ULTIMATE HARDMAX FOR HEIGHT (any age)

caay

caay

Iron
Joined
Jun 2, 2026
Posts
70
Reputation
24
Now for starters, this method isn’t guaranteed to work and does have risks, so keep that in mind—but in my experience, it was totally worth it.
The method I’m talking about is spinal fusion. It’s a surgery usually done for people with scoliosis, which I had and most people also have it and don’t even realize . Your spine needs a curve of 50 degrees or more to qualify; anything less and they’ll just put you in a back brace, meaning you’re stuck walking around like a dumbass for a year.All you have to do is tell your parents your back hurts and have them take you to a doctor or if your school does scoliosis checks participate in them.
A spinal fusion is done by inserting metal screws into the curved part of your spine to straighten it. This gave me about 2 inches of height, taking me from 5’10 to 6’0.
The drawbacks: you’ll stay in the hospital a few days (I stayed 2). Walking will hurt, and you’ll have to relearn how to move normally. You’ll lose some physical ability, so you won’t be at your previous peak after recovery. Recovery takes about a year, and during that time you’re not cleared for physical activity—so basically a free pass from gym class.
Some sports might not clear you afterward, especially football, wrestling, and rugby. That doesn’t mean you can’t play, just don’t expect it. Sleeping can be painful because of your back, so you might end up on the floor. Taking off the bandage hurts a lot, and you’ll have a scar down your entire back.
Overall, it was worth it for a few months of real pain and a year of no physical activity.
IMG 4438
 
  • JFL
Reactions: Zbych66
LL is much more effective and is applicable in every case
 
LL is much more effective and is applicable in every case
true but LL is more expensive and probably won’t be included in insurance and this is mainly for people under 18 who can’t get LL
 
  • +1
Reactions: hypergonadal
true but LL is more expensive and probably won’t be included in insurance and this is mainly for people under 18 who can’t get LL
ya I agree but this is not the ultimate hardmax for height
 
  • +1
Reactions: Tsl
Most ppl dont have a 50 degree curve so this is quite useless
 
  • +1
Reactions: hypergonadal, Rick_bozo and iwannasleeponurlap
Now for starters, this method isn’t guaranteed to work and does have risks, so keep that in mind—but in my experience, it was totally worth it.
The method I’m talking about is spinal fusion. It’s a surgery usually done for people with scoliosis, which I had and most people also have it and don’t even realize . Your spine needs a curve of 50 degrees or more to qualify; anything less and they’ll just put you in a back brace, meaning you’re stuck walking around like a dumbass for a year.All you have to do is tell your parents your back hurts and have them take you to a doctor or if your school does scoliosis checks participate in them.
A spinal fusion is done by inserting metal screws into the curved part of your spine to straighten it. This gave me about 2 inches of height, taking me from 5’10 to 6’0.
The drawbacks: you’ll stay in the hospital a few days (I stayed 2). Walking will hurt, and you’ll have to relearn how to move normally. You’ll lose some physical ability, so you won’t be at your previous peak after recovery. Recovery takes about a year, and during that time you’re not cleared for physical activity—so basically a free pass from gym class.
Some sports might not clear you afterward, especially football, wrestling, and rugby. That doesn’t mean you can’t play, just don’t expect it. Sleeping can be painful because of your back, so you might end up on the floor. Taking off the bandage hurts a lot, and you’ll have a scar down your entire back.
Overall, it was worth it for a few months of real pain and a year of no physical activity.View attachment 5356895
spinal fusion at 3 years old fym any age
 
Now for starters, this method isn’t guaranteed to work and does have risks, so keep that in mind—but in my experience, it was totally worth it.
The method I’m talking about is spinal fusion. It’s a surgery usually done for people with scoliosis, which I had and most people also have it and don’t even realize . Your spine needs a curve of 50 degrees or more to qualify; anything less and they’ll just put you in a back brace, meaning you’re stuck walking around like a dumbass for a year.All you have to do is tell your parents your back hurts and have them take you to a doctor or if your school does scoliosis checks participate in them.
A spinal fusion is done by inserting metal screws into the curved part of your spine to straighten it. This gave me about 2 inches of height, taking me from 5’10 to 6’0.
The drawbacks: you’ll stay in the hospital a few days (I stayed 2). Walking will hurt, and you’ll have to relearn how to move normally. You’ll lose some physical ability, so you won’t be at your previous peak after recovery. Recovery takes about a year, and during that time you’re not cleared for physical activity—so basically a free pass from gym class.
Some sports might not clear you afterward, especially football, wrestling, and rugby. That doesn’t mean you can’t play, just don’t expect it. Sleeping can be painful because of your back, so you might end up on the floor. Taking off the bandage hurts a lot, and you’ll have a scar down your entire back.
Overall, it was worth it for a few months of real pain and a year of no physical activity.View attachment 5356895
It's not worth it
 
also messed up i need at least a 40 degree curve
 
Now for starters, this method isn’t guaranteed to work and does have risks, so keep that in mind—but in my experience, it was totally worth it.
The method I’m talking about is spinal fusion. It’s a surgery usually done for people with scoliosis, which I had and most people also have it and don’t even realize . Your spine needs a curve of 50 degrees or more to qualify; anything less and they’ll just put you in a back brace, meaning you’re stuck walking around like a dumbass for a year.All you have to do is tell your parents your back hurts and have them take you to a doctor or if your school does scoliosis checks participate in them.
A spinal fusion is done by inserting metal screws into the curved part of your spine to straighten it. This gave me about 2 inches of height, taking me from 5’10 to 6’0.
The drawbacks: you’ll stay in the hospital a few days (I stayed 2). Walking will hurt, and you’ll have to relearn how to move normally. You’ll lose some physical ability, so you won’t be at your previous peak after recovery. Recovery takes about a year, and during that time you’re not cleared for physical activity—so basically a free pass from gym class.
Some sports might not clear you afterward, especially football, wrestling, and rugby. That doesn’t mean you can’t play, just don’t expect it. Sleeping can be painful because of your back, so you might end up on the floor. Taking off the bandage hurts a lot, and you’ll have a scar down your entire back.
Overall, it was worth it for a few months of real pain and a year of no physical activity.View attachment 5356895
water post but nonetheless nice
 

Similar threads

Thai_boi
Replies
3
Views
90
foidslayer182zp
F
framemogger28
Replies
32
Views
200
TGUN.
TGUN.
S
Replies
7
Views
55
suryan110
S
stacylover
Replies
24
Views
132
stacylover
stacylover
etrnl06
Replies
28
Views
99
etrnl06
etrnl06

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top
Sponsored
Stake.us
America's #1 Social Casino
Slots, Poker & More
Join Now →