Do you look more like your mother or your father?

H

hopelessAspieNEET

This account is a work of fiction and satire
May 26, 2023
2,267
I inherited much more features from my mother. Every single pheno trait (eyes, eyebrows, lashes, dark circles, hooding, nose, lips, ears, forehead) I have from her. Other than that I don't look like either one of my parents. In terms of skeletal frame and proportions I don't resemble them at all. In terms of skull I don't resemble them at all, they both have narrow skulls while mine is broad, none of them have good forward growth (distance between ear and upper jaw), the only person in my family tree somewhat resembling my forward growth is grandpa on my mom's side that she didn't even inherit herself. My mom is 5'3, my dad is 6'2 and I'm 6'3. My siblings also barely look like me with the exception of my sister, but she doesn't have the same forward growth. I'm glad I don't look like my family because they are dysgenic trash (with the exception of my grandpa that I talked about, but he is like 5'7 unfortunately. He skullmogs nearly everyone I ever met and has A17 eyes)
 
uglyboi1

uglyboi1

high school drop-out 9 year NEET and live alone
Dec 12, 2021
7,384
I think most sons usually get features like skull shape etc from their whore mother. If I got my dad's skull I wouldn't be incel
 
A

Atila

xiǎo bái liǎn
Dec 2, 2020
18,657
fakecel
Download 1
 
Disorder

Disorder

Born2Lose
Nov 29, 2020
9,920
I remember one time as a kid my mum's gook friend brought up how I looked so much like my dad and I started crying and ran out the house and they got so worried because I didn't come back for hours. But yeah the bitch was a retarded gook and I look more like my mother.
 
H

hopelessAspieNEET

This account is a work of fiction and satire
May 26, 2023
2,267
Maybe you inherited your skeletal structure from the forward-grown guy your mom cheated on your dad with.
What do you think the chances are that this is the case? Could this be a reason as to why my supposed father doesn't get along with me?
 
KARENIN

KARENIN

I wanna revive Hitler but I can't figure out how
Jul 2, 2022
3,156
What do you think the chances are that this is the case? Could this be a reason as to why my supposed father doesn't get along with me?
The chances are high enough that it's worth investigating if you are able to find a non-Jewed DNA testing laboratory. Though I noticed the vast majority of the features you say you inherited from your mom (eyebrows, lashes, dark circles, hooding, lips) actually comprise a single phenotypic trait, the dermis (skin), which is a single continuous organ meaning it's literally impossible to get lips from one parent but eyebrows from another parent. Eyeballs aren't part of the skin but are made from the same chemical compound (proteins), so my guess is that the gene(s) determining skin features also determine the appearance of the eyes, i.e. if you inherit one parent's skin you'll inherit his/her eyes too in terms of same protein structure (melanin level, which determines eye colour, is a separate trait). While the cosmetic appearance of the nose, ears and forehead (which is also influenced by hairline i.e. a skin feature) is a composite phenomenon as these features are influenced as much by the underlying skeletal structure as by the soft-tissues and skin. The most straightforward way to compare your skeletal structure with your parents' is actually by looking at the shape of your hands and feet (disregard the nails as nails are part of the dermis so their appearance should be a masculinised version of your mother's nails.)
 
Deleted member 1379

Deleted member 1379

Asentientheterodroidsexual Monk-mode mgtow
May 17, 2023
1,380
@barcamgtow
"Asperger likewise claimed that while autistic children had a range of different body types and physical abilities, they all fell short of contemporary masculine physical ideals in some way. Harro was shorter than average, and “his arms and legs looked as if they were too short for his body.” His “posture too was odd,” as he “stood broadly, arms held away from the body, as a portly gentleman or a boxer might do.” Fritz was of “delicate build” and his veins were visible beneath his skin, which was “of yellowish-grey pallor.” The boy’s “musculature was weakly developed,” Asperger related, and his “posture was slouched, his shoulders slumped, with the shoulder blades protruding.” In his short description of Hellmuth, Asperger wrote that the boy’s “appearance was grotesque.” He reportedly “had noticeably increased salivation, and when he talked one could hear the saliva bubbling in his mouth.” He was also “grotesquely fat.” Since age eleven, Hellmuth had “distinctly formed ‘breasts and hips’ ” as well as “knock knees and flat feet,” and “when one shook his hand, it seemed as if it had no bones and were made of rubber.” Asperger wrote that some children’s deviations from the norm could appear farcical. Their “conduct, manner of speech and, not least, often grotesque demeanour cries out to be ridiculed,” he said. Harro was supposedly “an object of ridicule” and “directly provoked teasing” from other children for his “strange, slightly funny dignity” and “strange and comical behaviour.” Asperger noted “motor clumsiness” in “almost all autistic individuals.” Fritz and Harro, as well as Ernst and Hellmuth, were all “very clumsy” and poor athletes, unable to integrate with group sports. Harro’s “movements would be ugly and angular” and he was certainly “not a skilled fighter.” Asperger asserted that “autistic children also do not have a proper attitude towards their own bodies.” Itemizing the boys’ failures of grooming, he generalized that autistic children lacked “cleanliness and physical care. Even as adults they may be seen to walk about unkempt and unwashed.” Asperger’s idea of autistic intelligence, which was central to the diagnosis, arrived at another nondefinition. He admitted it was hard to generalize about autistic children since “the findings can be contradictory and different testers can come to different intelligence estimates.” Asperger’s core idea of autistic psychopathy—finding social interactions difficult to navigate—was also nebulous. It meant, basically, not fitting in: “In early childhood there are the difficulties in learning simple practical skills and in social adaptation. These difficulties arise out of the same disturbance which at school age cause learning and conduct problems, in adolescence job and performance problems, and in adulthood social and marital conflicts.” (page 152)
 
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