^^^Exactly, I think what makes it hot is that it's something different that we don't get over here. Some of their exclusives truly are sick colorways, I grabbed a couple different air maxes a couple years back when I went to Ireland, but now you can just have it shipped to the US. I think for most JD exclusives, if they were also GRs in the states, they would sit on shelves the same way.
Yeah - the grass is greener on the other side phenomenon supplemented by a shred of truth.
Personally, I think we do all kinds of things to limit our own buying habits and that often involves slightly contriving our preferences.
We want what we can't have, and at the same time, we set barriers for ourselves so we don't feel that we are depriving ourselves, but that we are either sticking to principle or creating strawmen that we wouldn't actually live out if they actually came to pass.
I'm honest with myself; I do this too. For example, I complain about the materials and shape of forces and say I won't buy damn near any new release. And, that's true. I don't. But then - like many of the Team AF1 guys - I say that if the GRs were just like the days of old, but were $110, I'd buy damn near every release. ...But, is that really true? Would I really do that?
Maybe. I mean, my AF1 collection indicates that I might. But, there's a part of me that enjoys hunting and that makes the find sweeter. So, whenever I find basic CWs from pre-2002 for decent prices, I buy them. But, if I could walk into the store and they were there everyday, I'm not sure if I'd feel the same way. I might coerce myself not to - because if I did, I'd be committing myself to buy dozens of pairs a year.
A lot of times you aren't consuming a commodity so much as you are a feeling, and if you don't feel the same way in acquiring the same commodity, it isn't the same and all of a sudden, you don't like it as much anymore. Behavioral psychology is crazy, and we know a lot less about why we do things than we think we do. Add in all the crazy manipulations about identity and emotion that get wrapped up in advertising and commodity fetishism, and we're walking around in a fog out there. It's actually kind of wild, which is why I prefer to go through drunk...