Tall People Are Happier, Smarter, Win More, Have Better Lives, And Have Special Statues, Really?

Me: I wanted to put up a long list of random articles I have found all across the internet which all seem to point at the fact that people of above average stature just seem to be either better or have a better quality of life than people who are of below average stature. This is not to say that people taller than you will always be happier and be better than you. We at this website are trying to change that. My motto has always been that with enough innovation and intelligence once day we will find a way to increase even our adult height so that we might even be taller than what nature had destined us to limit us to be. All I did was just type in the two words “tall people” on Google. All of the articles posted below are from just the first page that appeared. 

From the website for Time Business magazine HERE

Why Tall People Are Happier Than Short People

By SEAN GREGORY Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Damn you, tall people. They block your view at the movie theater. They’re a pain to shop for: Who really wants to drag themselves to the Big & Tall to buy Uncle Lurch a pair of extra-long pants? They’re the ones with better chances of becoming pro basketball players, or supermodels.

Squirts probably don’t need any more reasons to envy their longer-limbed neighbors. Unfortunately, a new study just added to the indignity of short people. According to a paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research, both men and women who are above average height — 5 ft. 10 in. for males, 5 ft. 4 in. for females — report higher levels of happiness than smaller people.

In the study, men who call their lives the “worst possible” are nearly an inch shorter than the average man. The women most down in the dumps are half an inch smaller, on average, than the average woman. Taller people say they are more content, and are less likely to report a range of negative emotions like sadness and physical pain. “Happiness is just one more thing that taller people have going for them,” says Angus Deaton, a Princeton economist and co-author of the study, who stands a smug 6 ft. 4 in. (Full disclosure: I, too, am about 6 ft. 4 in., but I will refrain from mocking shrimps in this story.)

Why are tall people happier? According to Deaton’s analysis, the result is linked to education and income. The study found that taller people tend to have more education, and thus higher income levels, than shorter people. It follows that the smarter, richer tall people would be sunnier than their vertically challenged compatriots. “Money buys enjoyment and higher life evaluation,” says Deaton. “It buys off stress, anger, worry and pain. Income is the thing!”

To gain some real-world insight into these stats, I called the first smart short person I could think of, a friend named Milton Lee. Despite what these studies indicate, smart short people do exist. Milt, a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, made a killing as a Wall Street trader in the 1990s, but quit finance to chase his dream of becoming a basketball coach. He has trained many NBA players, including this year’s top draft pick, Oklahoma’s Blake Griffin, and even landed an assistant coaching gig for the Los Angeles Clippers’ summer-league team.

Despite giving up an healthy Wall Street income, Lee, who claims he’s 5 ft. 9 in. but admits to being 5 ft. 8 in. when pressed, considers himself content. “I’m not totally buying it,” he says of the study. “I’m below average height, and have above-average happiness.” In his basketball work, Lee spends a lot of time around well-compensated human trees, and doesn’t always see smiling faces. “There are plenty of NBA players who are absolutely miserable,” Lee says. “They want more playing time, they feel underappreciated. Only a dozen or so guys feel that they are truly loved.”

In his Wall Street days, Lee saw plenty of rich, happy short people and wealthy, depressed tall people. He does offer one reason why taller men might be happier. “Whenever I’m out with tall guys, they tend to get more attention from women,” says Lee. “You never hear girls say, ‘Hey, I’m really into short guys.'”

Lee directed me to one of the players he coaches, Coleman Collins, for the smart, tall guy’s perspective. When I told him Lee questioned the findings, Collins, who is 6 ft. 9 in., wasn’t surprised. “Short people are always ready to disagree,” says Collins, who graduated from Virginia Tech when he was 19, after just three years, and played for the school’s basketball team. He points out that he has many short friends. “Generally speaking, I’ve found that they are more likely to have a chip on their shoulder, more likely to have something to prove,” Collins says.

Collins, now 23, supports the study’s results. “I’m generally in a good mood,” he says. “And based on the anecdotal evidence I’ve seen, tall people have a more pleasant disposition and are more easygoing. They don’t have to make an extra effort to command attention. When they walk into a room, it tends to come naturally to them.” Such recognition surely helps your self-esteem. If only it wasn’t too late for you short people to have a growth spurt.

