomeone could walk "a bit weirdly" for many reasons. LL is one of them, or maybe he was drunk.
It is impossible to say, but if all you noticed was a weird stride then odds are it is not LL simply because there are so many other possibilities.
I appreciate your response, but my question was not whether he had LL. It was whether people who have LL tend to have a bit of a weird/distorted walk afterwards.
No of course
That isn't really a smart question
Stupid question
There are plenty of videos on here that you can look at to see how people walk after LL.
Hi I'm pretty new here in this forum, as I experienced with working many limb lengthing people it's true they have inward leg and there are many reasons to have a bow leg or inward leg
One of them is inappropriate muscle contraction
So if you stretch all hip muscle equally and keep your hip biomechanically in a right alignment probably you will have less such as that problem
Quote from: Physiotherapist on July 07, 2021, 03:15:40 PMHi I'm pretty new here in this forum, as I experienced with working many limb lengthing people it's true they have inward leg and there are many reasons to have a bow leg or inward leg
One of them is inappropriate muscle contraction
So if you stretch all hip muscle equally and keep your hip biomechanically in a right alignment probably you will have less such as that problem
Hey man! Good to have you here. May I ask where you practice?
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