Teen Sex Bands...

Meghan - posted on 05/27/2010 ( 17 moms have responded )

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Jelly bracelets or gel bracelets are inexpensive, thin rubber bracelets available in a variety of colors, often worn linked together. Jelly bracelets first became popular in the 1980's when stars such as Madonna wore them. In the late 1990's jelly bracelets enjoyed a renewed popularity that continues today.

Though many teens wear jelly bracelets as inexpensive fashion accessories, some teens and pre-adolescents, including elementary school students, know jelly bracelets as sex bracelets. Sex bracelets are a coded form of communication among teens and young people where wearing different colored jelly bracelets indicate what sexual acts the teen is supposedly willing to perform. Some of the most common jelly bracelet color codes are:

In a variation of sex bracelets, there is a game called snap, in which if a boy can snap a jelly bracelet off a girl's wrist - not easy to do, since jelly bracelets are hard to break - the girl is supposed to do whatever the color of the jelly bracelet promises. This is not the first example of such secret codes or games; the tabs from soda cans and the rings from milk or juice cartons have also been used in similar ways.

In late 2003, the media picked up and distributed the teen sex bracelet story, prompting investigations into jelly bracelets. News sources and the Internet rumor investigation site Snopes.com found that many teens do know about the sex bracelet code, though in some regions teens had heard of it only through the media. According to the teens surveyed, some do follow through on hugging and kissing or french kissing as promised by the jelly bracelets they wear, but very few will have sex with someone simply because of a jelly bracelet. Others refuse to wear jelly bracelets because they are disgusted by the idea of the sex bracelets, and some teens wear jelly bracelets, but scoff at others who think they will have sex because of them.

Several schools across the nation have banned jelly bracelets. The reason they give for this is not the fear that students may be having sex because of them, but the concern that they are disruptive and expose children to sexuality prematurely, since some students as young as third grade are able to discuss jelly bracelets and the acts they represent. Most experts agree that this is too young for children to be fixated on sexuality, or to be sophisticated about sexual acts. Exposure to these ideas at a young age can desensitize children and cheapen later intimate relations.

If you are the parent of a teen or child who wears jelly bracelets, you need not automatically assume that he or she knows the sex bracelet code or would follow through with it, but take this opportunity to have an age-appropriate conversation about sex with your child. Express to him or her your views on when, where, and with whom you believe sex is appropriate. Though teens, and sometimes children, learn about sex from their peers, the education they get from their parents is a powerful and important part of having a healthy and accurate understanding of sexuality. Also, talk with your child about the jelly bracelets and what kinds of clothing and accessories you consider appropriate, and why.

Note: Jelly Bracelets should be distinguished from the wide, rubber LIVESTRONG wristbands used by Lance Armstrong's organization and other cancer research and awareness groups as fundraiser items. They are also color-coded, but the colors represent the kind of cancer for which they are raising money, i.e. pink for breast cancer. These have been counterfeited by for-profit companies as fad accessory items with various sayings, which detracts from the fund raising purpose of the wristbands, but they do not appear to have taken on alternative meanings.

Color Meanings:

* Yellow - indicates the wearer is willing to HUG
* Pink - indicates the wearer is willing to give a hickey
* Orange - indicates the wearer is willing to KISS
* Purple - indicates the wearer is willing to kiss a partner of either sex
* Red - indicates the wearer is willing to perform a LAP DANCE
* Green - indicates that ORAL SEX can be performed on a girl
* Clear - indicates a willingness to do "whatever the snapper wants"
* Blue - indicates ORAL SEX performed on a guy
* Black - indicates that the wearer will have regular "missionary" sex
* White - indicates the wearer will "FLASH" what they have
* Glittery Yellow - indicates HUGGING and KISSING is acceptable
* Glittery Pink - willing to "flash" (show) a body part
* Glittery Purple - wearer is willing to French (open mouth) kiss
* Glittery Blue - wearer is willing to perform anal sex
* Glittery Green - indicates that the wearer is willing to "69" (mutual oral sex)
* Glittery Clear - indicates that the wearer will let the snappee "feel up" or touch any body part they want

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17 Comments

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Jenniferhutcherson - posted on 06/01/2012

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i just asked my child about these bracelets she says that everyone wears them and guys snap them off just to annoy or iritate her and they never ask for any form of sex well she is about to go to 9th grade and i know she is a smart kid i trust her to not do anything stupid

Jennifer - posted on 06/05/2010

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LMAO I can't believe I just read that. This is obviously an American thing. I wear these and have never heard of this ever! Wierd lol!

