Recommended Reading: Secret Keeping: Overcoming Hidden Habits
and Addictions John Howard Prin 
(New World Library, 2006)

Shame and denial about their behavior propels many overshoppers to hide this addiction—from other people and from themselves. While Secret Keeping does not address the compulsive buyer directly, its focus on the keeping of guilt-laden secrets—and on the compromises and consequences that such a life stance mandates—is very pertinent. According to Prin, secret keepers lead… Continue reading Recommended Reading: Secret Keeping: Overcoming Hidden Habits
and Addictions John Howard Prin 
(New World Library, 2006)

Research Reported in the New York Times

Three recent articles in the New York Times attracted our attention. “Money Doesn’t Talk,” by Shivani Vora, looks at the practice among women of disguising some of their purchases by paying cash, a practice that has grown in recent years even though more and more women are themselves wage earners. Why do they do it?… Continue reading Research Reported in the New York Times

Recommended Reading Green with Envy: Why Keeping Up With The Joneses is Keeping Us In Debt

Haven’t we been taught to believe that envy, the only vice warned against in both the Ten Commandments and the Seven Deadly Sins, is a seriously destructive emotion? There are exceptions. Shira Boss’s envy of her neighbors in the apartment next door was the productive seed that grew into this unusual look at an aspect… Continue reading Recommended Reading Green with Envy: Why Keeping Up With The Joneses is Keeping Us In Debt

Shopping: A National Pastime in Asia

Shopping for shopping’s sake has become a “national pastime” for many Asian countries, a global online survey done by AC Nielsen suggests. Of the top ten markets where people shop regularly for recreation, seven are in Asian countries: people in Singapore, Hong Kong, and Thailand rank the highest in the world. On average, they shop… Continue reading Shopping: A National Pastime in Asia

Financial Education in the Workplace

On August 16th, a persuasive online article appeared about the harmful effects that financial stress has in the workplace. Jeffrey Strain, who authors this website, cites research that shows greatly decreased efficiency and effectiveness in financially stressed workers. He argues that companies would do well to promote healthier lifestyles in their employees by offering financial… Continue reading Financial Education in the Workplace

Extreme Overshopping Leads To Legal Troubles

Lisa Walker, 42, of New York City, more commonly known as Antoinette Millard, charged nearly a million dollars of goods on her no-limit American Express card during a three-month period in 2004. The former investment banker, who quit her job and pretended to be a Saudi Princess, tried to buy her way into high society.… Continue reading Extreme Overshopping Leads To Legal Troubles

Recommended Reading: Give It Up! My Year of Learning to Live Better with Less By Mary Carlomagno (New York: Harper Collins, 2006)

Each month, for a year, Carlomagno chose to do without one of her favorite things: alcohol one month, shopping another, cell phones, dining out, elevators, multi-tasking, television, taxis, coffee, chocolate. Her discoveries and observations, which she shares in an easy, anecdotal style, confirm her book’s title: we can indeed live better by living with less.… Continue reading Recommended Reading: Give It Up! My Year of Learning to Live Better with Less By Mary Carlomagno (New York: Harper Collins, 2006)

Consumer Monster Mockumentary

Canadian filmmaker Jeremy Lutter has nearly finished shooting Not For$ale, a mockumentary about overconsumption. Styled after Michael Moore’s work, the film follows the picaresque journey of a Cookie Monsterish yellow puppet. At home in Canada, he meets a variety of people who teach him about the growing movement to scale back our consumption. His addiction… Continue reading Consumer Monster Mockumentary

Recommended Reading: The Soul of Money; Transforming your Relationship with Money and Life (Lynne Twist, Norton, 2003)

Lynne Twist’s The Soul of Money is a valuable resource for anyone looking to reevaluate his or her relationship with money. Through inspirational stories, Twist reveals how to let go of burden and guilt and replace them with purpose, transforming your ground of being from scarcity to sufficiency. A global fundraiser and activist, Twist uses… Continue reading Recommended Reading: The Soul of Money; Transforming your Relationship with Money and Life (Lynne Twist, Norton, 2003)

Money Saving Gift Tip

Make a scrapbook! Next time a friend has a birthday, don’t buy a lavish gift. Instead, have friends send in warm words and photos, and then compile them in a memory book—an extra special and wonderfully personal gift the receiver will forever cherish. (Now don’t go to the nearest scrapbook store and spend too much… Continue reading Money Saving Gift Tip