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Bracelets Reveal Secret Society Of Eating Disorders

Parents Should Recognize Warning Signs

UPDATED: 9:24 am EST February 15, 2005

Inconspicuous bracelets that are growing popular among teens are actually a secret signal for people with eating disorders and other destructive behaviors, reported WDIV-TV in Detriot.

They look like any bracelet you might buy at the mall. You probably wouldn't even notice if your child started wearing one, but these are not just any bracelet.

They are a sign of membership in a world of underground Web sites that connect people who share a dangerous passion, the television station reported.

Red bracelets represent anorexia, purple is for bulimia, and black and blue is for self injury, such as cutting and self-mutilation.

The Web sites don't discourage eating disorders. They encourage the behavior of people who want to keep starving themselves.

"They are encouraging people to be ill, and it's like a secret cult, a secret society. Word spreads around and people have a lingo now," said Lynne Grege, of the National Eating Disorders Association.

The lingo includes nicknames like Ana and Mia. The cute names may sound innocent, but they aren't. The nickname Ana is for anorexia and Mia is for bulimics.

Bracelets sell for about $15 on a Web site called bluedragonfly.org, and if you spot your child wearing one, you may have no idea what it means.

Parents said they thought the bracelets were just a teenage fad, but finding out what the fad was shocked them. They realized the teenagers were engaged in a practice that could be a matter of life and death.

Eve Rosenblum, 18, owns one of the secret bracelets. The Royal Oak, Mich., teenager has struggled with anorexia since she was 12 years old. She visits Web sites like bluedragonfly.org almost every day.

"They understand," Rosenblum said. "They don't think it's like horrible, and they don't think you should get better."

Bluedragonfly.org lists the first names and hometowns of girls who have ordered the secret bracelets. Visitors post messages encouraging each other's weight loss and even offer tips on how to purge more quietly.

The Web site features pictures of emaciated women. They call it "Thinspiration." They are pictures designed to inspire girls to lose more weight.

Girls that the television station spoke to said the anorexia bracelets are more than a secret sign of membership. They use them to motivate themselves not to eat.

"If you're going to eat something and you see the bracelet on your arm, you'll stop yourself and say I don't want that," said Rosenblum.

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