In a quiet moment between friends, a simple pin became a powerful symbol of hidden struggles. One sought to wear their truth boldly, a small badge proclaiming a battle often misunderstood and minimized. Yet, beneath the surface, unspoken pain and past wounds stirred, challenging the boundaries of empathy and recognition.
Caught between personal pain and the weight of another’s experience, the question lingered: who holds the right to claim a suffering so deeply personal? In that fragile intersection of understanding and silence, the story unfolded — not about pins or labels, but about the raw, human need to be seen and heard.

I bought a pin about having an ed and my friend got upset




As stated by Dr. Cynthia Bulik, Founding Director of the UNC Center of Excellence for Eating Disorders, eating disorders “are serious, complex mental illnesses that affect people of all ages, races, ethnicities, genders, and body weights.” This highlights that while the clinical presentation and severity can differ significantly across diagnoses (like ARFID versus Anorexia Nervosa), the underlying mechanism involves significant psychological distress and impairment, validating the OP’s feeling of suffering.
The situation illustrates a common dynamic known as ‘suffering Olympics’ or invalidation based on perceived hierarchy of illness severity. The friend’s reaction stemmed from a place of past trauma and a feeling that their struggle with anorexia, which often carries higher societal recognition and immediate physical danger perception, was being equated to something they perceived as less severe (‘picky eating’). The OP’s motivation was self-validation and representation, which is important, but they failed to consider the friend’s established sensitivity regarding eating disorder terminology.
The OP was not an asshole for having ARFID or wanting representation, but the execution lacked critical awareness of their friend’s past trauma. A better approach would have been to discuss the pin privately first, or to understand why the friend reacted defensively. Moving forward, when dealing with sensitive health topics, it is crucial to prioritize open, non-confrontational communication about personal needs rather than making purchases that directly challenge another person’s historical narrative of struggle.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.




























The individual felt justified in claiming the pin based on their lived experience with ARFID, believing their condition significantly impacted their life. This created a conflict with their friend, who felt their own history with anorexia was being minimized or invalidated by the friend’s purchase.
The core issue is whether the definition and severity of one person’s eating disorder automatically invalidates another’s claim to the same label or representation. Should public identification of a specific, less commonly understood disorder like ARFID be treated with the same sensitivity as more visible or historically recognized disorders like anorexia?







