Yes, someone very close to me, my sister, was diagnosed with Anorexia when she was a sophomore in high school. She had always been thin growing up so being slender was normal for her. She does have the Type A personality--and even then was a perfectionist and had to have things done her way--keeping in control of herself, of what she ate and put in her body, was extremely important to her. It was so much work for my sister to not eat, always exercise, etc.
My parents were quite critical when we were growing up--perfect straight A's were expected--and had high standards for us to keep. I think as a family, we were not very communicative, emotionally distant, and were 'head in the sand' when it came to her warning signs.
She had the typical symptoms: exercising at all hours of the day or night, wearing huge sweatshirts to hide how thin she was getting, eating tiny portions, always feeling cold, and weighing herself all the time...at her lowest, she weighed less than 90 pounds and couldn't stop shivering one night. That's when my dad took her to the hospital and the doctor told us that it was anorexia.
Thankfully, we lived near the Melrose Institute,
http://www.parknicollet.com/eatingdisorders/
where she was an inpatient for a month. We as a family had therapy with her too. She's not relapsed and has been at a healthy weight for many years now. And become a vegetarian, but not because of anorexia, she saw a documentary about a slaughterhouse once...anyway!
It's definitely affected my life since then. I don't like to get on the scale at all, reminds me too much of how she would methodically do that twice a day. I hate to see how the women in the modeling industry are so thin because of these ridiculous standards of beauty. I see girls who are rail thin, have no muscle in their legs and arms, just a skeleton almost, and I think of my sister and how horrible that time in our lives were, and I don't want any girl and her family to go through that.
