Meagan:
What a great name, Meagan Faria, be a good name for an orchid: Meaganus Fariensis. Welcome to ECF. Since I was in just your position a mere two weeks ago and have now completely given up tobacco--after smoking heavily since Eisenhower was president--and using nothing but my new toy, I am perfectly qualified to give you expert advice on what to do and how to do it.
You have gotten lots of well-meaning advice but there is only one way to do this and only I know the one-true-path which can be found by following the directions on the two signposts just ahead. The first one reads: Nothing is true and everything is permitted. The second one: Press on regardless!
You have brought up a several issues of justifiable concern which I will address.
Cravings: This is a tough one at first, but there is a solution. You need a mantra, preferably a longish one, which you memorize and repeat to yourself obsessively whenever you feel the need. If you can associate it with a melody, all the better. The one I use, and the one I suggest is: "Here's a little song I wrote...", well, you know the rest. Now, as soon as a craving hits, I start humming that and repeating the words over and over to myself while I take out my new toy and puff furiously until I start to get dizzy. The craving magically disappears and now all I can think about is holding on to the shopping cart so I don't pitch like some goofy doofus into the meat display, all the while trying to avoid the incredulous stares of passersby. Needless to say, this concentrates the mind most wonderfully.
Overdosing: Don't worry about that, you'll know. See above.
A&A: This stands for Abbreviations and Acronyms. Keeping up with them will begin to occupy a larger and larger amount of your time. I suggest about half an hour of intense study daily, but the truth is they are a lot like Kudzu--do they have Kudzu up there?--they will multiply faster than you can learn them.
Carrying your gear: You will find that this is more of a progression than a fixed problem. Probably good to begin with something along the lines of an eyeglass case. Of course then you have the hard or soft dilemma. Many fine points to both solutions as well as many valid concerns. Study this issue carefully, read the blogs and the forums, research it thoroughly, then flip a coin.
But wait, there's more... As you become immersed in the nicotine vaporizer culture, you're carrying needs will grow. First it's the eyeglass case, then something about the size of a kid's pencil box, then a nice Garcia-Vega cigar box, then something more along the lines of a largish make-up kit, then maybe a medium-sized bass-fisherman's tackle box, then a trekking rucksack and finally something steamer-trunk sized, on wheels so you can tow it behind you.
Equipment: Here's where the serious decisions have to be made, and again this is going to change as you change. You are going to have to decide exactly where you want to fit in the Personal Vaporizer spectrum. This can be likened to a decision about a new car: Do want a family sedan, a Mercedes limousine, a four-wheel drive SUV, an all-terrain vehicle, a Big Daddy Don Garlitts nitro-methane fuel burning dragster (Sunday! Sunday! Detroit Dragway!... on CKLW with Martha and the Vandella's "Dancing in the Streets" playing in the background and your dad yelling at you "Turn that crap down". Any summer weekend, Motown, early 60s, but I digress) or maybe you'll want something more along the lines of a Stryker armored personnel carrier to amaze your friends and intimidate your adversaries. You pays your money--Boy, do you ever!--and you takes your choice. Over and over...
Me? Right now I just want something along the lines of a nice mommy-van.
Press on regardless.
btraven