Anonymous wrote:My mom was poor and I wanted things she couldn’t afford.
If somebody shoplifts and has enough things they want, it might be about needing a thrill, as a PP said. My brother was like this. He got caught shoplifting a 2-dollar air freshener when he was an adult.
Some brains just can’t be content with the stimulation around them so they find more somewhere else. This is why people with untreated ADHD are at higher risk for drug/alcohol abuse.
There is also the issue with impulse control, which often stems from lack of mindfulness. If you don’t check in with yourself and realize that what you’re thinking and feeling are okay, you might regularly feel like they aren’t okay and do whatever strikes your fancy to change how you feel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) thrill
2) want something and don’t have the money
I know this is weird but when my abusive husband cut me off financially I shoplifted a little at the grocery store. Would “forget” to ring up an item or leave it in the bottom of the cart until past the checkout. I was watching every penny. But it was psychological. Also when I was pregnant and we had no money.
Me, too. Abusive ex who won't pay child support (but is a LAWYER).Often had to sell random things in the house to get money to eat and pay rent. Every once in a while, I had to "forget" something in the basket. But normally I am terrified of shoplifting and have never stolen anything but food for kids.
Honestly, I don't even feel guilty. If the 1-5% aren't going to pay their fair share of taxes, they set the tone. DGAF.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It amazes how people try to excuse and normalize stealing. No wonder our society is in a free fall. Truly sad.
I'm sorry, all I saw, aside from the posts like yours, people explaining some of the root causes of stealing. Can you point me to the posts excusing and normalizing stealing?
The closest anyone has come is saying that they don't feel guilty for stealing food for their children when they were poor and in an abusive relationship. I wouldn't feel guilty about that either! That's not normalizing or excusing stealing, it's understanding context. It's far more upsetting that a mother would have to shoplift food for her child than that she stole. These people have no perspective.
This is what Les Miserables was about and why Jean Valjean went to prison for stealing a loaf of bread for a hungry child. The entire question was about whether it should really be a crime and what justice is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It amazes how people try to excuse and normalize stealing. No wonder our society is in a free fall. Truly sad.
I'm sorry, all I saw, aside from the posts like yours, people explaining some of the root causes of stealing. Can you point me to the posts excusing and normalizing stealing?
The closest anyone has come is saying that they don't feel guilty for stealing food for their children when they were poor and in an abusive relationship. I wouldn't feel guilty about that either! That's not normalizing or excusing stealing, it's understanding context. It's far more upsetting that a mother would have to shoplift food for her child than that she stole. These people have no perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It amazes how people try to excuse and normalize stealing. No wonder our society is in a free fall. Truly sad.
I'm sorry, all I saw, aside from the posts like yours, people explaining some of the root causes of stealing. Can you point me to the posts excusing and normalizing stealing?
Anonymous wrote:It amazes how people try to excuse and normalize stealing. No wonder our society is in a free fall. Truly sad.
Anonymous wrote:1) thrill
2) want something and don’t have the money
I know this is weird but when my abusive husband cut me off financially I shoplifted a little at the grocery store. Would “forget” to ring up an item or leave it in the bottom of the cart until past the checkout. I was watching every penny. But it was psychological. Also when I was pregnant and we had no money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) thrill
2) want something and don’t have the money
I know this is weird but when my abusive husband cut me off financially I shoplifted a little at the grocery store. Would “forget” to ring up an item or leave it in the bottom of the cart until past the checkout. I was watching every penny. But it was psychological. Also when I was pregnant and we had no money.
I’ve done this too and was anxious about money. I stopped but it was hard. It’s embarrassing. You’re not alone.
Same. For me it was actually a way to relieve guilt over buying things. Mostly I stole things for my baby— a cute pair of leggings at Target or the organic blueberries that I felt guilty buying because they cost twice as much. Sometimes also things for me, but small things. A cheap lipstick, a warm pair of socks.
