Oniomania Addiction
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How To Beat An Addiction To Oniomania
How To Beat AddictionDescription
According to research papers, Oniomania (from Greek onios = "for sale," mania = insanity) is a medical term for the compulsive desire to shop. Oniomania is the technical term for the compulsive desire to shop, more commonly referred to as compulsive shopping, compulsive buying, shopping addiction or shopaholism. Another common version of this syndrome is credit card addiction, also known as compulsive credit card use. All of these are considered to be either clinical addictions or impulse control disorders, depending on the clinical source: First described by Bleuler in 1915, and then Kraepelin in 1924, as oneomania from the Greek oneomai, to buy, included among other pathological and reactive impulses, compulsive buying went largely ignored for nearly sixty years.
Disorders
Psychiatrists often call oniomania a compulsive disorder or addiction, but it has only been accepted as a disorder by the Deutsche Gesellschaft Zwangserkrankungen (German organization for obsessive-compulsive disorders), for several years[2]. In the United States, impulsive-compulsive buying behavior may be diagnosed as an Impulse control disorder - Not Otherwise Specified in the DSM-IV-TR.[3] It may be under consideration for inclusion as a separate specific Impulse-Control Disorder in the next edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.
Only in the past twenty years has specific and persistent inquiry into the disorder occurred. Although the study of compulsive buying is still in its infancy compared with some of its psychological siblings-alcoholism, eating disorders or drug abuse-there is more and more evidence that it poses a serious and worsening problem, one with significant emotional, social, occupational, and financial consequences. As many as 8.9 percent of the American population may be full-fledged compulsive buyers. (Ridgway, et al., 2008), and the problem is fast becoming a global one.
The terms compulsive shopping, compulsive buying, and compulsive spending are often used interchangeably, but the behaviors they represent are in fact distinctly different (Nataraajan and Goff 1992). However, one may buy without shopping or certainly shop without buying. Most current researchers use the term compulsive buying and subscribe to an exceptionally specific definition proposed by McElroy and her colleagues (1994) as follows:
1. Compulsive buying is a maladaptive preoccupation with buying or shopping, or maladaptive buying or shopping impulses or behavior, as indicated by either: frequent preoccupation with buying or impulses to buy that is/are experienced as irresistible, intrusive, and/or senseless, or frequent buying items that are not needed or cannot be afforded or shopping for longer periods of time than intended.
2. The buying preoccupations, impulses, or behaviors cause marked distress, are time-consuming, significantly interfere with social or occupational functioning, or result in financial problems, and they do not occur exclusively during periods of hypomania or mania.
Symptoms
Similar to other compulsive behaviors, sufferers often experience the highs and lows associated with addiction. Victims often experience moods of satisfaction when they are in the process of purchasing, which seems to give their life meaning while letting them forget about their sorrows. Once leaving the environment where the purchasing occurred, the feeling of a personal reward has already gone. To compensate, the addicted person goes shopping again. Eventually a feeling of suppression will overcome the person. For example, cases have shown that the bought goods will be hidden or destroyed, because the person concerned feels ashamed of their addiction and tries to conceal it.
Causes
Personal
The addicted person gets into a vicious circle that consists of negative emotions like anger and stress, which lead to purchasing something. After the buying is over, the person is either regretful or depressed. In order to cope with the feelings, the addicted person resorts to another purchase.
Shopaholism often begins at an early age. Children who experience parental neglect often grow up with low self-esteem because throughout much of their childhood they experienced that they were not important as a person. As a result, they used toys to compensate for their feelings of loneliness. Adults that have depended on materials for emotional support when they were much younger are more likely to become addicted to shopping because of the ongoing sentiment of deprivation they endured as children. During adulthood, the purchase instead of the toy is substituted for affection. Shopaholics are unable to deal with their everyday problems, especially those that alter their self-esteem. Most of the issues in their lives are repressed by buying something.