From the website for Psychology Today HERE

A look at the hard truths about human nature.
by Satoshi Kanazawa

Why are taller people more intelligent than shorter people?

Why are taller people more intelligent than shorter people?
Published on January 25, 2009 by Satoshi Kanazawa in The Scientific Fundamentalist
In my previous post, I explain that men on average are slightly but significantly more intelligent than women, not because they are men, but because they are taller.  But why are taller people more intelligent than shorter people?The real answer is we don’t know for sure, but there are two possible explanations.  First, both height and intelligence may be indicators of underlying health.  According to this view, people who are genetically and developmentally healthier simultaneously grow taller and become more intelligent than those who are less healthy, producing the positive correlation between height and intelligence.

This is a plausible theory.  In our paper, however, Reyniers and I produce evidence against it.  In the analysis of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, we control for the respondent’s health, by using four indicators of health and producing a latent variable for health using principal component analysis in order to eliminate random measurement error.  The association between height and intelligence does not diminish at all when we control for health.   In fact, once we control for other demographic and social variables, health is not significantly correlated with intelligence at all; it actually has a nonsignificantly negativeassociation with intelligence.  So, at least in our sample, health is unlikely to be the common cause for both height and intelligence.

In our paper, Reyniers and I propose a second possible explanation.  It consists of three separate mechanisms.

1.  Assortative mating of tall men and beautiful women.  Because height is desirable in men and physical attractiveness is desirable in women, there should be assortative mating between tall men and beautiful women (and short men and less beautiful women).  Because both height and physical attractiveness are heritable, this will create an extrinsic (non-causal) correlation among their children between height and physical attractiveness, where tall people (both men and women) are more beautiful than short people.

2.  Assortative mating of intelligent men and beautiful women.  Because intelligent men tend to attain higher status, at least in the evolutionarily novel environment in recent history, and high status is desirable in men, and because physical attractiveness is desirable in women, there should be assortative mating between intelligent (and thus high-status) men and beautiful women.  Because both intelligence and physical attractiveness are heritable, this will create an extrinsic (non-causal) correlation among their children between intelligence and physical attractiveness, where more attractive people are more intelligent than less attractive people.

3.  Extrinsic correlation between height and physical attractiveness (produced by Mechanism 1 above) and extrinsic correlation between intelligence and physical attractiveness (produced by Mechanism 2 above) will create a second-order extrinsic correlation between height and intelligence.

We believe that this may be why taller people are more intelligent than shorter people.  Another factor contributing to the seeming male advantage in intelligence is that taller parents are more likely to have sons than shorter parents.  So, over many generations, more sons will inherit their parents’ genes inclining them to be taller and more intelligent, and more daughters will inherit their parents’ genes inclining them to be shorter and less intelligent.  But, once again, the crucial factor is height, not sex.

In our paper, we present evidence for all of the crucial mechanisms:  Taller people are on average physically more attractive than shorter people; physically more attractive people are on average more intelligent than physically less attractive people; taller people are on average more intelligent than shorter people; and taller parents are more likely to have sons than shorter parents.  But the issue is far from resolved.  While there is no doubt that taller people are indeed more intelligent than shorter people, the question of why this is so is one of the remaining puzzles in evolutionary psychology.

From the website for news for the Men’s Health Magazine HERE

BODY SCIENCE

Why Tall Men Win

by Chris Garcia October 25, 2011, 09:00 am EDT

It’s OK, man—Tom Cruise is short, too, and he’s a millionaire.

Napoleon was right to have a complex: We like our leaders tall. People prefer bosses and political leaders to be physically imposing, which is one reason why tall people push for leadership positions more often than their shorter counterparts, according to a pair of studies in Social Science Quarterly.

The two studies interviewed 467 college students about leadership abilities and asked them to draw an ideal leader next to an average citizen. Sixty-four percent of the students drew the leader as taller than the citizen. The second study quizzed students about their effectiveness as leaders and asked if they would ever seek out a leadership position. As height of the male respondent increased, so did his confidence in his leadership abilities.

“People tend to ally themselves in groups with certain taller individuals,” said study co-author Prof. Gregg R. Murray, professor of political science at Texas Tech University. “The taller individual then tends to dominate the group, which builds the taller person’s confidence further down the road.”

