Derby Telegraph

Speaking up for our charity shops

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LET me ask a question: when did you last visit your local charity shop? I don’t mean to offload last year’s unwanted Christmas gifts or stock up on this year’s Christmas cards.

No, I mean really spend a bit of time there, browsing the shelves and chatting to the staff.

Because if the answer is not for a while then you’re missing out.

A report this week found that two thirds of those questioned are considerin­g buying from a charity store when it comes to their festive shopping.

The Barnardo’s survey discovered that with the cost of Christmas rising rapidly the products in thrift shops now hold a new attraction for a whole new generation.

Once upon a time I’d have raised my eyebrows at this. Who wants to go rooting around other people’s cast-off clobber? Wouldn’t the experience be, well, miserable? And realistica­lly what would I find for me in there?

My mother-in-law has been the queen of the charity shop for years, regularly coming home with all kinds of bargains but I never saw the attraction.

Now, post-pandemic, I think I get it.

For a start, for an awful lot of folk money is tight. Charity shops can be a lifeline for those on a budget and increasing­ly that’s many of us.

They’ve upped their game too.

Take a look in the windows at the newly-cleaned furniture they stock, the barely-used toys, the pristine books.

Sadly, we remain, despite everything, a throwaway society and increasing­ly what tend to throw away is not tat.

Charity shops are also a good antidote to the hyped-up spendathon of Black Friday and Cyber Monday, that relentless push to excess just because there’s a few pounds off. There’s no slick marketing or glitzy displays in British Heart Foundation or Sue Ryder. Just stuff you might find useful at a good price.

Then there are those for whom charity shopping is a hobby.

Entire online communitie­s are out there, populated by folk who dedicate their time to teasing out finds – costume jewellery, retro handbags – and showing them off on Facebook.

I’ve no idea if anyone ever unearths a Picasso from their local Oxfam store but it’s compulsive to follow.

Best of all, I reckon charity shops may be part of the answer to filling the hole in communitie­s up and down the land left by the closure of libraries and Post Offices.

These were the places where in the past people would meet up and chat; exchange news, had a gossip, feel like they belonged. Yes, business was done – stamps bought, books exchanged – but they also helped with the business of mankind.

For all the coming together of the last few months loneliness, particular­ly among the older generation, remains an issue.

Coffee shops are all well and good but how much caffeine can you drink in a day? Not everyone wants to go to church or join a club.

In charity shops there is time. Staff chat, shoppers compare, conversati­ons happen. Everyone in there is usually local.

You can part with a couple of quid for a good cause and get a good chat thrown in for free.

In these isolating times, that can be priceless.

Charity shops can be a lifeline for those on a budget and increasing­ly that’s many of us.

 ?? ?? There’s less tat, more chat in modern charity shops
There’s less tat, more chat in modern charity shops

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