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Jelly Sex Bracelets

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Anonymous

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CHICAGO, Illinois (AP) -- Orange, red, blue, black -- they're just thin, rubbery bracelets that come in a rainbow of colors, but they're causing quite a stir.

First made popular by Madonna and other pop stars in the 1980s, "jelly bracelets" are making a comeback with teens and some grade-school kids. But this time, there's a twist: In some parts of the country, they're calling them "sex bracelets" -- with various colors supposedly representing promises to perform sex acts in a game called "Snap."

As the story goes, break someone's orange bracelet (or purple, in some cases) and you get a kiss. Red, a lap dance. Blue, oral sex. Black, intercourse. And so on.

"They've been selling like crazy," says Andy Ball, a clerk at The Alley, an edgy clothing and accessories store in Chicago. He says he learned about their secret meaning from a group of teens who came into the store about a month ago.

Still, it's unclear whether young people are really following through with the sex acts. And some experts think most youth are hearing about the game from recent news reports, not each other.

Snopes.com, a Web site dedicated to exposing urban legends, has deemed the validity of sex bracelets "undetermined."

"Every now and then, I get a note from kids who say it is true," says Barbara Mikkelson, Snopes.com's co-founder. "But I get a heck of a lot of e-mails from kids who are outraged that adults think they would do this. To them, [the bracelets] are just a fashion statement."

Regardless, a few schools in such states as Illinois, Ohio and Florida have banned the bracelets.

"It's about the disruption of the school day," says Joann Hipsher, principal at one of the schools -- Malabar Middle School in Mansfield, Ohio. She says students were spending too much time "worrying about who had them, who had been snapping them."

Elizabeth Cooke, a fourth-grade teacher in Baltimore County, says she was surprised when a fifth-grader told her the bracelets had "secret meanings -- one being, if someone broke one it meant you have to have sex."

"He told me that he wasn't sure if he wanted to wear them anymore because they were stupid," says Cooke, whose school allows the bracelets as a fashion item, if they cause no distractions.

"In my opinion," she adds, "he shouldn't even be thinking about sex at all."

But in other parts of the country, teens say no one they know calls them "sex bracelets."

"It's kind of outrageous and ridiculous. I think the media is making an issue out of nothing," says Kelly Egarian, a 17-year-old from Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, who serves as a consultant for Teenage Research Unlimited, a suburban Chicago firm that tracks youth trends.

In fact, when the staff at Teenage Research asked its 300-some young consultants nationwide about sex bracelets, they found nothing concrete.

"They knew of a friend who had a friend who had a friend who knew about this," says Michael Wood, the company's vice president. "But no one could point a finger to anyone who was actually doing this."

Other experts who deal with teens and children also believe the so-called trend has been blown out of proportion.

A few doctors who treat children and teens in such states as Connecticut, Minnesota and California had never heard of "sex bracelets."

Meanwhile, Dr. Cynthia Mears, an adolescent medicine specialist at Children's Memorial Hospital in Chicago, says some of her young patients do call the bracelets by that name. But she says the most they might give another teen who broke one would be a hug or a kiss -- not sex.

"When I ask, 'Do you go there?' they just kind of look at me and go 'Nahhh,"' Mears says, noting that her young patients are generally willing to talk about their sexual activity because the conversations are confidential.

Mears is concerned that younger children might hear the sex bracelets lingo and "think it's cool." But regardless of the age, she and other experts say parents shouldn't freak out.

Instead, Dr. Lynn Ponton says the bracelets give parents a chance to talk about sex with their children -- something she says they often avoid or handle awkwardly.

"It offers an opportunity to say 'Hey, what's the bracelet mean? What are other kids wearing? What do you think about that?"' says Ponton, a professor of psychiatry at the University of California at San Francisco and author of the book "The Sex Lives of Teenagers."

But Egarian -- the New Jersey teen -- advises parents to tread carefully.

"If my parents questioned me too much about the bracelets," she says, "I'd probably wear them more."

http://www.cnn.com/2003/EDUCATION/12/10/sex.bracelet.ap/index.html
 
Hasn't this one already been examined on Snopes?

If I knew how to do a link I would! :)
 
Rent a copy of 'Cruising' and you'll get some idea of the history of this particular myth (BTW: the speach in the movie was actualy true at the time acording to one critic I read and...the people in the clubs ain't acting :eek!!!!: )

Nasty little movie but it's one of Pachino's finest performances.
 
Red: lap dance

So that is what Madonna's red 'Kabbalah' bracelet really means.:D

(also Britney and whoever else is wearing them these days)
 
Holds out wrist showing BLACK!Bracelet...... :rolleyes:
Awww well...someone had to do it.:D
 
So all this time I've been going round with a t-shirt on saying "take me here, take me now", and I only needed a few little bangles. *sigh*

What time does Claire's accessories open?
 
im wondering what my silver bracelet says about me.... OAPs?....or Warewolf love?
 
I do remember a couple of my friends doing something a lot like that actually, having bracelets redeemable against sexual favours. They were kind of on-off going out at the time, though, so it was a bit less orgiastic than the story above.
 
BlackRiverFalls said:
Couldn't they just have imported the handkerchief colour code, it's much more sensible?

Hankerchiefs and bandanas are strictly forbidden in schools here. :rolleyes:
 
Well, my immediate reaction was that they had the definitions of yellow and red wrong. (Let's not discuss brown.)

Does it matter which wrist you wear the bangle on?
 
i vaguely remember them being called shag bands more rhan five years ago.
 
My daughter was wearing one of these bracelets the other day and she informed me that it was called a "fuck bracelet" apparently my wife told her that this was what they were called when my wife was a teen.
 
