The disease of visiting physical stores has become an irresistible addiction for many people, and some people spend a lot of time in physical stores every day, enjoying the feeling of shuttling between various products. However, behind this behavior, the psychological burden cannot be ignored.
Visiting a brick-and-mortar store often comes with a sense of anxiety about whether they have missed an important item or made the wrong purchase decision, which not only affects the shopping experience, but also stresses people's lives.
Visiting a brick-and-mortar store can also trigger a psychology of comparison, where people unconsciously compare themselves to others, believing that they don't have as good an item as someone else, or that they don't have the ability to shop as well as someone else. This comparative psychology can lead to feelings of inferiority and loss, which can have a negative impact on mental health.
Many people are influenced by various factors when visiting a store, such as the atmosphere in the store, the sales pitch of the sales staff, the placement of products, etc., so as to make impulsive purchase decisions. These decisions are often made not out of practical necessity, but out of the impulse and desire of the moment.
Therefore, the illness of visiting a physical store is not a healthy state of mind. Not only does it affect the shopping experience, but it can also bring stress and negative impact on people's lives.
In order to alleviate this psychological burden, people should learn to control their shopping desires, maintain a rational and calm attitude, and also pay attention to their own mental health. Only in this way can you truly enjoy shopping and not make shopping a burden and stress.