Quote from: Ozymandias on January 01, 2016, 07:44:41 PM\
No, going from "average" to "tall" is not more important than going to "very short" to "short", or from "short" to "average". The fact that you are saying this proves me that you have never faced any height discrimination, and that you are probably trying to attribute any minor issue you are having in your daily life to a false self-perception of not being tall enough. But you are 184, for gods sake. You are a tall guy. Even in the tallest country of the world, you are at least average. It does not sound bad at all, does it?
When you are average height, you get no height discrimination. Plain and simple. You're confusing "discrimination" with "lack of privileges". There is a guy in this forum who was fired from his sales position for being too short. That is an example of real discrimination. And I know a few more extreme cases. Just think for a second how CLL can change the life of a guy going from short / very short to average. In my honest opinion, if your only reason to consider CLL is getting more female attention, you should forget about it. Especially if you are already an average/tall guy, like is your case.
But, of course, it is your body, and it is you money. If you are honestly decided to go through this surgery, god luck. Just be sure it is what you really need.
I disagree with this post big time. Picture a normal curve:

Let's assume average height is 5'10 and the standard deviation for height is about 2 inches.
That means about 2/3s of people are 5'8 to 6' with 1/6th above and 1/6th below. Note: In Netherlands its more like 2/3s between 5'9.5 to 6'1.5. That means if a person who is 5'8 gets 4 inches extension he will leapfrog 2 out of 3 men in terms of height. If he gets just 2 inches he will go from being the shortest or second short out of 6 people to the 3rd shortest.
From my perspective, 2 inches will take me from the 50th to 80th percentile, which I think is the ideal place to be. That is pretty much the same for Moloko.
If a person who is 5'5 gets 2 inches taller, he is now 5'7. In his mind and in the eyes of many woman this makes a world of difference. But from the perspective of 80% of men, he is still short. He has only leapfrogged about 6% of the population.
EDIT: Having said that, Moloko I advise you look up real statistics about the height of men in Netherlands to get a more objective sense of how tall people are. The average height is not 6'1, despite what one study might say. Based on the average height of the various Scandinavian countries (a large enough sample of genetically similar people to take out bias inherent in each study) I would imagine the average height is more like 5'11.5-6'. This means you are on the taller side of average, maybe 55th to 60th percentile. Another 2 inches would get you right up to the 85th percentile without hampering your athletic ability too much. That is my plan but feel free to go ahead with whatever you desire!