Self-help organization for the chronic over$pender

Latimes

Self-help organization for the chronic over$pender"


Play all audios:

Loading...

An aspiring clinical psychologist says she may be helping to identify and treat a growing American ailment--overspending. Nancy Liela Wallace, who is doing her internship at the Westminster


Center for Personal Development in Pasadena, theorizes that overspending just might be an addiction and therefore subject to treatment. Wallace has studied addictions at International


College in Westwood, where she is a doctoral candidate in clinical psychology. In the three years she has worked as a counselor, overspending has emerged as a serious problem for about 25 of


her clients, she said. Binge-Buyer Herself Wallace, who admits to having been an occasional binge-buyer herself, has formed a self-help group for “spendaholics,” which she hopes will


provide further evidence that overspending can be treated clinically. Meetings are held at the Westminster Center; fees are based on a client’s ability to pay. The idea of offering


psychological help for compulsive spenders is relatively new. An informal Times survey of psychologists and credit counselors identified only one similar program, a San Francisco-based


project founded by a woman who says overspending helped land her in prison. In interviews, several therapists and family counselors said compulsive spending has been appearing with


increasing frequency among their clients. Many viewed overspending as addictive, and they lauded efforts to find solutions to what they termed a potentially large-scale social problem. Sandi


Gostin, founder of the San Francisco program, got the idea for her group while serving a one-year term in the Women’s Correctional Facility at Frontera. She said she was convicted in 1976


on charges of embezzlement and went to prison in 1983 for violating parole. Destructive Spender After telling her story of destructive, uncontrolled spending on several Bay Area television


and radio talk shows and in newspaper interviews, Gostin said she was contacted by at least 500 people who wanted to discuss their own spending problems. The result was $pendMender$, a


nonprofit organization for compulsive spenders. The groups she founded in San Francisco and Lafayette attract from 10 to 50 people each week. They pay Gostin $5 to attend each session, she


said. Wallace and Gostin have not met or even heard of each other, but their findings have many similarities. Both have concluded, for instance, that overspending usually comes in the guise


of some other problem and that compulsive spenders frequently have difficulty with relationships, work, drug dependency or excessive drinking or eating. They may feel out of control, that


money governs them the same way alcohol and drugs control other addicts, the group leaders said. Many overspenders also tell of hiding secrets: shoplifting, falsifying documents, bouncing


checks and of being hounded by creditors, Wallace and Gostin said. Both also contend that overspenders often are bright, educated, successful, upwardly mobile people who present a curious


dilemma to those who work with them: They are often so far in debt they look at counseling as a luxury they can’t afford and go on spending and increasing their feelings of powerlessness.


They all suffer from low self-esteem, behavioral scientists agree. However, even within this framework spenders express a wide range of feelings and ways they handle them. Some spender


personalities Wallace has identified are: --The superperson, who feels compelled to do, support and provide for others; the savior of all who are in financial need. --The Cinderella who


clings to youth by believing Prince Charming will appear to save her from financial ruin. --The adolescent whose rebellion never ends, demonstrating that he or she can’t be told what to do


with money. --The undeserving who must get rid of money fast in order to get on with being poor. Some in this group are burdened with images of their suffering poor parents. Subconscious


Anxiety More typical, she said, are: --Binge buyers who spend to relieve subconscious anxiety. --Status seekers who need confirmation of their worth from their peers. --Fearful people who


keep their partners insolvent as a way of holding onto them. There are others as well. “If you could get (all the varieties of overspenders) to clasp hands, they’d stretch mall to mall


between here and San Diego,” said Richard Hogan, a founder of Psychological Services Group in Cerritos. Hogan, a clinical psychologist for 30 years and author of a text on psychotherapy,


said overspending surfaces as a secondary issue among some of the 200 clients he sees during an average year. Clients, Hogan said, “use overspending as an acceptable coping device and


they’re not self-critical about that. They don’t see this as a problem that is serious in their life style, and it stays in the closet for a long time.” ‘Undisciplined Personalities’ Donna


Fong, executive director of Consumer Credit Counselors of Los Angeles, calls overspenders “undisciplined personalities.” Fong, who heads Los Angeles’ largest nonprofit service for people in


debt, identifies overspenders as mostly men and women under 40 who are subject to peer pressure, credit card overuse, flashy advertising that encourages indebtedness and changing values. The


agency, which is funded by businesses and foundations to provide free workshops and low-cost personal counseling for people in debt, had 924 people in its debt repayment program in 1984,


nearly double the 495 it served in 1982, Fong said. “People don’t feel badly” about indebtedness, Fong said. “They think it’s the norm. It’s now accepted . . . there’s no disgrace in filing


for bankruptcy. That’s even considered a smart thing to do. “The people we see just don’t sit down and balance their books. They just don’t want to think about it,” she explained. “These are


not older people, who lived in more of a cash society. This is a generation that grew up with credit cards, and with television urging them to spend.” Wallace’s group, $penderMender$, and


