Sunday Mirror

BEAUTY QUEEN’S HEARTFELT PLEA Instagram made me self-harm at age 13

- BY NICOLA SMALL

MISS England Alisha Cowie says sick images on Instagram drove her to self-harming and thoughts of suicide.

The beauty queen backs Health Secretary Matt Hancock’s crackdown on graphic social media content as she pours out the story of her hellish childhood today.

Relentless­ly bullied at school, Alisha, now 19, became anorexic and weighed just six stone at 13.

But when she desperatel­y looked for help online she was lured towards internet images “glamorisin­g” selfharmin­g that poisoned her mind.

And it was only the shocking death of her best pal that pulled her back from the brink.

Now Alisha is speaking out for the first time about her ordeal to try to help other youngsters from falling victim to the dark side of the internet.

“For young girls like I was, going on social media looking for help for something like anorexia can be so destructiv­e,” she says. “I believe Instagram now has controls so if there is a graphic image a warning sign will pop up. But you can still click on it.

“These images need to be completely blocked. There’s absolutely no reason for them to be there. They don’t help anyone. They just ruin lives.

“Within a week of coming across self-harming images, I started doing it too. It’s crazy what children are being exposed to on Instagram.”

Alisha’s call comes in a week when Mr Hancock warned social media firms could be banned if they fail to remove harmful content.

TORMENT

He spoke as it emerged 14-year-old Molly Russell took her own life in 2017 after viewing content about suicide online. Her dad Ian said Instagram had “helped kill my daughter”.

Alisha knows only too well how easy it would have been for a vulnerable girl like Molly with mental health issues to be influenced by what was on the screen in front of her.

“Back then I didn’t know I was ill,” she says. “So when you see these sorts of things on Instagram you don’t realise they are wrong – and it can start you on this downward spiral.”

Alisha’s own torment began at the tender age of five. “My dad told me I came home from nursery and refused to eat because everyone there had been calling me fat,” she says.

“The first memory I have is of being about nine in Year 6 and being called fat all the time. Because of my last name they used to call me “cow”.

“At first I didn’t let it bother me as I knew I wasn’t fat, but as you get older it gets harder to like yourself.”

She started watching her diet at 11, and it soon became an obsession. “I was constantly counting calories and weighing food. By 13, I was restrictin­g myself to 300 calories a day. All I’d eat was toast and an apple.

“I tried to hide what I was doing from mum. I’d either put my dinner in the bin or tell her I wasn’t hungry as I’d had lots to eat at school. If I craved food like chocolate I’d chew it then spit it out. I’d do at least 100 squats a night and run up the stairs until I was dizzy.” Alisha’s worried mum Amy May, 38, took her to a doctor. She was referred for counsellin­g – but it didn’t help.

Back at school the bullying only got worse. “I’d been bullied because I was fat, then bullied because I was thin. I was made to feel like a freak of nature,” says Alisha. “I’d walk down the street and other kids would throw things at me, stones, anything they could pick up.”

But the physical damage of being hit by a stone was harmless compared to the mental damage social media would cause her.

“I remember I’d been searching for healthy eating posts – nothing sinister. But then Instagram started suggesting posts about anorexia to me,” says Alisha, of Spennymoor, Co Durham.

“I clicked on a before and after picture of someone who had lost a lot of weight. The person had used the hashtag #Ana so I searched for other posts with the same hashtag.

“That’s when I started seeing all these graphic images. People would post pictures of themselves like skin and bones and say what they’d eaten and what exercise they had done.

“It was like a competitio­n. Everyone was trying to lose more weight than everyone else. Then I started to see self- harming images too. People posted pictures after doing it, showing the cuts and all the blood.

“The posts would use really poetic language and it was all made to seem really beautiful. It was like self- harming and anorexia were being glamorised. I was only 13, I didn’t know anything about self-harm or suicide. But then I was bombarded with all this stuff on Instagram and it made me feel like I had to do it too.

“I’d cut myself on my arms and legs, mainly my legs so no one could see it.” Thoughts of taking her own life also flitted dangerousl­y across her mind.

INSEPARABL­E

Then just before Alisha turned 14, new girl Sarah Clerkson started at her school – and the pair quickly became inseparabl­e best friends. But only eight months later Sarah – living with foster parents – was found hanged at a house party. An inquest recorded an open verdict as there was no evidence she intended to take her own life.

These images just need to be blocked. They don’t help anyone. They just ruin lives BEAUTY QUEEN ALISHA ON DANGERS OF SOCIAL MEDIA

 ??  ?? Bullied for being ‘fat’Anorexic on 300cal diet
Bullied for being ‘fat’Anorexic on 300cal diet
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? VICTIM Molly ‘killed by Instagram’ – dad
VICTIM Molly ‘killed by Instagram’ – dad

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