Very insightful post, thanks for your input. What you say here makes total sense, and I suppose the natural following question is: is there a cure besides physically altering your body? Would such an all-consuming preoccupation with height be classified as body dysmorphia? And if so, shouldn't that be treated with psychotherapy?
Of course, psychotherapy for helping with this issue is said to very rarely work; I would expect this has a lot to do with the fact that, as you say, the idea of this being a legitimate issue to be concerned about is routinely ingrained in us by society. If that's the case, is it really body dysmorphia? Because all you're doing is identifying an issue society does deem to be important that you do not possess, where dysmorphia suggests your perceived woes are your mind's fiction.
Good question.
I dont think I would classify it as body dysmorphia because eye level is such a fundamental psychological thing.
I think I remember some experiment being done, where they gave tall people Virtual Reality goggles, and made them simulate being in a full subway (metro) while being very short.
If I remember correctly most if not all reported feeling a strong sense of anxiety being so far down compared to everyone else.
Body dysmorphia is more when you see yourself in third person, while a height neurosis is as much seeing the world from first person view.
As such I dont think a psychotherapy can cure a height neurosis, unless the height neurosis only manifests when the person see’s themselves on pictures, and not simply their first person view. As an example, one of the feelings I dread, is simply going to a social gathering at someones house, taking my shoes of, and having to interact in that setting.
The difference in eye level, as seen from my point of view, makes me feel very childlike and emasculated. I think the nail on the head is knowing these other people are not super tall. Maybe just average or slightly above average. So they are correct while I am incorrect.
I do however think that talking with a psychologist in combination with LL could be beneficial. Why? Well, it could help deal with the psychological dilemma of after LL. That is, do you keep it hidden, do you tell everyone, do you only tell certain people, when to tell them, when to tell a girl you are dating or not to tell etc.
Maybe creating a plan for this part, and having someone to talk things out with, and how to deal with this part could alleviate a lot of problems.
At the end of the day, when we do LL, we make a trade. We obtain more peace of mind from the added height in terms of height neurosis going down, but we instead we get stress from the psychological aspect of whom to tell or not to tell about having done LL.
I think having a clear plan of 1. Why you are doing LL 2. What is your goal and what are the constraints. You know you can’t become 7 foot tall and there will still be people taller than you after. Explain why you would feel okay with yourself in this scenario vs. with your current height. 3. What is your plan to deal with post LL in terms of who to tell and when.
I think nailing down these 3, maybe with a psychologist maybe by yourself, could prepare you well for the demons that you will face in exchange for lessening the height neurosis.
The same way many people stretch etc. before LL to prepare for the physical battles ahead.