A boy who is just 14 has become India's tallest teenager measuring a staggering 6ft 7inches and still growing but has found it very difficult to get a girlfriend.
India's longest teenager Yashwant Raut
For most teenage boys, finding a girlfriend is difficult enough. But for India's longest teenager Yashwant Raut it's an even taller order as he fears he will never find a girl who measures up, Dailymail reports.
At just 14-year-old, Raut is 6ft 7in and is still growing, with doctors warning he could reach soon reach 8ft, making him the world's tallest.
'I always hit my head when I’m walking around the house and in school, and I can’t fit in our car or sit properly at my school desk,'
Yashwant told MailOnline. 'Everything is a problem for me.’
Yashwant, who wears size 15 shoes, comes from an short family - his father is 5ft 5ins, his mother only comes up to his waist at 4ft 5ins and his sister Triveni measures 5ft.
The schoolboy from Solapur in Maharashtra, western India, said: ‘I don’t fit on my bed so I can’t sleep properly at night. We need a customised bed but we haven’t got round to it yet.'
But his biggest fear is that he will never find a wife when the time comes for him to settle down.
‘I want a girl who will be tall enough,' he said. 'She has to suit my height. If I don’t find a girl who can match my height or get close even, I probably will not marry at all.’
But despite the daily trials and tribulations, Yashwant is trying to make the most of being unique and dreams of becoming a basketball player.
‘I feel my height is a huge strength in my life,’ he said. ‘There have been times when I feel really special, like a celebrity, when people stop me to click pictures and ask for my autograph.
'I always wanted to be tall but I never imagined I would grow this tall.
‘My height will make me a great basketball player. I want to play for my country one day.’
Yashwant’s father, Brahmadev Raut, 40, is proud because his son stands out in a crowd.
‘People stop and look as he steps out of our home, sometimes they say good comments and sometimes bad,' the teacher said. 'But we teach him to take every word as inspiration and motivation and just move on with his life.’
His mother Suman Raut, 36, who also works as a teacher, wants her son to be recognised across the globe for his height.
‘He is blessed with this remarkable height and I am hopeful he’ll be able to do something fruitful with this blessing,’ she said. ‘People ask me what I did during my pregnancy but I can’t answer them, I have no idea.
'He was like any other baby but just a bit bigger. His hands and legs used to always stick out of the cot or pram, always too big to fit into anything.’
He has applied to Guinness World Records but he has been told he has to wait until he’s 18 to be considered for one of their records.
‘I can only hope I keep growing. I’d love to be in the book of Guinness World Records,’ he added.
Guinness World Records recognised Kevin Bradford, a teenager from Florida in the U.S., as the tallest male under the age of 18 in April 2015.
He measured 7ft 1ins tall when he was 16 years old.
India's tallest man is Dharmendra Singh, 32, from Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, who stands at 8ft 1in. In an interview last year, he revealed he was struggling to find love due to his height.