Lockdown Retail Therapy: What Useless Item Can You Buy Today?

Dealing with depression and boredom, many are seeking solace in mindless shopping

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Dealing with depression and boredom, many are seeking solace in mindless shopping

Our heads, right now, are a bit like a drawer that needs tidying up desperately. There are degrees of messiness in our madhouse. I have been on an overdose of Downton Abbey, so mine, with due apologies to all upper-class, anal-retentive, pursed-lipped Brits, is quite alright, thank you. But there are certain others, who shall not be named, who need an urgent deep cleaning from Urban Clap. I am going to start a petition asking for Head Clean Ups to be included in their emergency services.

The He Who Shall Not Be Named is a compulsive shopper at all times. Post lockdown, he has discovered the joys of domesticity and been distractedly buying random and perfectly useless things, on a daily basis, to keep himself from running out into the streets kicking and screaming. 

I thought retail therapy was a cliché, but apparently not. He has piled up many bottles of Dettol Liquid Soap and Lyzol, those being the only items available everywhere while shopping online. He has bought us an Instant Cooker, which is on its way, for which I am seriously grateful. But he can also write a book on My Experiments With Vile (Non-Alcoholic) Drinks, and a mini-dissertation on what happens when aloe vera is mixed with berries. Even though the results are frightening, this seems to be a very lucrative line of business online. To be fair, he has got me some yeast after I repeatedly mentioned it, three days in a row, when asked if I needed anything. And then got all-round applause by getting himself a pair of orthopaedic flip-flops from the pharmacy. Not because he needed one, but because he found it at a medical store! 

But it first struck me he had lost it, when I looked at the shopping bag that arrived this afternoon. Along with the usual sugary drinks and chocolates (there was a bar of white chocolate, which I frankly think is an abominable deal-breaker), I found a pack of playing cards. The playing cards are made of 100 per cent plastic...

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