It Turns Out There’s A Psychological Reason We’re Spending All Our Moolah On Beauty Products

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It Turns Out There’s A Psychological Reason We’re Spending All Our Moolah On Beauty Products

Remember when self-care just meant a lunchtime swim, a walk around the block or a Sunday afternoon yoga class? These inexpensive (or totally cost-free) moments were practiced with the intention of winding down to avoid becoming stressed or overwhelmed. Fast-forward to 2023 and ‘self-care‘ has become a go-to excuse for us to overindulge and often overspend, particularly when it comes to beauty.

That $200 face mask? Add to cart, it’s self-care. Another $50 shampoo? Self-care, it’s coming home with us. Oh, and how could we forget about that $300 multi-wick candle that we’ve seen appear in every TikToker’s ‘home reset’ video? SELF-CARE goddamn it, our hands are tied!

Can you blame us? The brief endorphin hit we receive when we tap our card or receive a package is unlike anything else. Thrilling.

If it makes us feel good, what’s the harm?

Well, according to psychologist Jenny Yip, self-care has evolved and she’s questioning whether it’s as good for us as we’re leading ourselves to believe. Uh oh.

“Treat culture is a form of self-care dialled up 100 per cent, without regard to anything else, including our budgets,” she told Well + Good.

“In the last few years, we have reinforced the idea of self-care in our society, and a lot of people are taking the idea to an unrealistic degree. Whether it’s to feel good about themselves or to avoid uncomfortable emotions, we’ve fallen under this lie that we will be happier if we have this or that.”

With beauty products specifically, they are often directly linked to our self-confidence. We’re led to believe that if we have clearer skin, fuller eyebrows, longer lashes or hairless legs, that we will ultimately feel better about ourselves.

“It deludes us into thinking that beauty can buy happiness, fulfillment, social standing and tells us that beauty is empowerment. Meanwhile, to obtain beauty, we have to sacrifice our actual sources of capital—money, time, energy, headspace,” said author of The UnpublishableJessica DeFino.

When is ‘treat culture’ ok and how do we know when to reign it in?

As a general rule, beauty products are a ‘nice to have’ and not a necessity (as much as you may feel like you’ll perish without your brow pencil). So, if you’re spending beyond your means in order to keep up with your beauty wishlist, it’s time to consider cooling it.

Beauty products should be used because they make you happy and not because you feel like you’re not good enough without them. Fact.

Main image credit: @filomena_makeup

What do you think about this? Do you ever overspend on beauty products?

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Comments 49

  1. When you are buying things you know you don’t really need and end up hoarding. Sometimes it is just purely packaging. I just envision what happens after I have used up the product and whether the packaging is reuseable as a type of home decor. Otherwise, no thank you. Definitely not in this economy.

  2. I have a mood disorder and a symptom of it is we can be prone to overspend. Luckily I can sometimes control it because I would have no money otherwise. I tend to spend more when in an elevated mood.

  3. I have always been a minimalist so I only tend to buy when I have run out of something. I like to try new products but even then I am mindful of the family budget.

  4. It’s so nice to treat yourself and I feel like the last few years have been tough on a lot of people. If I can treat myself and feel good with a $40 skincare product rather than a $400 weekend away then it was worth it