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How to Curb a Shopaholic Problem

Most Americans say they carry credit card balances some of the time. Among those households with unpaid balances, the current average balance is about $7,300, according to LendingTree.

Although people racked up some of those dollars to cover necessary expenses during tough times, growing credit card debt is a big sign of overspending, also known as shopaholism. Reports suggest that between 5 percent and 9 percent of Americans have a shopping problem.

The reasons vary. You might overspend if you’re stuck in a boring job and need a little jolt of excitement. Some people buy things to improve their self-image; owning expensive things makes them feel more important. Scrolling through social media exposes you to a stream of ads or photos of your friends on expensive vacations.

Shopping selectively may give you a sense of accomplishment. You might buy yourself luxuries to ward off the void of loss. In general, if you shop when you’re disappointed, angry, or scared, you will probably buy something you don’t need.

What Is Overspending?

In Bought Out and Spent: Recovery from Compulsive Shopping and Spending, Terrence Daryl Shulman, a lawyer and social worker, outlines the various reasons people overspend and provides exercises to help them gain insight and self-control.

“Shopping therapy” is a ritual among some girlfriends. To judge if you are a problem shopper, ask yourself if you often crave a shopping trip when you’re feeling anxious, and then become relaxed and a little “high” after your purchases. That’s okay, now and then, especially if your pleasure came from your friendships, more than the objects.

But maybe next time, you could all go for a walk instead.

Problem shoppers can fall into a pattern similar to building up tolerance to a drug. Over time, they need to buy more often or more lavishly to experience the relief and pleasure they crave. Simply put, they become harder to satisfy and increasingly unhappy in between buying sprees.

How to Tell If You Have a Problem

How to Stop Overspending

Spending less can be freeing in profound ways. If people bought less, “We’d have less debt, less clutter, less to take care of. We’d need smaller houses, less storage,” notes Leo Babauta, blogger and author of The Power of Less: The Fine Art of Limiting Yourself to the Essential…in Business and in Life.

How do you get there?

  • The old advice to use cash, rather than credit cards, still applies. Cut up your cards.
  • When you get paid, put aside money for bills, taxes if you are self-employed, and savings and investments. Get the rest in cash and limit your ATM trips. You may spend less if you take large denomination bills.
  • Have a retirement savings plan so you know how much you need to save, and use any options for automatic deposits. Use a savings account with no early withdrawals (or a retirement account with stiff penalties for withdrawing early).
  • Track your spending on a smartphone app, computer-based spreadsheet, or simple paper list. For extras—beyond ordinary bills—rank each purchase by how necessary it was, Benson suggests.
  • Block websites like Amazon and eBay, if you tend to browse.
  • Remove credit card or checking account information from your smartphone. If you have to enter in your details each time, you might just skip it.
  • Don’t go to stores where you tend to overspend, even if they offer discounts.
  • When you’re at a store and see something you want to buy, ask a store clerk to hold it for 20 minutes, then go off to the bathroom or another distraction. Twenty minutes later, you’ll have a better idea of whether the purchase is necessary or wise. Or set a rule that you’ll buy an optional item only if you still want it a month later.
  • Set limits on your possessions; for example, buy only clothes that you can fit into one closet. The goal isn’t to feel restricted, but to help you pause before accumulating more, and give away things you don’t use, Babauta says.
  • Before you get to a store (or go online), you can help yourself with this simple reflection. Examine your priorities and goals. Are you shopping to run away from problems? Which problems? What can you do now to address one of those problems, even if it’s a baby step?

Employ the meditation technique of labeling your emotions. When you have an impulse to buy—a desire to match other people or solve problems or create a feeling of pleasure or progress through purchases—Babauta suggests you stop and look at it, saying, “Ah, I have the urge to buy.”

Babauta writes: “Recognize that the impulse isn’t a command, just a feeling that arises like any other, just temporarily, like a passing cloud. Watch it, feel it, stay with it, but know that it will pass.”

If dissatisfaction and restlessness build up, breathe. Concentrate on where you are, and what’s good about your present moment. Maybe it’s a Saturday morning. You could go to the mall. Or you could tell yourself, “I’m already good enough. There doesn’t need to be more.”

You might spend some time cooking and eating breakfast slowly. Invite your husband or kids to slow down and talk. Show your willingness to listen deeply, asking questions and focusing on what they say, rather than running away to do errands and then rewarding yourself with a new handbag.

For big purchases like a vacation, plan early. You may get the most pleasure from anticipation, so maximize that time. Early planning will also help you get the best deals and understand which experiences you’ll most enjoy—and can afford.

Change your routine. You might just be bored. Wake up a half hour earlier and do something pleasurable.

  • Consider using your kids’ old crayons and markers and coloring yourself
  • Knit
  • Ride a bike
  • Do yoga or push-ups at home, maybe with an online video
  • Read books from the library
  • Write a letter, journal entry, or poem
  • Walk in the park

Conclusion

Resisting desires as they come up is an ongoing practice. As Babauta puts it, “You let go of one, turn to the present moment, appreciate it, find satisfaction in what there already is … and then a little while later, another desire arises. It comes from advertising, websites, magazines, seeing what other people are doing on social media, watching the news, talking to people, walking past a cool store, seeing a new bag that your friend just bought.”

Notice that the material in the shirt you are wearing is soft and comfortable. Eat an apple. Move on.

A version of this story appears at Your Care Everywhere.

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