Consumer Credit Counselors use some of the same techniques to effect changes. They ask victims to forfeit credit cards, to budget, to keep records of their spending and receipts of all


purchases. Wallace and Gostin also encourage talking. Gostin invites speakers from consumer organizations to speak to her groups; Wallace uses psychotherapeutic techniques to encourage


clients to identify inner feelings that lead to addictive and destructive outer expressions. Someone to Talk To “There should always be someone to talk to,” said Gostin, who believes most


overspending stems from early childhood experiences. It usually continues for many years before the problem is acknowledged, Wallace and Gostin said. Often a crisis--such as a broken


marriage or eviction--will prompt the overspender to seek help. Because groups and treatment are still in the pioneering stage, no statistics on treatment results are available. Fong of


Consumer Credit Counselors said it takes her agency from 2 1/2 to 3 1/2 years to effect long-term change in its clients. Gostin said “a lot of our people got it together” in less than a


year, and Wallace cites two examples of clients who have gotten out of debt and stopped charging on their accounts, also within a year. Liane, who requested that her last name not be used,


is a San Francisco artist who said she has benefited from $penderMender$ and psychotherapy. After attending the group meetings, Liane said, she notified her friends that they would get just


one Christmas present from her--”instead of the usual four or five--or 10.” In Therapy for Years “I’m obsessive about pleasing people,” she said. “I’ve been in therapy for years, but nobody


hit on spending because it’s been so hidden. “I feel like I’m in the way if I ask for anything, but it’s all right for my friends to leech off me. I get all my clothes in thrift shops, but


someone with a new hair style and I. Magnin clothes will ask me for money and get it. You might not believe this, but it took me two years to buy a new toothbrush for myself. The bristles


were falling out, but I was giving $5 to every derelict who asked, because I believed he deserved it more than I.” Liane is now 39 and her life has changed, she said. “I have hope now. Part


of the problem was not knowing I had a problem,” she explained. “I’m white-knuckling it. I go unconscious about money. It’s like an overeater eating or a doper doping. I can’t even trace


where my money has gone. But at least I’m aware of it now and I’m not alone. I always thought I was alone.” MORE TO READ


Trending News

Russia ambassador found dead in swimming pool at his residence

Russia's ambassador to Sudan, veteran diplomat Mirgayas Shirinsky, was found dead in the swimming pool of his Khartoum r...

NCLT asks Jet Airways’ IRP to discuss employee concerns over salaries with creditors

When Jet Airways temporarily shut shop, one of the most affected were employees, most of whose salaries had not been pai...

The right poetry collection for right now: Terrance Hayes’ ‘American Sonnets for My Past and Future Assassin’

Now’s the time for “American Sonnets for My Past and Future Assassin,” Terrance Hayes’ electric, new book. In his five p...

Enjoy 'buy tickets now and pay later' option on all trains

A service charge of 3.5 per cent will be levied on such tickets and the customer will have to pay the ticket amount with...

Download Festival 2025: Full list of banned items that will be ‘confiscated and not returned’

What's OnDownload Festival 2025: Full list of banned items that will be ‘confiscated and not returned’Download Festival ...

Latests News

Self-help organization for the chronic over$pender

An aspiring clinical psychologist says she may be helping to identify and treat a growing American ailment--overspending...

IPL 2020: David Warner records 9th consecutive half-century against KXIP

LATESTWEBSTORYTRENDINGWoman files case alleging neighbour stole her cat, court says...Pakistani man stabs wife to death ...

Ninth-inning double does in the angels, 6-5

CHICAGO — Even though the Chicago White Sox are out of the American League West race, the thrill of winning in the final...

[withdrawn] coronavirus (covid-19) national testing programme: conditions of grant

* Department for Education Guidance CORONAVIRUS (COVID-19) NATIONAL TESTING PROGRAMME: CONDITIONS OF GRANT Updated 2 Jun...

Kashmir: The king of meadows Tosamaidan comes alive after 50 years

Historic: Situated about 10 kilometers from Khag in the Himalayan range, Tosamaidan is one of the largest pastures.From ...

Top