>Caving probably. Easier to fit in tight spaces. I hear Nutty Putty is a great, very safe cave. Should visit the birth canal passageway.
Based manlet suicide mission sender and nutty putty cave connoisseur
Olympic lifting, Gymnastics, Bodybuilding, Wrestling, Hiking, Ultra Long distance anything
But you're a fucking retard if you think you should be looking to optimize your height advantage in a certain sport.
You're not an olympic athlete, and you never will be. Pick something that interests you, and put in the work, height wont hold you back in any skill level you'll realistically be participating in.
Tons of sports have weight classes. I compete in WL and being 5'6 is not at all a disadvantage, you will be in a category against people around your BW and being shorter generally confers an advantage. We have a 5'0 woman who went to worlds
sports are a man made concept that revolve around the aspect of having a rare spectacle of competition between outliers that incentivizes the general population to pay money to witness it
sports don't matter, focus on what humans are meant to, which is move efficiently with great endurance and longevity
5'6" is good for endurance sports and agility activities, AKA the things humans are best at >dyel cope
our society is a fake dystopian nightmare, reality favors small people that can move a lot and not get tired, in fights they use weapons and strategy
being big is inherently the antithesis to the human condition
lifting, unironically. >shorter limbs = better leverage, making you naturally stronger for high intensity lifts. mechanics 101 >Shorter limbs and stature also mean shorter ranges of motion for your lifts, making them extra easy. That is, your squat, bench, and pretty much every other lift has to move the weight a significantly shorter distance than for a taller person >It's easier to fill out your comparatively smaller frame >it's easier to hit your caloric needs and daily protein requirements (they are going to be less than for a much taller person) >lighter weight relative to tall people means bodyweight/plyometric exercises are naturally easier >if you ever do calisthenics, you have a MASSIVE advantage over taller people. When you learn how to planche, you will understand how being 6ft is a massive disadvantage. When you do handstands or balancing work, being taller means much higher center of gravity which is also a big disadvantage
Caving probably. Easier to fit in tight spaces. I hear Nutty Putty is a great, very safe cave. Should visit the birth canal passageway.
cave diving is even better, and OP should hit jacobs well on their first dive
>Caving probably. Easier to fit in tight spaces. I hear Nutty Putty is a great, very safe cave. Should visit the birth canal passageway.
Based manlet suicide mission sender and nutty putty cave connoisseur
Olympic lifting, Gymnastics, Bodybuilding, Wrestling, Hiking, Ultra Long distance anything
But you're a fucking retard if you think you should be looking to optimize your height advantage in a certain sport.
You're not an olympic athlete, and you never will be. Pick something that interests you, and put in the work, height wont hold you back in any skill level you'll realistically be participating in.
Jockey. But you might be big for that. They're normally 5'1" ish, 115 pounds unironcally
Powerlifting
Gymnastics
referee
I'm going to go ahead and say martial arts.
formula1 and motorcycle racing
Is that a pic of you with a handgun?
Tons of sports have weight classes. I compete in WL and being 5'6 is not at all a disadvantage, you will be in a category against people around your BW and being shorter generally confers an advantage. We have a 5'0 woman who went to worlds
Femboy body building
A lot of top climbers/boulderers are short
Hide and seek? Limbo?
> Hide and seek? Limbo?
I don't know. Some garden gnome girl set the hide and seek world record in the 40s. It's a done deal at this point.
>day 1973
>he doesn't know I'm still in his walls
rock climbing
That’s the worst one. You need reach and big long fingers.
Midget Tossing
wrestling
bodybuilding and powerlifting
Boxing
best sport for manlets is shotgun shooting...... your own head! LOL
>tiny little arms can't reach the trigger
checkmate
test
sports are a man made concept that revolve around the aspect of having a rare spectacle of competition between outliers that incentivizes the general population to pay money to witness it
sports don't matter, focus on what humans are meant to, which is move efficiently with great endurance and longevity
5'6" is good for endurance sports and agility activities, AKA the things humans are best at
>dyel cope
our society is a fake dystopian nightmare, reality favors small people that can move a lot and not get tired, in fights they use weapons and strategy
being big is inherently the antithesis to the human condition
you should focus on having sex
Plenty of wrestlers that short, including some that are pretty heavy
lifting, unironically.
>shorter limbs = better leverage, making you naturally stronger for high intensity lifts. mechanics 101
>Shorter limbs and stature also mean shorter ranges of motion for your lifts, making them extra easy. That is, your squat, bench, and pretty much every other lift has to move the weight a significantly shorter distance than for a taller person
>It's easier to fill out your comparatively smaller frame
>it's easier to hit your caloric needs and daily protein requirements (they are going to be less than for a much taller person)
>lighter weight relative to tall people means bodyweight/plyometric exercises are naturally easier
>if you ever do calisthenics, you have a MASSIVE advantage over taller people. When you learn how to planche, you will understand how being 6ft is a massive disadvantage. When you do handstands or balancing work, being taller means much higher center of gravity which is also a big disadvantage