For me, I felt less guilt about stealing these things from some big box store that likely had a certain amount of theft built into their business model, than I felt buying them and feeling like I was overspending because money was so tight.
OP is there a reason your son might feel guilt over spending money, or Shane around not being able to afford something? I’d start there.
Stealing is stealing. Don’t try to sugar cost it because it’s Target. The lack of accountability on your part is shameful.
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Really rude thing to say. Next time, note the tense the writer is using before responding.
There is nothing rude about calling a thief a thief.
This. These people have lost all touch with reality. What’s next? Can’t call Simone who murdered someone a murderer. If you steal something, you are a thief. No matter the reason. The one abuse story was truly sad. But stealing organic blueberries? Nope, you’re just an entitled thief.
No one cares what you say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) thrill
2) want something and don’t have the money
I know this is weird but when my abusive husband cut me off financially I shoplifted a little at the grocery store. Would “forget” to ring up an item or leave it in the bottom of the cart until past the checkout. I was watching every penny. But it was psychological. Also when I was pregnant and we had no money.
I’ve done this too and was anxious about money. I stopped but it was hard. It’s embarrassing. You’re not alone.
Same. For me it was actually a way to relieve guilt over buying things. Mostly I stole things for my baby— a cute pair of leggings at Target or the organic blueberries that I felt guilty buying because they cost twice as much. Sometimes also things for me, but small things. A cheap lipstick, a warm pair of socks.
For me, I felt less guilt about stealing these things from some big box store that likely had a certain amount of theft built into their business model, than I felt buying them and feeling like I was overspending because money was so tight.
OP is there a reason your son might feel guilt over spending money, or Shane around not being able to afford something? I’d start there.
Stealing is stealing. Don’t try to sugar cost it because it’s Target. The lack of accountability on your part is shameful.
![]()
Really rude thing to say. Next time, note the tense the writer is using before responding.
There is nothing rude about calling a thief a thief.
This. These people have lost all touch with reality. What’s next? Can’t call Simone who murdered someone a murderer. If you steal something, you are a thief. No matter the reason. The one abuse story was truly sad. But stealing organic blueberries? Nope, you’re just an entitled thief.
Anonymous wrote:Love that in a thread titled “help me understand” shoplifting, most posters are ignoring the explanations from former shoplifters that might provide insight in order to shame them.
Not particularly helpful to OP or her son in terms of ending this behavior.
Shoplifting has been understood as a psychological issue for a long time, and most experts agree that the best way to resolve it is to provide therapeutic treatment to address the problem. When you shame and humiliate compulsive shoplifters, it doesn’t stop them (it’s a compulsion, so not something they necessarily choose, though they might retroactively justify it). Instead, they will just conceal it or lie about it because the shame is too intense.
OP, approaching this from a place of trying to understand is really healthy. Best of luck to you and your son.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) thrill
2) want something and don’t have the money
I know this is weird but when my abusive husband cut me off financially I shoplifted a little at the grocery store. Would “forget” to ring up an item or leave it in the bottom of the cart until past the checkout. I was watching every penny. But it was psychological. Also when I was pregnant and we had no money.
I’ve done this too and was anxious about money. I stopped but it was hard. It’s embarrassing. You’re not alone.
Same. For me it was actually a way to relieve guilt over buying things. Mostly I stole things for my baby— a cute pair of leggings at Target or the organic blueberries that I felt guilty buying because they cost twice as much. Sometimes also things for me, but small things. A cheap lipstick, a warm pair of socks.
For me, I felt less guilt about stealing these things from some big box store that likely had a certain amount of theft built into their business model, than I felt buying them and feeling like I was overspending because money was so tight.
OP is there a reason your son might feel guilt over spending money, or Shane around not being able to afford something? I’d start there.
Stealing is stealing. Don’t try to sugar cost it because it’s Target. The lack of accountability on your part is shameful.
![]()
Really rude thing to say. Next time, note the tense the writer is using before responding.
There is nothing rude about calling a thief a thief.