So what does that mean for the rest of us? The key is to mimic the confidence of tall people. Here’s how:

Keep the tone of your voice steady. Murray advises watching a Larry King interview with a famous celebrity or politician. King often manipulated the tone of his voice to match that of his powerful subjects. The key is to keep your tone constant. Lowering it conveys embarrassment and meekness.

Stay on top of your workout. Evolutionary theory suggests that tall people earn our trust because their physical dominance makes us feel protected, Murray says. If you don’t have the natural height advantage, you can still convey the illusion of height by making a simple adjustment to your posture. Follow these tips on how to carry your body.

Don’t underdress. Appearance is everything. One way to gain the benefit of physical dominance is to look like you matter, says Murray. Easier said than done? Get the Men’s Health Color Advantage and gravitate toward the shoes, pants and shirts that will help you naturally exude confidence.

Trust your abilities. “What our study really shows,” Murray says, “is that people who feel qualified are more likely to put themselves out there and take a risk.” It sounds like a no-brainer, but knowing you’re qualified and performing like it are two very different things. Just follow the lead of the World’s Richest and Fittest Guys. They’ll teach you that taking a big risk can lead to huge dividends—regardless of height.

From Malcolm Gladwell’s own blog HERE….

Why do we love tall men?

This excerpt is from the part of “Blink” where I talk about the things that throw off our powers of rapid cognition. I’ve just been talking about a test–called the IAT–which measures your level of “unconscious prejudice.” That’s the kind of prejudice that you have that you aren’t aware of, that affects the kinds of impressions and conclusions that you reach automatically, without thinking.

Or what if the person you are interviewing is tall? On a conscious level, I’m sure that all of us don’t think that we treat tall people any differently from short people. But there’s plenty of evidence to suggest that height–particularly in men–does trigger a certain set of very positive, unconscious associations. I polled about half of the companies on the Fortune 500 list–the largest corporations in the United States–asking each company questions about its CEO. The heads of big companies are, as I’m sure comes as no surprise to anyone, overwhelmingly white men, which undoubtedly reflects some kind of implicit bias. But they are also virtually all tall: In my sample, I found that on average CEOs were just a shade under six feet. Given that the average American male is 5’9″ that means that CEOs, as a group, have about three inches on the rest of their sex. But this statistic actually understates matters. In the U.S. population, about 14.5 percent of all men are six feet or over. Among CEOs of Fortune 500 companies, that number is 58 percent. Even more strikingly, in the general American population, 3.9 percent of adult men are 6’2″ or taller. Among my CEO sample, 30 percent were 6’2″ or taller. The lack of women or minorities among the top executive ranks at least has a plausible explanation. For years, for a number of reasons having to do with discrimination and cultural patterns, there simply weren’t a lot of women and minorities entering the management ranks of American corporations. So today, when boards of directors look for people with the necessary experience to be candidates for top positions, they can argue somewhat plausibly that there aren’t a lot of women and minorities in the executive pipeline. But this is simply not true of short people. It is possible to staff a company entirely with white males, but it is not possible to staff a company without short people: there simply aren’t enough tall people to go around. Yet none of those short people ever seem to make it into the executive suite. Of the tens of millions of American men below 5’6″, a grand total of ten–in my sample–have reached the level of CEO, which says that being short is probably as much, or more, of a handicap to corporate success as being a woman or an African-American. (The grand exception to all of these trends is American Express CEO Kenneth Chenault, who is both on the short side (5’9″) and black. He must be a remarkable man to have overcome two Warren Harding Errors.)

