THE RETAIL THERAPY TRAP
WHO|September 13, 2021
Are you addicted to emotional spending?
ZOE SNELL
THE RETAIL THERAPY TRAP

When was the last time you decided to buy something online because you’d had a bad day? Maybe you bought something you didn’t really want (and definitely didn’t need) as a way to cheer yourself up. Or perhaps you splashed out as a reward for earning that promotion you worked so hard for? There’s a term for this: emotional spending – and like any other addiction, it’s not healthy.

HOW DOES SHOPPING AFFECT OUR EMOTIONS?

Psychologist and founder of the TARA (Therapeutic Addiction Recovery Assistance) Clinic, Tara Hurster, explains that shopping helps to release feel-good hormones, leading us to crave the boost it gives us.

“We learn that shopping helps us to survive because it releases dopamine – therefore we do it again and again to experience short-term relief,” she says.

Unfortunately this reward system in our brain can leave us ripe for addiction. “Addiction is a behavioural pattern of engaging in actions that offer short-term relief and either helps us to move away from a feeling we don’t want, or move towards a feeling we do want,” Hurster explains.

DANGERS OF PICK-ME-UP PURCHASES

This story is from the September 13, 2021 edition of WHO.

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This story is from the September 13, 2021 edition of WHO.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.