Health

How Avis Cardella Overcame Shopping Addiction by Dealing With Her Grief

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Growing up, Avis Cardella loved to shop. “I was very into fashion magazines and liked to go shopping with my mom as a teenager,” Cardella, now 60, says. “Fashion was something that was important to me, and shopping was something I truly enjoyed.” She later parlayed her love of fashion into a career as a model, then a stylist, and later a fashion writer and editor.

When Cardella was in her late twenties and working in fashion media in New York City, her mother passed away very suddenly. “I started using shopping as a coping mechanism to avoid my grief,” she says. “Part of it was that shopping was something I used to do with my mom, and it reminded me of her. But ultimately it became this crutch in my life, and a way to avoid confronting my emotions.”

According to Terrence Shulman, a certified counselor and founder of the Shulman Center for Compulsive Theft, Spending, and Hoarding in Franklin, Michigan, shopping often “becomes compulsive when it becomes a way to deal with stress, or loss, and it can become very hard to control.”

First a Rush, Then a Crash

In her book Spent: Memoirs of a Shopping Addict, Cardella explains that between ages 28 and 42, she went shopping (and bought something) nearly every day. “I liked to buy clothing, accessories, skin-care stuff, and makeup,” she says. “Working in fashion was the perfect foil, because I used my career as an excuse.” This was in the 1990s and early 2000s, when the idea that there was such a thing as “too much” shopping wasn’t really taken seriously, especially among people in the fashion world, Cardella says. She was also living with her then-fiance, “who made quite a bit of money,” in a relatively large apartment in Manhattan, so she could afford to buy and house her purchases.

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