Is this a deliberate prejudice? Of course not. No one ever says, dismissively, of a potential CEO candidate that ‘he’s too short.’ This is quite clearly the kind of unconscious prejudice that the IAT picks up. Most of us, in ways that we are not entirely aware of, automatically associate leadership ability with imposing physical stature. We have a sense, in our minds, of what a leader is supposed to look like, and that stereotype is so powerful that when someone fits it, we simply become blind to other considerations. And this isn’t confined to the corporate suite. Not long ago, researchers went back and analyzed the data from four large research studies, that had followed thousands of people from birth to adulthood, and calculated that when corrected for variables like age and gender and weight, an inch of height is worth $789 a year in salary. That means that a person who is six feet tall, but who is otherwise identical to someone who is five foot five, will make on average $5,525 more per year. As Timothy Judge, one of the authors of the study, points out: “If you take this over the course of a 30-year career and compound it, we’re talking about a tall person enjoying literally hundreds of thousands of dollars of earnings advantage.” Have you ever wondered why so many mediocrities find their way into positions of authority in companies and organizations? It’s because when it comes to even the most important positions, we think that our selection decisions are a good deal more rational than they actually are. We see a tall person, and we swoon.

From CBS NEWS HERE

By      LLOYD DE VRIES /

CBS/ February 11, 2009, 8:06 PM

The Trouble With Tall People

Tall people have a special status in our culture. Often without good reason, they are thought of as leaders — as “standing tall above the rest.” In school, the tallest boys are the first to get dates. Tall girls are told they look great — “like beautiful models.” Short people with big egos are often said to have a “Napoleon Complex,” but nobody ever talks about tall, egotistical people as having a “de Gaulle Complex.” The average height in this country is 5 feet 9 inches for men, and about 5 feet 4 for women. Anybody below that comes up short.

I’m not proud to admit that I haven’t lost a lot of sleep over the fact that a former jockey will probably never be President of the United States. In my entire career, I don’t think I’ve ever been financially discriminated against because of my height. Then again, a comedy writer who is 5-feet-7 is considered on the tall side.

However, my attitude towards heightism changed recently when I read a University of North Carolina study. My consciousness, if not my height, has been raised. It turns out that short people are discriminated against in a way I never knew about — financially.

Statistically speaking, the taller you are, the more money you make. Each inch is worth about $789 more per year. Someone who is six feet tall is expected to earn $5523 more per year than someone who is 5-feet-five. Taken over a 30-year career, the smaller person’s height makes him come up hundreds of thousands of dollars short. Tall people get better job evaluations and quicker raises. So, short people don’t just have to put up with the good stuff always being on the top shelf or tall people sitting in front of them at the movies. A tall person’s earning power is head-and-shoulders above his shorter counterpart. And that is wrong.

Our reverence for height comes from primitive times. Back when we lived in caves, size was a more important survival trait than now. It made evolutionary sense. When a guy was coming at you with a spear, he was probably not going to be impressed by your command of the new tax laws or your ability to tell a really funny joke.

About 50 years ago, something strange happened — Americans stopped growing taller. In World War I, the average American soldier was two inches taller than the average German. Since around 1955, Germans and most people around the world have been growing taller, but we’ve stayed the same.

Is this another evolutionary development? Is America genetically ahead of the rest of the world in realizing that judging people by height is silly in this day and age? Will favoring tall people soon be a thing of the past? Is the height gene being phased out like the appendix or the ability to fricassee a lemur? Is American society finally evolving so that it will soon value things like intelligence, kindness, and sensitivity more than an ability to look good in designer clothes?

Don’t bet on it. Experts believe our failure to continue to grow taller has more to do with diet and exercise than with developing more humanistic attitudes. We’re growing wider, not taller. Meanwhile other countries are catching up to our height because they have been eating well. Maybe this development will have a positive effect. Maybe height will become less and less important to us as we stop towering over the rest of the world.

But I doubt it. I don’t think American pride will allow it. Height worship is too ingrained in our culture. Right now, the average height of men in the Netherlands is six-feet-one-inch. The Dutch are four inches taller than we are. The Dutch! Are our leaders really going to sit still and do nothing as the people of the world keep sprouting up and looking down on us? Can’t you just hear future politicians talking about closing the “height gap?”

There is bound to be some mistrust and suspicion if Americans continue to come up short internationally. Our proud leaders might even accuse other countries of employing the Ultimate Weapon in the Longitudinal War — using extra-high heels or putting lifts in their shoes. That’s right. Unless we get over our height hang-up, a vertically challenged president of the future might very well call for inspection teams to look for “Shoes of Mass Elevation.”

Lloyd Garver has written for many television shows, ranging from “Sesame Street” to “Family Ties” to “Frasier.” He has also read many books, some of them in hardcover.

By Lloyd Garver      Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.

