Friday, October 11, 2013

The eCigarette – Is “vaping” better or worse than smoking?


I am ashamed to admit that I have been a 1 pack a day smoker for nearly 20 years.  If you know that I am well over 40 – even with rounding - simple math will tell you that embarrassingly, unlike most other smokers – I didn’t start when I was a teenager.
I tried to start smoking when I was 13, 14, and 15 – it seemed like a good idea at the time but always resulted in nausea, dizziness and an extreme desire to lay down on the nearest flat surface to recover.  These flat surfaces included a backseat and several episodes of lying on the ground – including places such as a gas station parking lot and my best friends driveway.  In any case – I didn’t actually become a smoker until I went to my TEN year high school reunion – at the old age of 27!  How dumb is that?
By that time I was a healthcare professional – a pharmacist – and well aware of the dangers of smoking.  By that point in my life – I still wanted to seem cool in front of these people who had haunted me in high school and beyond even though I really had nothing in common with them but my adolescent past.
Smoking, in particular nicotine is one of the most addictive substances on the face of the earth.  It is more addictive than cocaine, alcohol, marijuana, amphetamines, anxiety medication, muscle relaxants, pain medication – and yes, even heroin.  In fact, even heroin addicts will tell you that though heroin withdrawal is immediately painful – if you can go through the withdrawal – quitting heroin is easier long term than quitting smoking.  By contrast, quitting drinking or quitting anxiety medication can be life-threatening but still not as hard as quitting smoking.

To be fair to myself – I hate smoking – it is one of the nastiest, smelliest and downright disgusting habit a person can have and I have tried just about everything out there to quit.  This list includes the patch, nicotine gum, lozenges and lollipops, plain candy, herbal cigarettes, exercise, abstinence and prescription medication – to no avail.  My husband has also been an intermittent smoker for his entire post-puberty life (possibly before) and has an extremely “addictive” personality.  He can “quit” at any time with seeming no negative effects from his point of view.  From the point of view of those who have to live with him, in truth for about FIVE days – he is a raving jacka$$.  But I digress.
Because of his “a$$iness” (in general and not just while he is quitting smoking), I have failed at abstinence – because I become a raving B!tch – which he does not tolerate well.  Consequently, I have continued to smoke.

A few years ago, congress voted to add more taxes onto cigarettes – I escaped this monetary javelin for the first year by buying tobacco in bulk, cigarette “tubes” and a machine to make my own which cost about &1.50 per “pack” vs. the near $7 that actual packs were – but then congress wised up and increased the price of my bulk tobacco from $13/can (about a pack) to $45 a can.  So I was stuck paying at least $5/pack with a lot of hassle – but I kept going for reasons stated above.
A couple of years ago – eCigarettes made their debut.  Electronic cigarettes involve a liquid that is heated by a battery device and inhaled.  It provides the nicotine but little of the “other” stuff in cigarettes – the “smoke” exhaled is largely water vapor, quickly disseminates and doesn’t smell.  In fact it can even be obtained in flavors.

I resisted the eCigarette for a long time – even though my best friend (oddly from high school) had raved about how great hers was.  My husband called me one day from the local “vaping” store, saying that he was going to buy a kit.  This included 2 batteries, 2 reservoirs, a bottle of nicotine “juice” and a case – for $129.  You can actually get them cheaper on the internet.  In any case once we paid for the initial investment – we had 2 devices that cost in maintenance about $1/day each, vs. the near $14/day we had been paying for both of us.
He took the bait first – used it for a week or so – and then quit (he was still and a$$ for several days). But he quit with less frustration.  Still I resisted until diminishing financial support forced me to reconsider – so I tried it, costing me about $30/month vs. the $210 I had  been paying. 

About the same time – the medical community and the FDA said they were going to investigate and possibly start regulating eCigarettes because the risks were yet “unknown”, had not been studied and may contain toxins, harmful to human health.  Oddly, the FDA does not regulate the consumption of tobacco which contains literally thousands of toxins – probably the worst of which are carbon monoxide (the same stuff that people use to commit suicide by locking themselves in their car) and tar – which is mostly what gunks up your lungs and causes cancer.

This is a clear representation of the government’s ironical behavior in what they choose to regulate.  Common sense will tell you that inhaling vapor from an eCigarette is much less harmful than smoke.  Any attention to the news will tell you that the government is doing a piss poor job of inspecting tons of crap, including sheet rock, medication and children’s toys that pour into the US by a ton on a daily basis and is sold to the unwitting American consumer.
The medical  community, large pharma and the tobacco lobby cannot stand to have anything that is not under their control available to the public – especially if it circumvents the large number of dollars that are made from both cigarettes and traditional “stop-smoking” regimens.  The AMA and the tobacco lobby are huge, influential entities in Washington – i.e. in the pockets of elected government officials.  Despite all the hullabaloo, even my dad, who still has a drugstore in a small town and who quit selling cigarettes years ago – carries a version of the eCigarette. He said that some people just can’t quit and this is way better.
The point is that nicotine is a very addicting substance – it has a weird mechanism of action where it simultaneously causes a bit of a calming affect while at the same time provides a bit of stimulation – which is why it is hard to quit, because there is a double reinforcement mechanism.
In any case, my journey to quit smoking is on the road – I haven’t touched a cigarette in over 6 weeks.  I can also decrease the nicotine in the “juice”, thereby slowly getting rid of the amount of nicotine in my eCig – and eventually quitting, in a controlled manner which will be a lot easier on those who are forced to be around me in these troubled times (a little melodrama).
Again – the big point is, no matter what alarms the mainstream media reports directly from the government’s health – no matter that adolescent and teenage use of eCigarettes has doubled – they aren’t smoking, they likely aren’t starting with eCigarettes and it isn’t nearly as harmful as the actual smoke.  Notice carefully that NONE of the information is comparing the drop in cigarette use to the increase in eCig use.  That information would actually allow you to think for yourself – which they don’t want you to do. 
In the meantime – I will continue to “vape” while those around me are relieved that they no longer have to smell the cigarette smoke and hear the morning hack.  Just my opinion.

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