April Benson, Ph.D., is a co-founder of the Center for the Study of Anorexia and Bulimia and a member of the Board of Directors, Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy, both in New York City. She has worked on the problem of compulsive shopping for more than a decade—doing research, treating patients, and training therapists—and has developed a comprehensive treatment program to help eliminate it. She has written about the treatment of compulsive buying and about social factors, social costs, and public policy related to compulsive buying and been quoted in
The New York Times,
The Wall Street Journal,
Time Magazine,
Harper's Bazaar, and
The Los Angeles Times. Dr. Benson has discussed compulsive shopping on numerous radio and television shows, including Good Morning, America and The Today Show. She maintains a private practice in Manhattan.
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Part 1 Part I: An Overview
Chapter 2 When Money Is the Drug
Chapter 3 A Systematic Investigation into Compulsive Buying
Part 4 Shopping, Buying, and Selfhood
Chapter 5 Shopaholics, Spendaholics, and the Question of Gender
Chapter 6 Are We What We Own?
Chapter 7 The Role of Self-Image in Excessive Buying
Chapter 8 Clothes, Inside Out
Part 9 Part III: Special Issues in Compulsive Buying
Chapter 10 Collecting as Reparation
Chapter 11 Giving until It Hurts
Part 12 Part IV: Psychiatric Considerations
Chapter 13 Assessment of Compulsive Buying
Chapter 14 Diagnosis, Associated Disorders, and Drug Treatment
Part 15 Part V: Psychodynamic Theory and Technique
Chapter 16 Compulsive Buying as an Addiction
Chapter 17 When Eating and Shopping Are Companion Disorders
Chapter 18 The Use of Money as an Action Symptom
Chapter 19 Clothes and the Couch
Part 20 Part VI: Couples Treatment and Group Therapy
Chapter 21 Overcoming Overspending in Couples
Chapter 22 Group Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Buying Disorder
Chapter 23 Psychoeducational Group Therapy for Money Disorders
Part 24 Part VII: Treatment Adjuncts
Chapter 25 Debtors Anonymous and Psychotherapy
Chapter 26 Financial Recovery Counseling
Chapter 27 Simplicity Circles and the Compulsive Shopper
Dr. Benson and her colleagues have given us the first serious, scholarly, comprehensive (and fascinating) study of compulsive buying, its root causes, accompanying disorders, and treatment approaches.
— Joseph A. Califano, Jr.
Shopping, often ridiculed, pathologized as an obsession and a perversion, and associated with frivolous women, has now been given serious, balanced, and substantive treatment. Using current contributions from infant research, motivational systems theory, self psychology, and relational psychoanalytic perspectives, Dr. Benson and her contributors add to the literature on shopping by indicating its self-sustaining and self-enhancing aspects. Richly illustrating all aspects of the shopping experience, this book addresses the multitude of psychological issues that shopping can encompass and attempt to negotiate.
— Frank M. Lachmann and Beatrice Beebe
April Benson's I Shop, Therefore I Am: Compulsive Buying & the Search for Self is a comprehensive and timely examination of an understudied but emerging public health problem. Our understanding of compulsive shopping, along with the other impulse control disorders, is rapidly changing, and this book will surely facilitate a reexamination and reconceptualization. Including material on shopping as a drug; gender and self image issues; psychiatric assessment; psychopharmacology; and psychodynamic, couples, and self-help approaches, this book is a tour de force...
— Eric Hollander
This is a substantive, impressive, and important book that should be read by every clinician in practice. It is the first work ever to attempt—and largely succeed at—a serious, comprehensive examination of the nature of compulsive or addictive shopping, spending, and buying, problems now astonishingly widespread, usually denied, and nearly always concealed. It is a work that is both flawed and inspired, at once infuriating, stimulating, annoying, and exhilarating. It is somewhat wrong at times; at other times, dead right. Fortunately, it is more often the latter. In the end, this work is a significant and valuable contribution to healing in the new century.
— Jerrold Mundis
Intellectually and clinically substantial, I Shop, Therefore I Am: Compulsive Buying & the Search for Self is so timely it ought to be on bookshelves everywhere, from the consulting room to the training institute. Given the remarkable explosion of e-commerce, Benson's focus on this subject seems almost prescient. It is impossible to imagine any therapist who doesn't come across the problem of compulsive buying, and equally impossible to imagine most clinicians having any idea about how to handle it.Dr. Benson has courage to take on this much disparaged, yet central aspect of everyday life...
— Ron Taffel
Intellectually and clinically substantial, I Shop, Therefore I Am: Compulsive Buying & the Search for Self is so timely it ought to be on bookshelves everywhere, from the consulting room to the training institute. Given the remarkable explosion of e-commerce, Benson's focus on this subject seems almost prescient. It is impossible to imagine any therapist who doesn't come across the problem of compulsive buying, and equally impossible to imagine most clinicians having any idea about how to handle it. Dr. Benson has courage to take on this much disparaged, yet central aspect of everyday life.
— Ron Taffel
April Benson's I Shop, Therefore I Am: Compulsive Buying & the Search for Self is a comprehensive and timely examination of an understudied but emerging public health problem. Our understanding of compulsive shopping, along with the other impulse control disorders, is rapidly changing, and this book will surely facilitate a reexamination and reconceptualization. Including material on shopping as a drug; gender and self image issues; psychiatric assessment; psychopharmacology; and psychodynamic, couples, and self-help approaches, this book is a tour de force.
— Eric Hollander