【視頻欣賞】
【聽力文本】
Are you one of the 17 million people who have never met an item you didn’t want to buy? You might be a shopaholic.
You Will Need
Self-evaluation
Honesty
Step 1: Evaluate why you shop(你為什么喜歡購物?)
Evaluate why you shop. Valid reasons—you need food or clothes. Bad reasons—you’re bored, stressed, depressed, or just got your paycheck.
Step 2: Explore your feelings(購物讓你感覺如何?)
Think about how shopping makes you feel. If buying something new gives you an incredible rush followed by horrible guilt—you might have a problem.
Step 3: Look around your home(你買的是需要的還是想要的?)
Look around your home—are most of the items in it things you needed, or stuff you wanted?
Step 4: Check out your closets(你的衣柜里面是否擺滿了帶著標(biāo)簽的衣服?)
Check out your closets. A shopaholic’s wardrobe is filled with clothes that still have their tags and shoes that have never seen the light of day.
If you’re on a first name basis with all the UPS guys, or can name every pitch person on the Shopping Network, you may have some spending issues.
Step 5: Examine your conscience(你是否曾經(jīng)向你的愛人或家人隱瞞你買的東西,或虛報它們的價格?)
Examine your conscience. Do you find yourself trying to justify purchases to yourself and others? Do you ever hide packages? Lie about how much you’ve spent? Have you ever snuck a new garment into the house in a dry cleaner bag to conceal you’d bought something new?
Step 6: Assess your willpower(你是不是有很強(qiáng)的購物欲?)
Assess your willpower. Shopaholics find themselves unable to resist buying things—even when they know their credit cards are maxed out.
Step 7: Get help(如果你都是,那么趕緊行動起來,找其他的事情來娛樂自己,不要沉迷于購物; )
Get help if you failed our little test. Cut up the credit cards, find fun ways to fill your time that don’t involve buying anything, join Debtors Anonymous, or get therapy to discover the deeper issues behind your compulsive spending.
Marie Antoinette, Mary Todd Lincoln, Jackie Kennedy, and Princess Diana are all believed to have been shopaholics.