From BBC News HERE
Page last updated at 10:35 GMT, Thursday, 10 September 2009 11:35 UK

Tall people lead ‘better lives’

Taller people live better lives, according to US researchers.
More than 454,000 adults aged 18 and over were asked by phone for their height and evaluate their lives.

Overall, taller individuals judged their lives more favourably and were more likely to report positive emotions such as enjoyment and happiness.

Reporting to the journal Economics and Human Biology, they conclude that this is because the taller people also had higher incomes and education.

Ladder

The researchers used the Cantril “self-measuring striving scale” which asks you to imagine a ladder with rungs numbered from zero at the bottom to 10 at the top.

The 10th rung represents the “best possible life for you” and the bottom is the “worst possible life for you”.

Participants were asked to report on which rung of the ladder they thought they stood on at the present time.

 

 Surprisingly people who say that their lives are the ‘best possible’ are slightly shorter on average 
Angus Deaton
Princeton University

Men who were above average height 5ft 10in (177.8cm) reported that they were standing higher on the ladder than men who were below average height.

They had an average ladder score of 6.55 compared to the shorter men who scored 6.41.

Women scored higher overall than men on the ladder scale and there was less difference between the taller and shorter women.

Taller women above the average height of 5ft 4in ( 162.6cm) scored 6.64 compared to a score of 6.55 for the shorter women.

But one of the lead researchers, Angus Deaton from Princeton University, said: “Surprisingly people who say that their lives are the ‘best possible’ are slightly shorter on average than those who are a step or two below.

“Perhaps the 8% of people who think their lives cannot be improved are different in other respects.”

Positive emotions

The study also looked at people’s emotions.

Taller men and women were more likely to report enjoyment and happiness, and less likely to report pain and sadness.

 The people who are happiest are not the very tallest- there is a threshold of height tolerance 
Dr Colin Gill
Chartered psychologist

Taller men, although not taller women, also worry less.

But sadness and anger were more likely to be experienced.

The authors say their findings cannot be attributed to different demographics or ethnicity, but are almost entirely explained by the positive association between height and both income and education, both of which are positively linked to better lives.

‘Height matters’

Chartered psychologist Dr Colin Gill said: “There’s no direct correlation between income and happiness – surveys going back years show that.

“But there does appear to be a correlation between height and happiness and height and income.

“If you look at this study, the people who are happiest are not the very tallest.

“There is a threshold of height tolerance – at about 6ft 5in (195.6cm) to 6ft 6in (198.1cm).

“It is about as tall as people think is normal, beyond that you are odd and life becomes very difficult.

“Height does matter, it’s always mattered for a very obvious reason – when you are born you are shorter than the people who look after you and have authority over you.

“And that power relationship never reverses.”

16 thoughts on “Tall People Are Happier, Smarter, Win More, Have Better Lives, And Have Special Statues, Really?

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  2. icelated

    I will say that i have an engineering and math degree and i study physics. I am 5 7″ I will tell you i took a ton of math, engineering and physics classes and the majority were my height or shorter. There was always one guy who was 6 foot.
    One of my computer engineering professors was tall. All my physics professors were short .
    Most of the people i work with in engineering are short. When you get into management is when the height goes up.

  3. Billy

    I completely dissagree. Could be because I’m 5″7, but I know for certain that I completely dominate everyone else I know of my peers group in intellectual persuits and have many examples that confirm this. I pride myself on my intelligence because in a way, it’s all I have going for me and that’s why I believe that this is the wrong way around. Shorter people are more intelligent because they have to work harder to imrpove themselves in ways that make up for their lack of hieght and appealability. Tall people get jobs more easilly simply because they’re more appealing and it’s subconciously assumed that you’ll get more out of them because there’s more of them.

  4. John

    Hey fuck everyone im tired of judge mental people. Fuck those who judge and perceive someone as intelligent or powerful and better leaders based on height. Keep on profiling people but ill tell you some are getting tired of it. Some might attempt to make proof to an ignorant audience soon

    1. admin

      This website was created for one specific purpose. This is our disease and cause. We all have issues with how society judges us due to our stature.

