Its never gonna be just like an analog. But we're kicking the crap put of a long time addiction in a pretty short time frame. All we have to do is hang on till the new habits replace the old ones.
I think you make a couple of profound points in your last few posts, Vaporer. This is just one thought they provoked in me:
Routine and belief are both really powerful, even on a neurochemical level.
Why does a pain placebo work, but not if the patient is administered an opioid antagonist first? It's not because one isn't in true physical pain. It's because somehow, you not only believe you'll feel less pain, you actually produce some endogenous opioids.
Why do we say to 'fake it til you make it'? It's because somehow, habit has a feedback effect on belief.
That's not to say you can
always or
totally make up an absent neurochemical effect (like the alkaloids) with sheer belief and forced habituation...as we're finding here.
But somehow, holding on and finding a combination of substitutes that vaguely approximates the feeling of combusted tobacco to you, making it your daily routine for long enough, and waiting until it feels almost normal... well, it may easily be the only route.
And especially when you think of something as a "last resort", it can become more powerful. This ain't
The Secret (ugh), it's just the fact that
cognitive framing and
intentionality are surprisingly important.