That's literally what everyone here is doing. The permanent solution for us is CLL. Most posters here, not you apparently, is here because they wish to increase their height through CLL. We ALL know that there is benefits to being taller. That's why we're here. No one's saying "just be yourself" and forget about getting taller. We have our solution, for most of us we just have to save money for a few years.
It's funny how in the paragraph following this one in your post, you criticize me for generalizing many posters on this board (at least based on the content of their posts), they DO face a cruel, harsh and depressing reality, but you're perfectly okay with making the generalized claim that "the permanent solution for
us is CLL".
To take a page out of your own book: Maybe that's the case for
you.Most posters here "wish to increase their height through CLL" because it's the only method available to do it. Most posters here would also prefer not to have to undergo a barbaric, crippling surgery with not-insignificant risks for permanent complications.
It's great that there are a lot of CLL success stories, but then there are stories like unicorn's or other patients who suffered serious complications that still persist to this day. Even a lot of the people who are "satisfied" with their CLL results have persistent complications (hampered athleticism, joint pains, reduced range of motion, stiffness, etc) that they try not to make a big deal out of because they basically feel the benefits of their new height outweigh the drawbacks.
What I'm saying is we shouldn't be satisfied with CLL. It's great that it exists and it's certainly better than nothing, but the fact is it's a 30+ year old surgery that has basically hit the cap in terms of how advanced it's going to get. At the end of the day, no matter what new devices come out (PRECISE 3, SYNOSTE or whatever), the whole thing comes down to cutting a bone and slowly pulling it apart.
If we had a more advanced and sophisticated procedure that was safer, less invasive, and didn't involve crippling yourself athletically for life or risking other permanent complications, nobody would look twice at CLL. What I'm arguing is that we're maybe 7 years away from such a procedure (science, especially stem cell research, has come a VERY long way in the last 3 years) if we all come together to support the scientists researching the relevant fields of study (epiphyseal plate regeneration, etc), and that it would benefit us
all to do so because we'd all be able to partake in the newer procedure(s).
Why the hell would we choose to be miserable and dwell on negativities while we save money/line up logistics to become taller? Especially because for a lot of us, it's not that bad, we just want to become taller. We will have the same outcome except one will be optimistic and one will be miserable.
Just because we want to have LL it doesn't mean we have a "cruel, harsh, depressing reality", maybe thats the case for you. You don't have to be depressed to get the LL, you just have to want the height more than the money/time.
I've met many more short men in my life who want CLL because their reality is "cruel, harsh, and depressing" than those who are getting it because it's just "a little bad". Even on this very forum and makemetaller, I've seen more depressed posters, posters whose lives have been ruined by heightism, and so on than I have posters like you.
Don't be a hypocrite.
and what I was saying in my example is that I would have cognitive dissonance if I convinced myself that "being short is really really bad", and I went out into my reality and see that it was actually pretty decent (will get even better with LL, which is why we are here).
The problem here is that your spin on my original analogy doesn't make sense from a logical perspective.
In my example, the person who gets convinced by positivity-posters that "being short isn't so bad" and then goes back into the outside world and suffers cognitive dissonance resulting from people's continued discrimination against him because of his short stature
had already had negative social experiences because of his stature to begin with.
That's why they ended up on this forum to begin with. Think about it. Cosmetic limb lengthening surgery is an extremely obscure procedure. The average person on the street doesn't even know that this surgery exists. Would a short man who was happy or satisfied with his stature, who wasn't discriminated against or mistreated because of it, end up desperately and obsessively scouring the internet for ways to get taller to the point that they eventually find small, niche forums like this dedicated to an obscure, barbaric, expensive and risky surgery?
You don't really think that makes sense, do you?
In your example, you say that you "would have cognitive dissonance if you convinced yourself that 'being short is really bad' and then went out into reality and see that it was actually pretty decent'". Well, obviously, you had already been "out into reality" prior to ever discovering this forum (you didn't spend every single second of your life sitting at your PC in your room reading this forum - you've BEEN in the outside world before), so your exposure to reality after "convincing yourself that 'being short is really bad'" wouldn't be the first.
I said earlier that your version of the analogy doesn't make logical sense. I'll explain why here.
In this hypothetical scenario, we have 2 possibilities as to your life experience prior to arriving on this forum, and indeed prior to "convincing yourself that 'being short was really really bad'":
1) Prior to "convincing yourself that 'being short is really really bad'",
you had several experiences with heightism and height discrimination (see examples of heightism already given in other posts). In that case, those experiences must have been quite egregious, since they drove you to "convince yourself that 'being short is really really bad'". That being the case, it is not likely that after being exposed to this forum and having your belief affirmed/supported by the "negative" (realist) posts on this board and returning to reality, you would somehow discover that being short is "actually pretty decent". After all, the thing that drove you to convince yourself that being short was 'really really bad' was the height discrimination you faced "out in your reality" to begin with.
So we have a contradiction.
2) Prior to 'convincing yourself that being short is really bad',
you had never had any experience with heightism. In this case, it doesn't make sense that you would "convince yourself that 'being short is really really bad'". Why would a person who's had no negative experiences related to their stature come to such a conclusion? Why would they be able to be convinced by random forum posters that it is? This is like saying that you could convince a rich man that 'being rich is really really bad' just by telling him that it is, despite the fact that it doesn't line up with his real-life experiences.
In order for you to become convinced that being short is 'really really bad', there must be
some basis for it in your life experiences. People don't just randomly start to hate a specific feature of themselves for no reason.
This doesn't make sense.So we again have a contradiction.
Idk it just sounds like your argument is: "Everyone should keep doing what you're doing (trying to increase our height), but be sad about it"
No. My argument is "everyone shouldd keep trying to increase their height without trying to delude themselves into thinking they're 'okay being short', or that 'being short isn't so bad', or any of the other dozens of platitudes that get repeated by the positivity posters."
In other words, be
realists, not
optimists. Why? Because optimism leads to unrealistic expectations, which leads to delusions, which results in what I explained to myloginacct. You end up in an endless cycle of "positivity" delusions that will get torn down when you go out into the real world.
How do I
know they'll get torn down? The answer is I don't
know for sure (I am not omniscient), but I can reasonably assert it because as I've repeated MULTIPLE times on this board, if you somehow find your way to a forum about a grisly, barbaric, crippling, expensive, obscure cosmetic limb lengthening surgery with tons of risks and actually intend to have it performed on you, the overwhelming likelihood is that you've
already had extremely bad life experiences related to your stature.
People aren't going to treat you differently just because you've changed your mentality when the whole reason they were mistreating you in the first place was not your mentality, but your stature.Again, just so we're clear:
short men who aren't in some way unhappy with their height and/or have not had negative life experiences based on their height do NOT end up on websites with names like "LIMB LENGTHENING FORUM", "MAKE ME TALLER", or any forum whose focus is an extremely painful, risky, barbaric surgery that has the potential to permanently cripple them athletically or even completely. "Normal", "well-adjusted", "happy" people don't know this surgery exists. They don't look for it, they don't sign up on forums to discuss it, they don't plan international trips to get it, they don't sit save up tens of thousands of dollars over the course of years to be able to afford it, they don't analyze their potential proportions before and after the surgery, they don't have anything to do with it.I don't know how many times I've had to repeat this point. It seems like a lot of people have difficulty understanding it.