  5. John

    doesn’t matter if I go to a top business school im too short to be a leader that’s what I’ve been taught and reassured

    1. admin

      Going to a top business school is a reasonably impressive achievement. I would be more impressed if you were able to get into that graduate physics program at Caltech or into Medical School or JHU though. That might eventually lead to you getting a prestigious job with Bain, BCG, or McKinsey making 7 figures a year as a manager, and you having a great professional life and career. You would feel great about yourself since you are defining yourself and your entire life’s meaning through your career, since that is the area of your life where you are doing really good in.

      However if you are short statured, what will more likely happen (but not always) is that the average intelligent female will choose the taller guy to date and have sex with when they are in their 20s, and then choose you as the provider husband type after they have had their decade of fun, crazy sex, etc. and realize in their 30s that they are losing their looks and need to find a stable, compromising, emotional intelligent male with a good job making high figures to settle down with or they will not have the high quality lifestyle they had always believed they were entitled to when they were still in their early 20s.

      Something to ask yourself is this. If you are tall and don’t have a lot of professional success, you can still go back to school, get a great job, and do well in your career. If you have a great career and professional success, there is little you can do to grow taller. The smarter thing to ask yourself is which state or position will give you the most choice in life.

      1. Sori

        Why would you want to date or marry someone who wouldn’t give you the time of day in their prime? I’m sorry that sounds desperate. Some of you guys complain about being discriminated against but how many of you would date a tall girl? (I’m 5’9 btw).

  6. Yer Lee

    I am just feeling so sad to be born very short. I am just 5 feet tall. I have trouble finding a better job because I am too far below average men in the United States. In Asia, I am the average man. When we came to this country, I am very short. There are many short people in the US too but why people respect tall people more than short people. I think something is wrong here. This is the same issue as men and women in the past. Short men do all the hard work, tall men be the leaders. I don’t want to be a leader but I just want to see a short man be a leader to show that we all are equal. I think this needed to be changed.

  7. Carlos Bunbury

    I think most of you are missing the point. Taller people get more respect and attention than shorter people, for no reason at all. in other words, the shorter you are the more you will need to work to earn respect and attention.

  8. Short Guy

    Socialization <— That's the reason. It's not intrinsic to have negative feelings about a shorter stature. That's propaganda used to defend heightism. When you take into account the mainstream discrimination prevalent in movies, cartoons etc .. it's no wonder heightism is a problem. Almost all of the Disney movies cast characters (like most movies) using height as a "trope". Shorter people are (almost) always cast in a negative light. Short people in movies, are often displayed as being taller than they are- when cast in a positive light. How many thousands of hours of media have you been entertained by, while ingesting these "tropes". What do you think is going to happen when people grow up internalizing discrimination?

    I don't "buy" this interpretation of these studies. If you research the history of discrimination- you will see an alarming amount of "scientific evidence" defending it. Do you think we have somehow magically "poofed" out of that age.. where research is *not* funded/used to defend discriminatory practices? Or perhaps distorted/spun… The researchers themselves have claimed that this study was about health and nutrition in early development. Not height vs height.

    I dare you to research racial discrimination.. and all of the "leading science" that "proved" it was natural and justified. If your not smart enough to figure that out, then I would conclude "tall or not" that you probably shouldn't be expressing your opinion in public :p

    And just a side note- Most of my "taller" friends are not the smartest people I know. Sometimes more successful – yes. Having watched them get "free passes" based on physical appearance I would suggest the problem again is "socialization" not "natural hierarchy" or intelligence.

    -Short Guy.

  9. Zaidi

    It’s really very simple. People have fewer blessings remaining in life as they get older, so being tall comes across as one of them when you have reached that state.

    It’s just the way life is. It seems to go down only unless you lift yourself up. Feeling thankful that at least you’re tall is only natural, and can just end up making you feel happier.

  10. Elected By Glory King

    You named “Milton Lee”, a short clever person. And you did that to show that statistics don’t always work, only probabilistically – because that means the term statistical.

    Remember most white “Lees” are of East Asian ancestry.
    And all East Asian Lees are of East Asian ancestry.

    So you try to prove scientific data wrong by not reading them well?

    Clever… I guess you have no East Asian genes either you are tall enough.

    Don’t call me a racist but BBC statistics, the world, and your reasoning method.

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