My mom and my sister are both willing to try PVs. Yay. My sister's stuff will be arriving as early as this Friday. In the meantime, I brought over a 510 and let them try it out with the sample of menthol I got especially for them to try (I'm allergic to mint). My sister has taken hits off my vanilla and menthol carts. No problem. My boyfriend has tried both as well. However, my mother either takes too gentle of a puff or she hits it too hard and ends up coughing.
Its ironic because her smoker's cough is part of why I want her to be able to quit. I keep trying to tell her: Draw from it smoothly, like you are taking a sip of pop from a straw, not sucking down a milkshake through a straw. Is there a better way to describe it for her? She still wants to try it, but says she is "afraid of inhaling" now for fear she will cough. No one else has had this problem. Could it be that she drags harder on her regular cigarettes due to reduced lung capacity?
Also, don't know if this is relevant, but my mom is really okay with "fiddling" with things. She rolled her own tobacco for quite some time and had no problem with it. She's also very tech savvy for someone her age (she just turned 69).
Her main draw is that after the initial investment, its "cheaper". For me, I want to quit for my health and I want her to quit for hers (her smokers cough is becoming very concerning - its not just in the morning, its all day). I've told her to think of it as the same price as smoking. I don't want her to become discouraged because its not a huge savings every month (I don't know what the cost will end up being, but that's really not the point).
My sister and my mom seem to consider me the "researcher" and ask me all their questions. I try to answer to the best of my ability, from what I've read here on the forum. I've given them links and the address to this forum, I even ordered my sister's initial stuff for her. I'm willing to hold their hands in this process if it gets them to stop smoking, but I do hope they will look for some of their answers themselves.
Like I said, I am brand new to this. I've been researching and reading for a couple weeks, but I don't feel I'm an authority on it. For goodness sake, I will have gone 24 hours without a real cigarette at 5pm tonight. That doesn't make me the expert. They asked today, "How many drops do you use a day?" and I said: "Um, I don't know. I'm finding out myself right now, but I did read on the forums that its around 2ml, depending on how much you vape".
On another note, I cannot believe its really this easy. I'm not getting inordinately mad at other people, I don't have the usual symptoms when I quit smoking: headache, spacey feeling, dizziness, short-fuse, etc. I really thought I'd wake up this morning fiending for a cigarette, that the 510 wouldn't be enough for me. It was. I've felt fine all day. I planned on just trying it out, but saying if I wanted to buy a pack of cigs it would be fine too. Again, I'm just fine and don't need to spend $6.87 on one pack of cigarettes. Just amazing. I'm still going to say to myself that its no big deal if I have a real cigarette, but I really don't see myself having a problem. I hope its this easy for my mom and my sister.
If you've read this far, thank you for taking the time. I tend to be long-winded and rambling.
Its ironic because her smoker's cough is part of why I want her to be able to quit. I keep trying to tell her: Draw from it smoothly, like you are taking a sip of pop from a straw, not sucking down a milkshake through a straw. Is there a better way to describe it for her? She still wants to try it, but says she is "afraid of inhaling" now for fear she will cough. No one else has had this problem. Could it be that she drags harder on her regular cigarettes due to reduced lung capacity?
Also, don't know if this is relevant, but my mom is really okay with "fiddling" with things. She rolled her own tobacco for quite some time and had no problem with it. She's also very tech savvy for someone her age (she just turned 69).
Her main draw is that after the initial investment, its "cheaper". For me, I want to quit for my health and I want her to quit for hers (her smokers cough is becoming very concerning - its not just in the morning, its all day). I've told her to think of it as the same price as smoking. I don't want her to become discouraged because its not a huge savings every month (I don't know what the cost will end up being, but that's really not the point).
My sister and my mom seem to consider me the "researcher" and ask me all their questions. I try to answer to the best of my ability, from what I've read here on the forum. I've given them links and the address to this forum, I even ordered my sister's initial stuff for her. I'm willing to hold their hands in this process if it gets them to stop smoking, but I do hope they will look for some of their answers themselves.
Like I said, I am brand new to this. I've been researching and reading for a couple weeks, but I don't feel I'm an authority on it. For goodness sake, I will have gone 24 hours without a real cigarette at 5pm tonight. That doesn't make me the expert. They asked today, "How many drops do you use a day?" and I said: "Um, I don't know. I'm finding out myself right now, but I did read on the forums that its around 2ml, depending on how much you vape".
On another note, I cannot believe its really this easy. I'm not getting inordinately mad at other people, I don't have the usual symptoms when I quit smoking: headache, spacey feeling, dizziness, short-fuse, etc. I really thought I'd wake up this morning fiending for a cigarette, that the 510 wouldn't be enough for me. It was. I've felt fine all day. I planned on just trying it out, but saying if I wanted to buy a pack of cigs it would be fine too. Again, I'm just fine and don't need to spend $6.87 on one pack of cigarettes. Just amazing. I'm still going to say to myself that its no big deal if I have a real cigarette, but I really don't see myself having a problem. I hope its this easy for my mom and my sister.
If you've read this far, thank you for taking the time. I tend to be long-winded and rambling.