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Is Shopping Addiction a real thing?

3K views 12 replies 12 participants last post by  MAJDEATH 
#1 ·
Yesterday my W left home around 2:30pm to run errands and go shopping. She returned around 9:30 pm, with 3 small bags of items from 1 of the multiple stores she went to, along with some bulk drinks. She communicated with me during the 7 hrs about some specific electronics she was searching for, but could not locate.

From my male mind, it seems like a long time to not come home with much. I am a planner, so I would research online which stores have my products, so I won't waste time, but I understand sometimes inventories are not updated regularly.

Perhaps it is the "big game hunter" phenomenon when she is out looking. And before anyone brings it up, I confirmed she was actually at the stores during the time period.
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#2 ·
Some people have an immaturity around money and shopping. They spend recklessly without considering a) do they need it b) is it a good price c) can it wait. I think this is just fecklessness as opposed to addiction.

But I have a friend who without doubt crosses the line from immaturity and fecklessness to 'addiction'. He will buy multiple items of the same thing and will not even open the box/packet. He hoards it in his attic then becomes overwhelmed and gives brand new things away. He will buy bizarre things, but justify his reasoning (an investment, might come in handy, so and so may like it...the stuff he buys once he is home is not a huge deal, but the buying process is hugely rewarding.).

An example of when I had noticed it had completely got out of control was when his house was FULL of art deco fixture and fittings, wallpaper, ornaments etc still boxed but starting to pile up high in the kitchen. He claimed it was for a house that maybe one day he would own (a fantasy 1920's house), his own house wasn't even on the market. He becomes obsessive over a theme, so for instance he will buy a DVD, enjoy the DVD, but then will have to buy every single movie that the actor has ever made within the space of a week. He is single so doesn't really go to any length to hide these things, but I guess if he had a partner he probably would.

So I think there is a huge difference between a feckless shopper and someone who has genuine compulsive behaviour. But it definitely does exist.
 
#3 ·
And before anyone brings it up, I confirmed she was actually at the stores during the time period.
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Yes, but was she alone? Ok, had to say that.

You are like me. You see the purchase as the end goal. She sees the process/path/journey of purchasing as the end goal as important and the purchase itself.

The time you spent researching online could have been as long as the time she spent in the store.

Plus you have to keep in mind they have to try on 10-20 things for every 1 thing actually purchased.
 
#4 ·
It is a real thing, totally. I used to be addicted to shopping, and it can be an expensive hobby. My bf doesn't see the need to spend hours at the mall looking in every store, he knows what he wants, and he'll go to the store to buy it. lol Opposites attract though, right? :)
 
#5 ·
First off, it's not your "male mind", it's your experience as a planner. You focus on the objective.

Do you know her objective?

My W spends 6-8 hours every weekend doing grocery shopping. Her end goal is not groceries. Her goal is to be away from the chaos she's created at home (visual clutter on all her work spaces), the sick dogs she fosters that demand attention and her marriage, which she thinks she should have never gotten into.

Not everybody needs "alone time"...but many do. Perhaps this is simply her alone time.
 
#7 ·
I think it can be an addiction. Nearly every thing can turn into an addiction. It''s pretty easy for time to fly by when you're out and about though so I wouldn't put too much thought into this if it doesn't happen very often.

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#8 ·
"Retail therapy" is the term our marriage counselor used. It can take the form of just browsing looking at what COULD be purchased, to hunting for bargains and then buying or the outright continual purchasing of stuff you really don't need. Each of those give the "buyer" varying degrees of satisfaction but the last one probably creates more issues (clutter, financial issues, etc...)
 
#10 ·
I use retail therapy quite a bit. But I do online shopping.
Why leave the house lol .
It definitely makes me feel better until I look At my Visa card. Lol.
I think to her part of the fun is the spending hours looking at stuff although to only come home with three small bags is pretty disappointing.



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#12 ·
Every addiction is "real" if it soothes the inner daemons of a troubled person in need of some relief such as: shopping, gambling, drinking, porn, etc. The addict is trying to escape from or soothe their hidden, repressed and usually DENIED inner pain(s) with any distraction or cover-up they can find such as SHOPPING FOR HOURS AND HOURS!
 
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