Be on the lookout for:
Constant thoughts of food
Counting calories
Weighing several times a day
Complaining about being fat or about specific body parts
Severely limiting food intake
Labeling certain foods as “good” or “bad”
Obsessive Exercising to the extreme to burn calories
Exercising as a punishment for eating a “bad” food
Vomiting after eating
Severe anxiety
Using laxatives, diet pills, enemas, diuretics, and or ipecac
Hiding foods
Exhibiting food rituals (such as cutting food into tiny pieces)
Frequent or often long trips to the bathroom, often with water running
Avoiding people, lying, keeping secrets, stealing, cutting or compulsively shopping
Perfectionism
Reading books or visiting websites on eating disorders and dieting
Considerably thinner in a relatively short period of time with no explainable reason, such as a medical cause
Swollen neck with enlarged salivary glands resulting from excessive vomiting.
Lying and secretive behavior
Absence of menstrual cycles (in younger ages, 3 cycles may be rather late in the game to intervene)
Maintaining a body weight of 15% below normal for age, height, and body type
Dressing to hide body shape
Avoiding meals
Dental Problems
Brittle Nails & Hair
* Studies have shown that anorexia and bulimia have a hereditary factor of 50-80%. It is important to address one’s “family history” of an eating disorder and be especially mindful of this factor.