When TikTokâs underconsumption trend meets festive excess
Secret Santa, stockings and presents under the tree â gift-giving is at the heart of Christmas Day.
But should it be?
This year more people have been exploring underconsumption â the trend where shopping hauls and miracle must-buys are replaced with reusing beloved possessions and purchasing less.
Itâs taken off on TikTok, where mentions soared by almost 40,000% in the UK earlier this year.
Experts say itâs resonated with younger people affected by the cost-of-living crisis and concerned about the climate as they look to make sustainable changes.
But can you mix that lifestyle with a time of year many people associate with overspending and indulgence?
Underconsumption means buying fewer unnecessary things and making the products you already own go further.
It might not sound that radical, especially if youâre used to stretching your weekly budget.
âItâs highlighting a behaviour thatâs quite normal,â author and creator Andrea Cheong tells BBC Newsbeat.
âBut in the realm of TikTok or Instagram it feels so unnatural itâs gone viral.â
On platforms built around ads and glamourised lifestyles the hashtag stands out, and Andrea does believe that underconsumption is different because âitâs a habit, not a trend.â
âThe people who are sharing what theyâve done in their daily lives, theyâve been doing this forever,â she says.
âThey were probably taught by their parents to do it.â
At Christmas, choosing to buy and consume less can feel like a challenge in the face of big-budget marketing campaigns, the pressure to share gifts and the perfectly placed extravagant home decor shared online.
âCompanies are spending millions of pounds on ads that make you want to go out and buy that thing right now,â says Darwin Arnold, a retail worker living in Brighton.
Darwin, who shares sustainability tips online in her spare time, says she doesnât want presents this Christmas.
She admits the âhardest stepâ is telling your family members.
âMy nan, sheâs one of those who loves having all of the gifts under the tree,â she says.
âItâs her way of showing love, itâs her way of making me feel special.â
Darwin says it pays to be straight-up with loved ones and it helps to suggest alternative ideas for gifts, such as experiences, rather than products.
Influencer Charlie Gill, from Manchester, has been sharing sustainability tips on social media for six years now and says her content has taken off since the underconsumption trend began.
Sheâs turned her focus on to Christmas, suggesting ways that decorations, gift wrap and even Christmas dinners can be stripped back.
âThere are so many small steps anybody can do,â she says.
âConsidering how much food youâre purchasing, donât buy things in excess, make sure youâre actually eating your leftovers.â
Charlie makes her own decorations, and this year sheâs created a Christmas tree out of a magazine, as well as âstars out of toilet rolls, all that kind of thingâ.
Some people arenât fans of the homemade aesthetic and Charlie admits she got some hate online over a TikTok of her festive decorations last year, but says it doesnât put her off.
âI donât think thereâs anything wrong with people celebrating Christmas in a different way,â she says.
âThere are different ways of gifting and creating the kind of Christmas you want whilst also underconsuming and not creating excess waste.â
Underconsumption might be a new hashtag, but itâs not a new idea.
âItâs not a new concern but it is an enduring phenomenon thatâs been labelled in different ways in different times,â says Prof Caroline Moraes, of the University of Birmingham.
One example is the voluntary simplicity movement in the 19th Century, she says, which advocated for an anti-consumerist lifestyle.
Prof Caroline, a marketing and consumer expert specialising in sustainable consumption, says the renewed interest in 2024 can tell us about modern-day worries.
She says it points to a greater concern over the environment and the cost-of-living crisis but also a greater awareness of brand ethics and where the things we buy come from.
âThe part we need to playâ
Earlier this year, fast fashion giant Shein said it found two cases of child labour in its supply chain, some luxury perfumes have also been linked to child labour and concerns about the fashion industryâs environmental credentials are widely reported.
âI think all of us are beginning to realise the part we need to play in terms of tackling the sustainability challenges and the climate crisis weâre facing,â says Prof Caroline.
Author Andrea thinks the sudden rise in interest also shows a fatigue with consumer culture.
âI think people like myself are so excited about underconsumption because we share the same mission, which is âletâs just slow downâ,â she says.
âBut really itâs rooted in a lack of control over the cost of living.â
Last week, figures showed prices were rising at the fastest rate since March.
While the cost of turkey and sprouts has driven down the cost of a Christmas dinner this year, what you pay for potatoes, carrots and parsnips has shot up.
âWhen life feels chaotic and overwhelming, youâre always going to have this human retreat to something slower,â says Andrea.
Trends come and go but the people Newsbeat spoke to hope that underconsumption might spark meaningful changes in our shopping habits all year around.
âWe are conditioned to believe we need to be consuming more because this is the time of year to do so,â says Prof Caroline.
âTrying to reduce consumption goes against the norms of consumer culture.
âSo I think itâs a really good thing these influencers are out there because theyâre questioning excessive modes of consuming, theyâre questioning some of these lifestyles that have appeared alongside social media and trying to bring us back to a normal way of consuming.â
Charlie says sheâs witnessed conversations in the comments under her videos and believes âmany people are really engaging with itâ.
âItâs just about everybody trying to live a little bit more sustainably in whatever way that is, because every little thing we do is going to make an impact.â