November 29, 2024

"Hauls are the shopping equivalent of a dopamine-chasing overdose. That is the essence of the idea, which is less about any one thing..."

"... than about the sheer number of things. It’s the elevation of quantity over quality, muchness as an end in itself. Like social media itself, and smartphones, the haul creates its own subset of compulsive behavior.... That addiction isn’t officially a part of the DSM-5, the most recent version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, but it is recognized by the Cleveland Clinic and the journal World Psychiatry, among other official bodies.... Not surprisingly, an anti-haul movement has grown in response, at least in a limited way. The hashtag #antihaul has almost 3,000 posts on TikTok; #deinfluence, about 4,500...."

Writes Vanessa Friedman in "I Haul, Therefore I Am/It is the shopping phenomenon of our times, and now it’s an Amazon store" (NYT).

I watched a lot of that "anti-haul" material at the TikTok link, and it's the video equivalent of junky clutter. It's chirpily and lengthily informing us that unneeded stuff is unneeded. Some of the videos are shot in a store — here's trashy nonsense that we shouldn't buy — and some are in the TikToker's own home — here are various items she's throwing out. I feel sorry for the young women — they are all women — who need support freeing themselves from things they don't need. I think this is basically an emotional problem of the young. You have amorphous hunger and acquisitiveness. If you wait long enough, I predict it will go away. Until then, direct that energy into building something of value. You know what those things are. I don't need to list them.

12 comments:

rehajm said...

Support the Althouse blog by doing your Amazon shopping going in through the Althouse Amazon link.…

rhhardin said...

I just bought a 1 ft USB-A to USB-A cable at 25% off to replace a 3 foot one I had pressed into service. I am not throwing away the 3 foot one.

Oso Negro said...

It's the vestigial nesting instinct and acquisitive nature of women that causes them to behave so. Closely related - inability to enjoy life without creating illusions on social media.

Oso Negro said...

I would expect nothing less from you.

rehajm said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
rehajm said...

Thank you 3ft USB-A to USB-A cable for bringing me joy…

Tom Grey said...

You do to list a few. The failure of teachers, and parents (including me, at times) is that we don’t push the kids to build things. Not enough.
Even things like sand castles that don’t last. And of course live music doesn’t last.

Disparity of Cult said...

There's the restocking videos, in which food products are transfered from their original packaging to clear plastic containers. Never mind the expiration dates.

Ann Althouse said...

"You do to list a few [of the things of value a young person ought to put their energy into building]."

A family, a worthy career, a moral structure, a strong and heathy body.

Theodore Roosevelt's father told him: "You must make your body. It is hard drudgery to make one’s body, but I know you will do it."

Achilles said...

The problem that is detailed here is that there are many people who are given status and wealth who gain it for frivolous reasons.

I do not expect people who work for the government spending tax money frivolously to do any better at home with the money they are paid.

Also see girl bosses.

Achilles said...

This is in part due to the frivolous nature of much of what our society funds.

Much of the HR department doesn't do anything at work. People who work in education don't do the job society hired them to do.

These people do not value the things that build society and make lives better.

Tina Trent said...

Marriage, children, prudence, fortitude, satisfaction.

Pretty much what Jordan Peterson recommends. That he strayed off the path and suffered for it only made his convictions stronger.

Like most paths. And most suffering.