by gg3 » Sun 03 Dec 2006, 05:17:25
If you define orgasm as a cathartic pleasure reflex, then yes, mindless consumer behavior appears to fit. Though, the behavior that shortly precedes orgasm appears to be a more accurate fit.
Look at pictures of riots in shopping malls, where people storm the gates of a store and practically trample each other to get their coveted things.
Harder, harder!, faster, faster!, more, more!, now, now!
But unlike the frantic writhing that occurs in the lead-up to a real orgasm, the frantic writhing at the shopping mall offers no real release from the tension. The consumers get home, unwrap their purchases, and discover.... that life goes on normally as before.
By analogy it's like sex with all the writhing and squirming but interrupted by a distraction that results ultimately in going but not coming. The pent-up libido accumulates for the next round. And whether in bed or at the mall, the result is more writhing and thrashing the next time.
This, I suspect, is at least partially responsible for the intensity that some people bring to shopping as a form of recreation.
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As for doing without buying: good exercise, good practice. I would suggest that for most people, a simple conscientious inventory of purchasing patterns and the intention to lower overall expenditures is at least achievable.
Opting out of the Winter Holiday Shopping Season is a good idea in any case. It makes no sense to buy things for people that they can afford to buy for themselves if they really want them; very often you "guess wrong" anyway and "whatever it is" gets returned and exchanged for something else.
The point of making a "generous gesture" is lost altogether in an age when advertisers tout the virtues of giving that Special Someone a new car: after all, who realistically can afford to give a $30,000 present, and compared to that scale of excess, anything else seems almost a sign of inadequacy. Better to chuck the whole concept and push the Reboot button.
The simple fact of taking time off from the rat race to spend with family and friends counts for more than consumer excess.
Any amount of time you can disengage yourself and those close to you from the rat race, the stress mess, the frantic pursuit of money and the things it buys, is time you are stealing from the robber barons and giving back to your grandchildren's future. Think of yourself as taking on the role of a Robinhood of Time. Best of all, it's not illegal. Yet.