World's Tallest Woman Tell Kids "It's OK To Be Different!"
A video featuring Sandy Allen, the world's tallest woman, takes "giant" steps in building kids'
self-esteem.

At 7-feet, 7-1/4 inches, Sandy Allen is taller than any player in the National Basketball Association. In fact, according
to the Guiness Book of World Records, Sandy is the tallest woman in the world.
Being the tallest woman in the world has its share of advantages, but it has its disadvantages too, Sandy says. But Sandy manages to laugh at those
disadvantages. In her video, It's OK To Be Different, Sandy challenges kids to make the best of obstacles they face and to always treat
others with respect.
By the time Sandy was ten years old, she was more than 6 feet tall! A tumor in her pituitary gland caused the gland to produce too much growth hormone.
Photo Credit: Masterlab, (Indianapolis, IN)
In her late teens, Sandy had an operation that helped to control her growth.
Without that surgery, she would have continued to grow and, eventually,
she would have died.
Today, at age 41, Sandy has already outlived her life expectancy. While her health problems are many, she takes the time to talk to kids whenever
she can. Sandy's It's OK To Be Different video is a taping of just such a session. Sandy talks openly and honestly about her life and her problems.
She responds warmly, gently, and with humor to the kids' curiosities.
"Some people make fun of me because I'm so tall, but I'm proud of myself," Sandy tells the kids. "You've got to be proud of yourselves too, no
matter what you are. Be proud of yourselves and make the best of what you've got."
Sandy talks of a universal problem--feeling left out: "The boys made fun of me and the girls didn't want to be my friend because I was different,"
she tells the kids gathered around her. "I didn't get to participate in most of the things other kids got to participate in."
But that only taught Sandy that she couldn't give up. "Don't give up when you've got problems to solve," she implores.
Sandy is able to laugh at herself and encourages kids to learn to do the same. "If you can't laugh at yourself, then you're really in trouble,"
she says.
In her video, Sandy tells stories that interest kids and make them smile. She tells of pulling into a truck weighing station along the highway to
be weighed, of meeting Michael Jackson (he's friendly and shy), and of her eating habits ("For breakfast this morning, I only had three short
people!").
Sandy encourages kids to read too----an activity she did a lot of as a child. Today, Sandy serves as spokesperson for a program called I'm Big on Books---You
Can Be Too!
In addition, Sandy talks about the Golden Rule, her 8-foot-long custom-made bed, and how she sews many of her own clothes and wears size 22 hand-me-down
sneakers provided by stars of the NBA!
Sandy's video is not without its drawbacks. It's not exactly "studio quality." Also, some teachers might want to preview the video and fast
forward by comments she makes about her preferred diet and about a brief encounter with a basketball official. But the positive messages stand out,
and they are messages kids won't soon forget. Students will come away from the video awed and inspired by Sandy and her messages: "No problem
is too big" and "It's OK to be different."
For more information about Sandy Allen's video, call 1-888-BIG-SANDY or write to Chart Breaker Music and Video, P.O. Box 29142, Indianapolis, IN
46229.
Article by Gary Hopkins
Education World Editor-in-Chief
Copyright © 1997 Education World
For more information about Sandy visit these related websites:
Check out a Web site devoted to Sandy.
At Sandy's
site, you may order an autographed picture or her video.
07/11/97