Amazing... a a big guy myself... its always those that have NO issues losing the weight that ASSUME its because we are not being honest... being fat isnt ALWAYS a choice or from doing something wrong, so yes it could be medical as you started.. I am sure geeker was looking for some support and an ear the listen... no accusing him of not doing it right...
Agreed, in principle. Certainly I resent the insinuation, so popular these days, that your weight is license for everyone around to judge you morally. The elephant in the room, as always, is genetics. Of course, if we were to concede that genetics cause a whole host of discrepancies in the population, then the public-health lobby's moralist narrative would begin to look every bit as sinister and discriminatory as it really is. And we can't have that!
There could be in fact something that vape blocks on a metabolic level, to say it doesn't is just as ignorant to say it doesn't... We just don't know yet!! only time and people sharing these findings will prove once and for all, but if no one speaks up, we wont know!!
Possible, yes. Plausible? Eh, probably not. It's far more likely that the absence of tobacco has uncovered some sort of underlying condition, as Sue suggested a few posts back. Or the OP acquired a new condition coincidentally at around the time he stopped smoking.
Or perhaps,
perhaps, the OP reacts in some strange way to some of the
flavorings he's been vaping.
It is
vanishingly unlikely that PG/VG/nicotine
directly caused the OP's condition (for lack of a better term), though. We may not have definitive data encompassing large-scale and extremely long-term
vaping, but we know the core components of e-juice to be safe, in principle. If there were even a suggestion that PG/VG/nicotine could cause the kind of pronounced condition described by the OP, we would have heard about it long ago.
FWIW, most of the symptoms about which people complain on this forum arise (either directly or indirectly) from quitting tobacco, not from taking up vaping. Unsafe as it is in the long term, cigarette smoke does have a number of short-term benefits; it can mask or attenuate all sorts of problems. And needless to say, people
do tend to eat more after they quit smoking, but that doesn't appear to be the case for the OP.