This disorder is often linked to emotional deprivations in childhood, an inability to tolerate negative feelings, the need to fill an internal void, excitement seeking, excessive dependency, approval seeking, perfectionism, general impulsiveness and compulsiveness, and the need to gain control (DeSarbo and Edwards 1996, Faber et al. 1987, Benson, 2000). Compulsive buying seems to represent a search for self in people whose identity is neither firmly felt nor dependable. Most shopaholics try to counteract feelings of low self-esteem through the emotional lift and momentary euphoria provided by compulsive shopping. These shoppers, who also experience a higher than normal rate of associated disorders-depression, bipolar disorder (also known as manic depression), anxiety, substance abuse, eating disorders, and impulse-control disorders-may be using their symptom to self-medicate.
Systemic
Social conditions may also play an important role, especially in capitalist societies that are dominated by a consumerist economy. Ubiquitous marketing and advertising promotes a culture of consumerism, by encouraging the creation of artificial needs. Debt, such as facilitated by Credit cards, enable the casual spending beyond that of ones means. What differentiates oniomania from healthy shopping is this compulsive, destructive and chronic nature of the buying.
Consequences
The consequences of oniomania, which may persist long after a spree, can be devastating. They may include crushing consumer debt, ruined credit history, theft or defalcation of money, defaulted loans, and general financial trouble. The resulting stress can lead to physical health problems, marital problems, ruined relationships, and in some cases, suicide. Sufferers often come into conflict with the law.[citation needed]
The "smiled upon addiction," as Catalano and Sonnenberg have called it (1993), is smiled upon in two senses: it is at once a source of wry humor and at the same time a behavior much inflamed by our ever present marketing machinery. As a result, compulsive shopping may be an even greater source of guilt and shame than alcoholism or drug abuse.
Famous Sufferers
* Marie Antoinette[citation needed]
* Mary Todd Lincoln[citation needed]
* William Randolph Hearst[citation needed]
* Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis[citation needed]
* Imelda Marcos[citation needed]
* Princess Diana[citation needed]
* Victoria Beckham
* Sarah Jessica Parker
Further reading
* Benson, A. I Shop Therefore I Am: Compulsive Buying & the Search for Self, New York: Jason Aronson. 2000.
* Benson, A. To Buy or Not to Buy: Why We Overshop and How to Stop Boston: Trumpeter Books, 2008.
* Black, D.W. (2007). A review of compulsive buying disorder. World Psychiatry, 6, 1, pp. 14-18.
* Bleuler, E. Textbook of Psychiatry. New York: Macmillan, 1924.
* Catalano E. and Sonenberg, N. Consuming Passions: Help for Compulsive Shoppers. Oakland: New Harbinger Publications, 1993.
* DeSarbo WS and Edwards EA. "Typologies of Compulsive Buying Behavior: A Constrained Cluster-Wise Regression Approach." Journal of Consumer Psychology 1996; 5: 231-252, 1996.
* Elliott, R. "Addictive Consumption: Function and Fragmentation in Postmodernity." Journal of Consumer Policy, 17, 159-179, 1994.
* Faber, R. J., O’Guinn, T. C. and Krych, R. "Compulsive Consumption." Advances in Consumer Research, 14, 132-135, 1987.
* Kraepelin, E. Psychiatrie (8th ed.). Leipzig: Verlag von Johann Ambrosius Barth, 1915.
* McElroy, SL, Phillips KA, Keck PE, Jr. "Obsessive Compulsive Spectrum Disorder." Journal of Clinical Psychiatry; 55[10, suppl]: 33-51,1994
* Nataraajan, R. and Goff, B. "Manifestations of Compulsiveness in the Consumer-Marketplace Domain." Psychology and Marketing, 9 (1), 31-44,1992.
* Ridgway NM, Kukar-Kinney M, Monroe K. "An expanded conceptualization and a new measure of compulsive buying." Journal of Consumer Research, 35, #4, 350-406, Dec. 2008.
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External Resources and Links (1)
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