Black Friday sales slapped me in the face and I didn’t even leave my home office. Social media feeds, newspaper advertisements, television ads – an onslaught of tempting sales and alluring, discounted goods.
And Black Friday was just the start of the Christmas shopping period.
After a strange year, it seems easy to justify a few splurges. A new pair of shoes for making it through the year. An indulgent treat to kick-start holiday season. A purchase to make myself feel better about the ‘year that was’. The impulse takes over and they’ve debited my card before I’ve had time to think.
Roy Morgan research company estimated that Australian consumers would spend more than $52 billion over last year’s Christmas period. And I’ve been wondering, how much of this ‘stuff’ really added value to our lives? How much of this ‘stuff’ ended up in garbage bins or in a dark cupboard?
I’ll be the first to admit, I’m a sucker for in-store Christmas carols and sparkly decorations. There’s no doubt they bring me into a happier ‘buying space’. Standing in a supermarket, recently, I found myself aware of Michael Bublé’s smooth, dulcet tones playing in the background. As I admired the swathes of gold tinsel on the shelves, it made me smile.
It made me excited for Christmas parties and fruit mince pies and celebrations to come.
And then I remembered … it wasn’t so long ago that I was standing in a similar local supermarket aisle. But on that occasion, it was stripped of every consumable item. It did not make me smile. Rather, I remember my shock at the self-serving nature of so many.
After a year of aborted events, it seems we have a void to fill. Well, I’m challenging this.
Most of us in Australia want for very little – yet we often feel empty. We’re always wanting more, or bigger, or better. For many of us, this year is the first time we’ve been unable to buy basic necessities, let alone all the gifts on our family’s Christmas list. Now, though, as our Aussie shelves are restocked, bare shelves are still a daily reality for many people around the globe – even when there is no pandemic or Christmas festivities.
A Christmas ad from a well-loved retailer stood out to me recently. It called on customers to ‘make up for’ everything missed this year – the birthdays, the baby showers, the weddings.
Certainly, this rhetoric is tempting. After a year of aborted events, it seems we have a void to fill. Well, I’m challenging this. Perhaps it wasn’t gifts we yearned for this year. And more ‘stuff’ won’t make up for it either.
Yes, Covid has transformed our purchasing habits and the relationship we have with products. Working from home means many of us don’t need many business clothes. It’s also caused us to re-evaluate what matters, what we value. As we continue the return to ‘normal’, it’s a good opportunity to remember our most pure form of fulfilment as creatures made in God’s image.
Internal and external motivators drive our behaviour. External motivators promise a reward or help us to avoid punishment, but for internal motivators, the behaviour itself is the reward.
External motivators can drive our consumerism – the buzz we feel walking out of a store with something shiny and new. But when we focus internally – such as on social interactions or time in nature – studies show that we experience greater overall life satisfaction. And feeding our internal motivators can also reduce our desire to feed external motivators, like consumerism.
In his book Curing Affluenza (a great read for the Christmas break), economist Richard Denniss argues that we must distinguish between consumerism (“the love of buying things, which is undeniably harmful to us and the planet”) and materialism (“the love of things, which can in fact be beneficial”).
Let’s ‘make up for’ the year that was by giving more than physical clutter this Christmas.
I know what you’re thinking – isn’t materialism bad?
Well, not in the way Denniss describes it. When we cherish our possessions, we adopt a far more sustainable relationship with the things around us. Their value to us becomes far greater than their price tag – meaning that we are more likely to look after them, repair when damaged, and thoughtfully consider what to do with them when no longer needed. Or as James writes, every good and perfect gift is from above!
So, instead of being caught in the whirlwind of bargain Christmas sales this season, let’s take a more conscious approach to purchasing gifts and self-splurges. Baptist World Aid has put together an easy guide for you here. Take a moment to consider why you are buying, and to appreciate who you are buying for.
Let’s force ourselves to remember the bare shelves and the isolation. Let’s remember the joy of a hug after six weeks in lockdown. The elation of a fully stocked toilet paper aisle. Or the freedom to walk aimlessly along a beach sans purpose, or time limit.
Let’s ‘make up for’ the year that was by giving more than physical clutter this Christmas.
If 2020 has taught me anything, it’s that we’re all capable of changing behaviour when needed most. And right now, our consumption habits need a full overhaul. Perhaps this isn’t the year you get everything on your Christmas list. Perhaps, this is the year you appreciate everything you already have.
This Christmas season, I’m trying to reflect on what truly adds value to life, and to fuel my own internal, rather than external, motivators. I hope you’ll join me … tis’ the season after all.
Bonnie Graham is Baptist World Aid’s Ethical Fashion Coordinator.