Jaime - posted on 06/04/2010

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Well I haven't had a date in a long time.....gonna go get me some sex bracelets---and QUICK! LOL

April - posted on 06/04/2010

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heard about this on law and order svu..i graduated in 1999...i'm not sure they were around yet but i never noticed anyone wearing them.

Emma - posted on 06/01/2010

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I think this is a huge urban legend on the most part,
I no doubt think this game was played somewhere at some point, but i honestly think that most teens know about the colour code from the media.

Amber - posted on 05/28/2010

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I remember wearing the bracelets. But nobody I know was trading sex for them...or any sexual acts.
We all kissed each other hello and good bye anyway, so snapping it for that would be pointless for us. We were all non sexually affectionate to one another, no bracelet snapping required :)

Charlie - posted on 05/28/2010

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we had them in Australia , lots of people did the kissing ones but no one ever had sex as far as i know .

Krista - posted on 05/28/2010

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I think this is just one of those tales that makes the round every few years to scare the shit out of parents about how depraved and promiscuous kids are becoming, when in actuality, the incidences of this happening are extremely few and far between.

Lyndsay - posted on 05/28/2010

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I've been hearing this since I was a kid and wearing jelly bracelets. Then or now, they never had any sexual significance to me or any of my other friends who wore them. Maybe its a local thing.

Ashley - posted on 05/28/2010

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haha... I never even heard of this till I was watching an episode of Law and Order SVU... I graduated 2002 and I don't think any girl wore them. Sad to think that it could be in elementary and juniour highs... I personally find the braclets tacky and would never let my little girl wear em (if I had one)

Jocelyn - posted on 05/28/2010

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I wore tons of these bracelets in higschool (grad 05) and most of my friends wore them as well. I have heard of them being used as "sex" bracelets (n the states, no tales in canada) and no one that I knew ever used them for that reason. I wore over 30 bracelets (not all jelly bracelets lol) on a regular day so I would have been hooped if guys started snapping them expecting a blow job!!

Ashley - posted on 05/28/2010

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Wow...it must not have been popular here (c/o 2003) since I never noticed anyone wear them...mostly I just noticed the candy-raver bracelets. The only "jelly" items popular here were the shoes in elementary school, haha.

Amanda - posted on 05/28/2010

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lol i heard about that on degrassi, but i never knew anyone that actually wore them for that reason... mostly all the punk/slacker chicks at our school wore the colored ones and guys wore the black ones a lot... i had two full arms of them... and i definately didnt hand out sexual favors when they broke lol

Holly - posted on 05/27/2010

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I guess I led a pretty sheltered life because this is all new to me (and I just graduated high school in '04). Or maybe I just wasn't in the "cool" crowd so I wasn't privy to the info! :P



I do remember people wearing rubber colored braceslets (NOT like the Livestrong bracelets - I had a few of those), but I don't remember any sexual connotations attached to them... I'll have to ask my friends to see if they do...

Sunny - posted on 05/27/2010

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We had these at school i wore them and yes they got snapped, but no one ever did anything it was just for a bit of a laugh.

LaCi - posted on 05/27/2010

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At one of our local shops there were actual sex bracelets... like... that was their listed purpose. We never used the rubber ones as sex coding. They were just colorful fashion when everyone went through their fashion-raver phase.

Charlie - posted on 05/27/2010

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Oh yeah these are the ones everyone had when i was in school !!
Different coding here but the same game , i dont think many people actually followed through with it , i know a few teens did but generally they didnt .