If by help you mean was the sole instrument used which I would not have quit without
Vaping IS NOT smoking. Simple as that. The only things they have in common are the feeling of smoking (physical, comforting hand-to-mouth habit, the taking time to focus on breathing, etc.) and sometimes nicotine. And, since those aren't the dangerous parts of smoking, vaping is well worth the trouble.I would think it's probably NOT designed to get you off cigs, because if that was the intention.. they'd be killing off their own business no?
unless you consider vaping the same as having quit smoking..
I love your avatar. What kind of car is that?35 years. Prolly 2+ packs/day since I rolled my own.
Quit the first day but cheated on occasion the first year because my friends/wife still smoked.
Rolling through my third year. No interest in smokes.
I'm starting to believe that, as a smoker, you gravitate towards other smokers.
When you quit, your circle expands.
Exactly how I feel. I never actually quit, not exactly. I just decided to put off that next cigarette as long as I could. It's been over 3 years now, and I'm still putting it off. That's a long time between cigarettes!I don't really consider myself an x-smoker. I'm a recovering smoker who vapes. It might sound like a matter of semantics but its not to me. I recognize that I'm still and probably always will be a few smokes away from returning to 2PAD. I smoked for nearly 60 years and not the nicotine addiction which is long gone if it ever was a factor but all the rest that goes along with a deeply engrained, comforting, habit creates an obsession for me. I was a daily dual user for a long time and then one who only dual-used during high stress. I learned how to quickly lay them back down after slipping during stressful situations and don't kid myself that it can't happen again. So, yeh, I try to keep myself humble knowing I'll most likely always be a recovering smoker who might slip now and then but, thanks to vaping, am not likely to become chained to a deadly habit with my one-day-at-a-time approach.
Yep. I had pretty much given up on quitting, but then late last year, I came across a number of articles in the media lamenting the fact that the FDA wasn't doing its job because it hadn't yet regulated e-cigs. Being an anarchist at heart, I figured I should check 'em out before the goobernment ruined 'em. So I ordered a starter kit from Halo (which I don't recommend because they continue to use the now obsolete 808 threads and aren't compatible with much of anything else) and decided to see how much of my 2 PAD habit I could replace with 'em. First full day, I went from 40 to 4. Second 2. Third and fourth: 1. Fourth day (180 days ago today!) I drove through a snow storm to a B&M, bought some better gear (Pro Tanks and Spinners) and higher VG juice and that was the end of my smoking. Now I have several liters of 100 mg nic base in the freezer, a lifetime supply of Kanthal and CelluCotton, and there's NFW I'm going back to smoking no matter what the nannies at he FDA do.
But, ah, it LOOKS like smoking!![]()
I started vaping in April 2010. By the end of the first week I realized that I had only been smoking about 6 a day, down from 2 PAD. I decided to keep the after meal cigarette and a couple with morning coffee and breakfast. I did that for two more years, thinking that I needed those.
One day, I decided to vape and smoke at the same time to compare flavors just to see how they stacked up. What I discovered was that my Doral Ultra lights tasted pretty nasty and the vapor was really good. I decided to finish the pack I was smoking and try to quit. I did that and never bought another pack. The first week vaping and not smoking went by and then week after week passed and no cravings. I was cured and didn't know it until I dropped those last few cigs.
The secret in my opinion was to quit the 2 PAD habit and allow myself 5 or 6 cigs at key times of the day while vaping. That weaned me off the addictive chemicals in tobacco and I still got the nicotine from vaping. Had I tried to switch over all at once I would have been fighting the cravings like many others say they have.
The moral of this story is don't expect to quit all at once. If you can, that's fine and you should do it. If you try to quit cold turkey and vape but still have the cravings, try the alternate method and keep a few a day to protect your sanity. Do that for a few months and then drop those. For me, that was the easy way.