Why I’m Still So Short

A while back, NPR’s Scott Simon asked me to join him on NPR’s “Weekend Edition Saturday” to talk about why I’m so short. With my memoir Coming Up Short out August 5, I thought you might be interested. (Click above for the audio.)

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

Robert Reich is a former U.S. secretary of labor and Rhodes scholar, an acclaimed author and now chancellors professor of public policy at University of California, Berkeley. Robert Reich is also less than 5 feet tall. Professor Reich wrote about his height recently for his Substack newsletter, a column entitled Why Im So Short. He joins us now from Berkeley. Thanks so much for being with us.

ROBERT REICH: Well, thank you, Scott.

SIMON: I cant think of a better way to begin by asking, what was it like to grow up?

REICH: Well, I didnt grow up.

SIMON: Ha. I set that up for you.

REICH: I grew upward. I grew upward — not very much. But I was very fortunate, Scott. My parents were very, very loving and accepting, and most of my friends were accepting. Now, you know, I was harassed and bullied a little bit and ridiculed. And that, I think, goes with the territory. But basically, I had a happy childhood.

SIMON: Wasnt until much later you discovered you have a genetic disorder, a rare genetic disorder, thats colloquially called Fairbanks disease. What is it? How should we understand it?

REICH: Well, I didnt really understand it for many, many years. Its a kind of deformity in which the cartilage at the end of ones bone that eventually adds additional bone when you are supposed to be growing up doesnt really do its job. It doesnt extend the bones as far as — the long bones — as far as theyre supposed to be extended. Eventually, I had to have my two hips replaced, and I still have various aches and pains.

SIMON: What was dating like?

REICH: Well, that was (laughter) a problem — well, I should say, a challenge — in my teenage years and in the — in my 20s. I chose to go to an all-male college. In those days, there were such things. And that may not have been the wisest choice because the only way you could get to date anybody — a woman, a young woman — was to go to a womans college for Friday night or Saturday night. In those circumstances, first impressions counted a great deal. And lets put it this way, there was not very much interest in me.

SIMON: Bill Clinton used to make jokes, didnt he?

REICH: He did.

SIMON: And you two have been friends since your days at university together?

REICH: Exactly. And I think thats the point. He felt very free to make jokes about my height because I was very often making self-deprecating jokes about my height. And, in fact, there was one moment when we were touring a — I dont even know why we were doing it — but it was Legoland.

SIMON: I think I remember this. Yes.

REICH: And I honestly dont remember why we were doing it. But he — there was a little Lego house and he said, gee, thats a nice house. Even Secretary Reich could fit in there.

SIMON: (Laughter)

REICH: And I laughed. I thought it was very funny. And he thought it was funny. We both laughed.

SIMON: Yeah.

REICH: But it caused — some people were offended.

SIMON: Youve looked at some of the research, and its mixed. What is it, the taller candidate tends to be elected president?

REICH: Yes. Its fascinating, actually. You know, people are more likely to make disparaging cracks about short people because nobody gets pulled up short for doing it. But respected people have stature and are looked up to. This is even in our language.

SIMON: Yeah.

REICH: And well, the researchers, their theory is that there is some sort of genetic trigger in our brain that told early humans they needed the protection of big men. Other things being equal, large males are more to be feared and longer living, and so probably makes some evolutionary sense.

SIMON: I gather families write you?

REICH: Yes. Over the years I get a fair number of letters. And Ive got — you know, since email was available — a lot of emails from parents of unusually short children who seek my advice. They — I think they really want my reassurance more than my advice. They want to know what to do or is this going to be a problem? Is it going to hold their children back in any way? Well, I dont want to impose my views on them, but I gently urge them not to resort to limb-lengthening surgeries or growth hormone treatments or — I mean, there are all sorts of things out there. I urge them not to do any of these things. I just tell them to love their short kids, inundate them with affection, and theyll be OK. I dont know who I would be if, in growing up, my parents had decided to take some risk and make me taller and they had succeeded. I would be a different person.

SIMON: Robert Reich, former U.S. secretary of labor, currently teaching at UC Berkeley and a figure of true stature. Thank you so much for being with us.

REICH: Well, thank you, Scott.


This post has been syndicated from Robert Reich, where it was published under this address.

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