Oh, I'm well aware of that fact. That's why I wasn't particularly surprised that so many people reacted aggressively to what I pointed out.
And for absolute clarity: I'm not making a value judgement about smokers or vapers. I'm simply pointing out a practical reality: nicotine is a drug. An intoxicating one. The phrase "sober vaping" doesn't really apply, unless the word "sober" is being used exclusively as a euphemism for "not drinking."
63 days 64 in two minutes
63 days 64 in two minutes
Whether or not "most people" think you're sober when you smoke is irrelevant.
It kind of is relevant though in terms of use of the word "sober" in a broader societal context, rather than a clinical or legal one. Most of society uses it to describe the effects of harder drugs like alcohol, green, H, coke etc. It's one of those words that can carry different meanings based on the context.
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It kind of is relevant though in terms of use of the word "sober" in a broader societal context, rather than a clinical or legal one. Most of society uses it to describe the effects of harder drugs like alcohol, green, H, coke etc. It's one of those words that can carry different meanings based on the context.
Having said that, I'm lucky enough to have only ever had one bad addiction, nicotene. (and maybe caffeine too). The effects of harder drugs are so much more harsh than nic or caffeine I can't even imagine having a tougher addiction. I have nothing but the highest respect for people who have one of these harder addictions and manage to get clean and stay clean.
Someone who is in recovery, or is close to someone who is in recovery, is Very Likely going to view Sobriety very differently than someone who Isn't.
I think Different Words mean Different things to Different People Surf.
I see no reason why the word Sobriety can mean Something to You that Doesn't have the Same Meaning to Me.
I'd be really careful about jumping to conclusions. I've been very close to people in recovery over the years.
No doubt. I'd suggest that the term "the harder drugs" is misleading, though. Nicotine is pretty damn "hard." I think it's a real bad idea to think that nicotine is significantly different from any other drug people take.
Context. No doubt. I'm not calling you "wrong," I'm just pointing out a practical reality. In a general sense sober applies to every drug, not just alcohol and illegal narcotics.
No doubt. I'd suggest that the term "the harder drugs" is misleading, though. Nicotine is pretty damn "hard." I think it's a real bad idea to think that nicotine is significantly different from any other drug people take.
The difference between nic/caffiene and stuff like (OTHER STUFF) is that people don't rob, cheat, kill and steal to get nic/caffeine.
Yeah...
And I have Never heard of someone getting a DUI and Crashing there car while Being Under the Influence of Caffeine.
Or in a Drunken Rage Punching out Someone.
Or Loosing their Wife/Husband, Kids, Job and Self Worth because they Went to Starbucks too Much.
Pav could you please not reference specific names of substances in future posts. It can be a trigger for some, and I am attempting to keep those types of keywords out of the thread and out of search results here and on search engines.
And again: you're trying to narrow definitions in order to let nicotine and caffeine off the hook. Attaching the consequences of alcohol use to the definition of "drug" is completely disinginuous. Lots of drugs don't cause you to black out or get a DUI or whatever, but they're still drugs.
Trying to make caffeine and nicotine into some kind of special case is nothing but rationalization. "We all LIKE these drugs, so they're not really drugs... at least not drugs like those big bad ones that I don't like."
Let's not feign innocence here. The definition of drug has nothing to do with whether or not it impaired you in such a way that you can no longer drive your car. The definition of a drug has to do with how it effects your brain chemistry. Period.
Why don't we Just Leave it as Your Definition of what Sobriety Means to you is Different from what My Definition of Sobriety means to Me?
I'll even say that you are Right if that Makes you Feel Better.
BTW - Have you ever heard of Rule #62?
Thin skin today. Maybe the OUTSIDE isn't for you.
I'm not trying to redefine anything. I'm pointing out the actual definition of critical terms like "sober" and "intoxicated."
And yes, I know rule 62. I guess you forgot that debate is what we do here.