[-] Jealousdonkey@lemmings.world 5 points 6 hours ago

Big slippers too.

[-] Jealousdonkey@lemmings.world 11 points 8 hours ago

It's not a hindrance but I do think I have more "drag" than the normal-footed guy. Like I just have more weight at the ends of my legs and surface area so I don't think it helps. I can run fast though. I'm really great at swimming, where my paddle-like hands and feet really come into their own. For q2 - not as much as you'd think. Women are not so forward to make a move on me just because they think my big feet implies something else. I get more women through my natural charm.

[-] Jealousdonkey@lemmings.world 5 points 9 hours ago

Just gonna sneak this in here though because I'm feeling playful

[-] Jealousdonkey@lemmings.world 11 points 9 hours ago

My Vans are a 49 EU?

[-] Jealousdonkey@lemmings.world 5 points 9 hours ago

Another photo of me measuring them bro. Pardon the awful hairdo.

[-] Jealousdonkey@lemmings.world 30 points 23 hours ago

Yeah I get that a lot.

[-] Jealousdonkey@lemmings.world 41 points 23 hours ago

You're making me realize I could have a nice alternative income stream in all this...

[-] Jealousdonkey@lemmings.world 90 points 23 hours ago

Bro you haven't even taken me for dinner yet!

[-] Jealousdonkey@lemmings.world 110 points 23 hours ago

Heh yes that does tend to happen

[-] Jealousdonkey@lemmings.world 25 points 23 hours ago

Yessir. Thanks man I am into taekwondo!

[-] Jealousdonkey@lemmings.world 61 points 23 hours ago

My feet are unfortunately hairy and wide which led to my nickname during a large chunk of my teenage years: Hobbit.

842

So, I’m a pretty average-height guy—5’7”. Not tall, not short, just… there. My feet, however, did not get the memo. They are gigantic. Size 15. Which means I leave footprints that suggest someone much larger (or possibly Bigfoot) passed through, got spooked, and took off running.

People always comment. First, the double-take. Then: “Whoa. Those are… big.” And finally, the classic: “How do you even find shoes?”

Badly. That’s how.

Shoe shopping for me is like searching for an ancient artifact. Store clerks disappear into the back, only to return shaking their heads, as if I’d asked for a unicorn saddle. “We might have one pair in the back…” And what they bring out is always tragic—some orthopedic dad sneaker the size of a small canoe, usually in a shade best described as “beige disappointment.”

For a while, I tried to hide it. I slouched. I crammed my toes into size 13s like a Victorian woman chasing a terrible beauty standard. I even considered custom shoes—until I saw the price and briefly thought maybe barefoot life isn’t so bad.

But now? I’ve embraced it. I don’t tip over easily. I get extra legroom on buses just by existing. And when people ask about my shoe size, I just smile and say, “Great for swimming.”

view more: next ›

Jealousdonkey

joined 1 day ago