July 8, 2007 (Press Release) --
You know, by promoting young women like Brazilian model Ana Carolina Reston - who died in November 2005 - from complications due to anorexia...the Fashion industry is leading millions of ordinary young girls to starve themselves to death.
It’s a silent epidemic according to Build Your Body for Life, Sex and Love, ($ 20.99 paperback, Authorhouse, 1663 Liberty, Suite 200 Bloomington, IN 47403) a 396-page, fully pictured new book by Silvan Teodoro of Stockholm, Sweden.
The average young women themselves - usually teenagers - are unaware they are about to develop disturbing, borderline, compulsive behaviors disorders.
“Worldwide, there are over 500 million young women suffering from mild to severe, destructive symptoms of poor self-image,” Silvan adds that nearly 35-40 percent of these young women are trying to mimic the eating habits and lifestyle of catwalk models and are suffering effects that put their lives at risk.
“What people don’t realize is that half of these women want to compensate for their poor self-image by engrossing in camouflaged contemptible attitudes about their body image. And to ‘measure up’ to the Fashion Industry standards, they punish themselves with life threatening rituals.”
Obsessive preoccupation with their diet, excessive exercising, and steroid use, are just a few red-flag signs. Next is sadistic experimentation with extreme fashion statements such as tattooing to dangerous forms of physical mutilation. All this is an indicator the young woman is in deep trouble.”
“Young women of all backgrounds are spending millions trying to live up to Fashion Industry Standards and suffer every negative and often destructive side effect described in the book. Sometimes, they show permanent and irreversible emotional or psychologically scars.”
“One in four parents of young teenage women fails to recognize the dangerous warning signs. They risk of having their child growing up influenced by the unhealthy ‘role models’ the Fashion Industry exert on their child!"
”
“Besides adversely affecting their diet, and eating habits,” adds Silvan Teodoro, “the Fashion Industry conspire to keep the young women ignorant of the risk they by having adapt to their unhealthy ideal of beauty and slender.”
And if they fail to act before is too late, many parents of growing teenage girls risk seeing their children admitted to intensive care.
It’s a silent epidemic according to Build Your Body for Life, Sex and Love, ($ 20.99 paperback, Authorhouse, 1663 Liberty, Suite 200 Bloomington, IN 47403) a 396-page, fully pictured new book by Silvan Teodoro of Stockholm, Sweden.
The average young women themselves - usually teenagers - are unaware they are about to develop disturbing, borderline, compulsive behaviors disorders.
“Worldwide, there are over 500 million young women suffering from mild to severe, destructive symptoms of poor self-image,” Silvan adds that nearly 35-40 percent of these young women are trying to mimic the eating habits and lifestyle of catwalk models and are suffering effects that put their lives at risk.
“What people don’t realize is that half of these women want to compensate for their poor self-image by engrossing in camouflaged contemptible attitudes about their body image. And to ‘measure up’ to the Fashion Industry standards, they punish themselves with life threatening rituals.”
Obsessive preoccupation with their diet, excessive exercising, and steroid use, are just a few red-flag signs. Next is sadistic experimentation with extreme fashion statements such as tattooing to dangerous forms of physical mutilation. All this is an indicator the young woman is in deep trouble.”
“Young women of all backgrounds are spending millions trying to live up to Fashion Industry Standards and suffer every negative and often destructive side effect described in the book. Sometimes, they show permanent and irreversible emotional or psychologically scars.”
“One in four parents of young teenage women fails to recognize the dangerous warning signs. They risk of having their child growing up influenced by the unhealthy ‘role models’ the Fashion Industry exert on their child!"
”
“Besides adversely affecting their diet, and eating habits,” adds Silvan Teodoro, “the Fashion Industry conspire to keep the young women ignorant of the risk they by having adapt to their unhealthy ideal of beauty and slender.”
And if they fail to act before is too late, many parents of growing teenage girls risk seeing their children admitted to intensive care.

The Fashion Industry Refusal To Ban Painfully-Thin Models From Upcoming Fall Season's Catwalk Encourage More Young Girls To Die Prematurely!
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