Whta a great marketing ploy! Cheap plastic bracelets that ppl are meant to break, so then they have to buy more! :rolleyes:
 
i asked my 15 year old neice about her black rubber bracelets the other day and she casually told me they were her "shag bracelets". Nice!!!
 
Sam Stringer said:
i asked my 15 year old neice about her black rubber bracelets the other day and she casually told me they were her "shag bracelets". Nice!!!

Well that's kids for you: they like to say shocking things.)
 
N.B. school bans 'sex bracelets'

Last Updated Fri, 21 May 2004 16:45:05

MONCTON - Two New Brunswick schools that are fighting a fashion fad said to signal sexual availability could be creating a bigger problem simply by their strong reaction to it, a pop culture expert says.

School officials in the Moncton area are worried about students wearing the cheap, jelly bracelets – colourful, rubbery bangles – which some adults think carry connotations of wild teen sex.

Jennifer Brayton, a sociology professor at Ryerson University in Toronto, says the "sex bracelets" story may be more urban legend than reality, and the school reaction just lends it more credence.

"The schools banning them is giving it even more legitimacy. Because it's coming from a position of authority, it gives it more validity than maybe kids would necessarily give it if the schools weren't up in arms about it," said Brayton.

When elementary students began wearing them to Soleil Levant school in Richibucto, N.B., the school's administration sent letters home to parents explaining their meaning.

In Moncton, the principal of Beaverbrook Elementary School has outright banned the bracelets from classrooms.

Pop stars wearing the bracelets

The bracelets can be bought at almost any dollar store or teen boutique. Madonna first made them popular in the 1980s. These days they've made a comeback after being spotted on the wrists of pop icons Avril Lavigne and Pink.

The controversy over the colourful baubles began last year, when Time magazine reported that the bracelets were undercover sex toys.

A three-paragraph Time story quoted one source, a 15-year-old girl from Los Angeles, who claimed the bracelets carried a colour-coded secret.

The different colors a person displays supposedly represent different sexual acts the wearer has done, or is willing to do.

If a boy snapped a bracelet off a girl's wrist, depending on the bracelet's colour, she owed him a sexual favour.

A number of American newspapers and television stations picked up on the Time story, and soon school principals were banning the bracelets in several states.

Brayton says the perception of kids being sexualized at such a young age is ultimately the heart of the problem. "Regardless of what kids are actually doing with the bracelets, it's the perception of what's being done with them that's obviously concerning the parents," she said.

Sandra Byers, who teaches sexual behaviour at the University of New Brunswick, says there's only one way for parents to avoid unpleasant shocks about their child's sexual conduct – by discussing sexual issues openly at home.

http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/05/21/canada/bracelets_nb040521
 
we called these shag bands or fuck bands.
we didn't have the colour code, and NOBODY took it seriously. it was considered acceptable to mend an accidentally broken bracelet by melting the two ends together with a lighter.
 
Ah, these did the rounds at my primary school...must have been about 11 years ago. Although we called them shag bands, if you broke one you just had to snog the person...we were so innocent :D
 
Should parents be worried about so-called 'shag bands'?
Tom Meltzer on the true meaning of the jelly bracelet craze
The Guardian, Tuesday 15 September 2009

It began, like so many pointless crazes, in the 1980s. And like just about any pointless craze you'd care to mention, it involves Madonna. The jelly bracelet – an innocuous loop of soft bright plastic – turned up on the wrist of the young diva in an early 80s music video, and the next day on the wrists of teenagers everywhere. At that point it was little more than a fashion statement, fashionably stating, "I am wearing a little plastic bracelet." :D Today, at least in the minds of a few paranoid parents, it is synonymous with juvenile sex games. [Like games? Why not buy The Beatles Rock Band? - Ed]

Last week in Lafayette, Colorado, the principal of Angevine Middle School urged parents to prevent their children wearing them. At the same time in Totley, Sheffield, a mother was outraged to discover her eight-year-old daughter sporting what she described as "a shag band". :shock: The Sheffield Telegraph gave over its front page to news that "children across the country without full understanding of the bands' true sexual meaning are buying them, wearing them, and talking about them".

So what exactly is the "true sexual meaning" of a band of brightly coloured plastic? And if children aren't familiar with it, what exactly is the problem? 8)

The answers vary from place to place. In some schools they apparently symbolise sexual experience: one website suggests a yellow band if you've kissed someone, black if you've "gone all the way". In others, the meanings are similar but they denote favours you would be willing to perform. In others, probably most, they mean nothing at all. So perhaps the parents' outrage is a little misplaced. Children aren't being sexualised by little loops of plastic. If anything, it's the other way around. The true meaning of coloured plastic bands is far more serious: people pay far too much attention to Madonna. :D

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2009/sep/1 ... xual-craze
 
I think this is an example of cross-pollination stemming from the use of coloured handkerchiefs in the gay community to indicate your sexual preference(s) - someone seems to have projected their own interpretations onto what is in all probability an entirely innocent fad.
 
rynner looks at wrist:
"Ah, what does that mean..?"

"Oh, it means I'm wearing a watch!" 8)
 
I've worn these from time to time for years and until last had never heard of them being called anything other than 'little plastic bracelets.' My boyfriend wears one that a friend gave to him and informed me that they're called "fuck bracelets" and if you snap someone's band it means you want to have sex with them.
I'd never heard of it before then, though. In fact, until I just read the above post, I'd assumed he was bullshitting me :D
 
So you mean if I wear a little plastic bracelet I'll get laid? If only I'd known it would be so simple.

:D
 
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