Call & Times

Readers provide ‘tall tales’ about dealing with height

- Abigail Van Buren

DEAR ABBY:

Regarding “Tall Person Sympathize­r” (Feb. 28), whose very tall husband and son hate the comments they receive, I am 6 feet, 8 inches tall, so I can relate. One does feel like part of a freak show and have to deal with things most average height people don’t think twice about, like, “Can I fit in that car?” or “Where can I buy clothes that fit?” And that tired basketball question. Yep, even at my age of 64 I still hear it.

But the questions don’t bother me much anymore -- except for “How’s the weather up there?” Now when someone asks the height question, I quickly respond with the obviously wrong answer of 5 feet 6. It always gets a laugh, and there usually is a little small talk after that, and I may even ask them their height. Then I tell them, I am 80 inches tall, which is true, and let them figure it out.

Seriously, though, most people look favorably upon you and wish they themselves were taller. I’ll add, from my memory of my youth, it sure didn’t hurt in attracting the ladies. -- JAMES IN DELAWARE

DEAR JAMES:

I received a “tall” stack of responses about that letter -- almost all of them upbeat and fun. Several suggested the helpful retort when asked if they play (or played) basketball:

Short person: “Do you play basketball?”

Tall person: “No, do you play miniature golf?”

Most readers emphasized the positivity of accepting all of our unique difference­s. Read on for another gem:

DEAR ABBY:

My granddaugh­ter was 6 feet tall by the time she was a sophomore in high school. And yes, she received a lot of comments about it. She told me that when she was 15 she decided to embrace her height. And she did.

During her senior year, she auditioned for “Miss Local High School” and performed a monologue about what it was like to be a 6-foot-tall girl in high school. With jokes and good humor, she addressed the questions of playing basketball and volleyball and said she did neither. But she finished by saying that the best thing about being so tall was that she was able to help all the old, bentover folks in the grocery store when they needed an item on the top shelf.

She didn’t win the contest, but she did bring laughter to the audience. Today, she’s a successful businesswo­man with a boyfriend who is even taller. She has never considered her height a problem, so it isn’t.

-- CAROL IN FLORIDA

DEAR ABBY:

I have a dilemma. A decadeslon­g friendship ended last year after an unfortunat­e, painful event. I have items he loaned me. What do I do with them, as we are no longer in contact? Should I ship them to his house? Donate them to charity? Neither seems like a good idea. I’m not angry, but I can no longer let this person be any part of my life. What is the right thing to do?

-- AT A LOSS IN THE MIDWEST

DEAR AT A LOSS:

The right thing to do would be to send the items to his house. They are not yours to donate; they are his property.

Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Today’s Birthdays:

Actor Gena Rowlands is

93. Hall of Fame race car driver Shirley Muldowney is

83. Singer Elaine “Spanky” McFarlane (Spanky and Our Gang) is 81. Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi is 78. Author Sir Salman Rushdie is

76. Actor Phylicia Rashad is

75. Rock singer Ann Wilson (Heart) is 73. Musician Larry Dunn is 70. Actor Kathleen Turner is 69. Country singer Doug Stone is 67. Singer Mark “Marty” DeBarge is

64. Singer-dancer-choreograp­her Paula Abdul is 61. Actor Andy Lauer is 60. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is 59.

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