Very few things in life are absolutes.
Vaping works as a smoking cessation tool.
Ja well, it does. Sometimes. For some folks. With varying degrees of ease, pain and/or commitment.
Some relapse quickly, some relapse after a while, some never relapse.
Vaping is the best cessation tool since some fool decided to roll up some dried leaves, stick it into (undoubtedly) his mouth and set it alight to enjoy the pleasure of inhaling raw smoke into his protesting lungs.
You gotta be a MAN to do that eh? Go Texan!
I have smoked since the dawn of time, well, soon after. I quit for 9 years after my first marriage, but it was a tough six months. Before that I tried quitting numerous times – the cartons of Lucky Strikes lining the road from Middelburg to the power station are all mine. Just to start scrounging stompies halfway through night shift.
It’s a long and boring story. After 9 years I started again, etc.
Everybody’s not like me, so my experience may not be useful to you, or it may be, which is why I will air my observations. Helping just one person and all that jazz.
Lately I started smoking again, for 2 weeks. By design. I was trying to make sure I have not developed a PG allergy, and I knew I could now stop and start at will, with absolute ease.
My lungs revolted, quickly developed a cough, but no, it wasn’t the PG that was causing my problem. So back to vaping.
Why do I find it so easy to switch from cigs with narry a desire nor thought of them?
Vaping is seen as a nic delivery system in the context of smoking cessation. I have long maintained that yes, it is a reasonably important factor, but not the most important.
Nic ain’t heroin. Withdrawal is relatively quick and it certainly won’t make you stare at babies crawling across the ceiling. Given a reasonable amount of nic in your vape, it isn’t a factor at all.
Then why do so many struggle, and many fail, to make the switch successfully?
Mental satisfaction, and the hole left by the missing ritual. The same reason gum and patches don’t have a high success rate.
You still have the urge to light up, fiddle, blow smoke.
So you have to replace it with the vaping experience. But just like replacing an old flame with a new one, the new one has to be more interesting else you’ll pine for the old one.
And this is where I see so many struggle and fall. They buy a small vaping device (don’t want to spend too much if it ain’t gonna work – well if it ain’t gonna work the couple of grand ‘wasted’ on decent vaping equipment is going to be the least of your problems.
At least if you are going to try it, give it a full go. You owe it to yourself and your family.
I have many vaping devices, I have to in order to test juices. If after this past two weeks I grabbed a pod or something, I’d be out buying cigs in no time flat. The nic may be there, but the ritual is like a cold, dead fish.
You want to replace the ex with a better model, not just for the sex but the whole experience. Else you won’t forget the ex.
Get something that you can grab a cup of coffee, blow amazing clouds, be amazed by the nuances of the flavour, improve your coils, the experience. Maybe keep the pod for the office, but if you want an easy, seamless transition from smoking you need something better.
Sure, you can quit with a pod or something. If it’s working for you that’s just great and dandy. But if you are struggling and thinking about that cig in the morning, go get yourself a mod and DTL RTA, make it a hobby. It’s worth the money spent – save on cigs, health, your families happiness.
I’ve seen too many fail, and every time it is the same. The replacement is a cold, dead fish.
Vaping works as a smoking cessation tool.
Ja well, it does. Sometimes. For some folks. With varying degrees of ease, pain and/or commitment.
Some relapse quickly, some relapse after a while, some never relapse.
Vaping is the best cessation tool since some fool decided to roll up some dried leaves, stick it into (undoubtedly) his mouth and set it alight to enjoy the pleasure of inhaling raw smoke into his protesting lungs.
You gotta be a MAN to do that eh? Go Texan!
I have smoked since the dawn of time, well, soon after. I quit for 9 years after my first marriage, but it was a tough six months. Before that I tried quitting numerous times – the cartons of Lucky Strikes lining the road from Middelburg to the power station are all mine. Just to start scrounging stompies halfway through night shift.
It’s a long and boring story. After 9 years I started again, etc.
Everybody’s not like me, so my experience may not be useful to you, or it may be, which is why I will air my observations. Helping just one person and all that jazz.
Lately I started smoking again, for 2 weeks. By design. I was trying to make sure I have not developed a PG allergy, and I knew I could now stop and start at will, with absolute ease.
My lungs revolted, quickly developed a cough, but no, it wasn’t the PG that was causing my problem. So back to vaping.
Why do I find it so easy to switch from cigs with narry a desire nor thought of them?
Vaping is seen as a nic delivery system in the context of smoking cessation. I have long maintained that yes, it is a reasonably important factor, but not the most important.
Nic ain’t heroin. Withdrawal is relatively quick and it certainly won’t make you stare at babies crawling across the ceiling. Given a reasonable amount of nic in your vape, it isn’t a factor at all.
Then why do so many struggle, and many fail, to make the switch successfully?
Mental satisfaction, and the hole left by the missing ritual. The same reason gum and patches don’t have a high success rate.
You still have the urge to light up, fiddle, blow smoke.
So you have to replace it with the vaping experience. But just like replacing an old flame with a new one, the new one has to be more interesting else you’ll pine for the old one.
And this is where I see so many struggle and fall. They buy a small vaping device (don’t want to spend too much if it ain’t gonna work – well if it ain’t gonna work the couple of grand ‘wasted’ on decent vaping equipment is going to be the least of your problems.
At least if you are going to try it, give it a full go. You owe it to yourself and your family.
I have many vaping devices, I have to in order to test juices. If after this past two weeks I grabbed a pod or something, I’d be out buying cigs in no time flat. The nic may be there, but the ritual is like a cold, dead fish.
You want to replace the ex with a better model, not just for the sex but the whole experience. Else you won’t forget the ex.
Get something that you can grab a cup of coffee, blow amazing clouds, be amazed by the nuances of the flavour, improve your coils, the experience. Maybe keep the pod for the office, but if you want an easy, seamless transition from smoking you need something better.
Sure, you can quit with a pod or something. If it’s working for you that’s just great and dandy. But if you are struggling and thinking about that cig in the morning, go get yourself a mod and DTL RTA, make it a hobby. It’s worth the money spent – save on cigs, health, your families happiness.
I’ve seen too many fail, and every time it is the same. The replacement is a cold, dead fish.
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