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Shopaholics Anonymous Yuma AZ

Consciousness means not allowing yourself to shop as a way of trying to satisfy emotional needs. It means becoming aware of what triggers your shopping urges and genuinely acknowledging their consequences: financial, familial, at work, and with friends.

Yuma Treatment Center
(928) 344-4310
1290 West 8th Place
Yuma, AZ
Crossroads Mission of Yuma
(928) 783-9362
944 South Arizona Avenue
Yuma, AZ
Anne Walton NCC
(602) 685-6000 
Phoenix, AZ
Neal, Kristine
(623) 455-9189
11024 N. 28th Drive Suite 290
Pheonix, AZ
Treese, Douglas
(480) 821-7857
1256 W Chandler Blvd Suite 13
Chandler, AZ
Lois Faust Fazio
(928) 344-9894
661 East 32nd Street
Yuma, AZ
Behavioral Health Services
(928) 341-9199
106 East 1st Street
Yuma, AZ
Fort Yuma Alcohol and Drug Abuse
(760) 572-0232
1888 San Pasqual School Road
Winterhaven, CA
Professional Psychology Associates P.C
(602) 852-0911
4222 East Camelback Road
Phoenix, AZ
Kathryn Forsyth, NCC
(480) 838-4300 
Mesa, AZ
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What's an Overshopper to Do?

What’s An Overshopper To Do?

Dr. April Benson - 11/23/2009 5:28:00 PM

Consciousness is the watchword for problem shoppers, particularly as the holiday season approaches, and most particularly amidst all the over-optimistic talk of economic recovery. Consciousness means not allowing yourself to shop as a way of trying to satisfy emotional needs. It means becoming aware of what triggers your shopping urges and genuinely acknowledging their consequences: financial, familial, at work, and with friends. And it means distinguishing your wants from your needs, as well as recognizing that many of those wants have been foisted on you by a massive and highly sophisticated marketing machine, rarely with your best interests at heart.

Since retailers make much of their year’s profit over the holidays, expect to be bombarded with highly stimulating ads these next months. Given the deeply sluggish economy, sales will be tantalizing. What’s an overshopper to do? Keep it real. Make a plan. Decide on a reasonable amount you can spend, and then decide just how you’ll slice that pie. When you shop, keep in mind the repeated result of studies: “shared experiences . . . offer greater value than material buys. Pleasant memories don’t fade in the wash or go out of fashion” (Lee Eisenberg, http://www.parade.com/news/2009/10/25-why-shopping-is-good-again.html ).

And whatever you buy, be the driver; don’t be driven! Carry a card with these six questions and, before any purchase, answer them : 1. Why am I here? 2. How do I feel? 3. Do I need this? 4. What if I wait? 5. How will I pay for it? 6. Where will I put it? You’ll find a tear-out one in the back of my book, To Buy or Not to Buy: Why We Overshop and How to Stop. ( http://www.stoppingovershopping.com/to_buy_not_to_buy.htm ) Do this honestly—and every time—and you’re on the road to shopping sanity. Above all, don’t fall prey to the myth of product transformation. Though marketers have taught us to think otherwise, t...

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