Are we looking for the word physiological instead of the words physical or mental, as far as the feelings of withdrawal go?
1) You claimed, I believe, that your anecdotal experience with your students is that those who smoked relatively briefly had no problems giving up smoking. IOW, the idea that nicotine (or cigarettes) "latches it's hooks in you quickly" is an urban legend of sorts. It's been so long for me I don't remember. But I respect that you spend your days surrounded by that particular lab rat.
Here you claimed you quit smoking, without "withdrawal issues", after 6 years (at around age 17-18). That, by my way of thinking, is a "long" time. I wonder if you are somewhat of an outlier on that. Most people around here (and I'm including those with fresher recollections) say otherwise.
2) You got into the issue of psychological vs physical addiction. I should go back and re-read the thread to refresh my memory but I had a distinct sense that separating the physical from the "mental" is not a simple matter, nor is it very intuitive to a layman. My sense was that few of us probably understood what you were trying to say. Simply because we are not trained to understand that and it is not a simple matter.
You would have had a very difficult time convincing me, back around day 4-5 of my final (and successful so far) quit attempt, that what I was feeling was not physical. Those were my worst days, and they were rather ugly. Yet at the same time I understand that I am not in a position to argue the point. It is quite complex indeed.
You said here that most of the dependency is behavioral, not chemical. Yet with vaping it is easy to separate that variable. By vaping 0mg juice. And if the user senses discomfort with 0mg juice than isn't there something chemical going on?
A similar issue with WTA. There are a number of people here that claim great benefit to WTA, in terms of easing their "withdrawal symptoms". And that is an issue of great interest here since WTA adds in some of the chemicals missing from tobacco that are thought to be addictive/dependent.
After reading mosspa's thread, contemporaneously with it developing, I mixed up a batch of 50mg juice, just in the interests of science, you could say
I am one of those people that are not into throat hit, and I never was. When I quit smoking I started with 24mg, which was the strongest I could acquire locally. I did that not for the hit but purely for the nicotine, assuming that was what was making me so uncomfortable with smoking abstinence.
I found it (50mg) quite irritating. Interestingly, other than getting slightly light headed I can't say I got any great rush from it, and I was probably down to 10-12mg or so when I first did that. Although mosspa did that with an EVOD type of gen 2 device, I had a dripper handy and dripped it at about 10-14W.
I tried it again about a week ago, just for grins, and vaped it for about an hour, starting at about 25W in a dripper. I used a dripper just because that is what I always use for vaping odd juices, and reserve tanks for my ADVs. It was way too harsh for me. So I think I backed off to about 15W or so and actually got accustomed enough to do it for an hour or so.
I am now down to 1 or 3mg. The 1mg mainly for 25-35W dripping, and my tank I run at 25W. I am back and forth as I use up old juice and too lazy to make 0mg baches of my favs to dilute it down. I occasionally drip 6mg now, mostly old juice recipes I never repeated at lower nic ratios. When I drip 6mg I often find it uncomfortable. Just to say I am really not into this throat hit thing.
That is my experience. I am a sample of one, for sure, but a guy that wants to be way on the left side of the TH curve. When you get your 72mg concentrate you will be able to play lab rat and see where you fall on it.
"Everyone" is taught that, or would it be more accurate to say "propagandized". Some countries (including the EU I think, either now or proposed) severely limit nic levels to 18 or 24mg. My understanding is that there is a general trend now in the USA at least, away from nic greater than 12mg (it is simply not sold by many shops). When I started a year ago I could not find greater than 24mg in my local shops. Supposedly the new 12mg available max has to do with high wattage vaping, and most people find high concentrations (above 12mg or less) uncomfortable. It is theorized here that since higher power uses juice at a greater rate, the body is also ingesting the nic at a proportionately high rate. But that is all just speculation. Not many people test their blood levels as they vary their vape.What I find hilarious, is the idea that vaping less nicotine is somehow better than vaping relatively high concentrations (35 mg/ml+).
Just to be very clear, I was referring to smoking cessation attempts, not studies of never-smokers. Does that change anything?Well, in controlled studies where the only potentially active ingredient is nicotine, there doesn't appear to be such evidence. After all, stopping the introduction of nicotine means 0mg nicotine.![]()
Are we looking for the word physiological instead of the words physical or mental, as far as the feelings of withdrawal go?
Just to be very clear, I was referring to smoking cessation attempts, not studies of never-smokers. Does that change anything?
To be clearer, you have a smoker. He quits smoking and takes up vaping with a heavy dose of nic in his juice. A few weeks later you give him 0mg juice. He will, as best I understand things, complain loudly when you do that.Yes, actually. From the non-smoker studies we generate the hypothesis that nicotine doesn't, itself, produce dependence. So, if there are withdrawal symptoms associated with smoking cessation (especially in long time smokers) the dependence must be attributed to something other than nicotine. See my post above.
Since we were talking about it, I been dripping some tonight at 20W in a dual coil Royal Hunter running about 0.8 ohm. I don't go crazy over the sub-ohming. A hell of a throat hitYou actually dripped 50 mg/ml? That's amazing!
Yes, actually. From the non-smoker studies we generate the hypothesis that nicotine doesn't, itself, produce dependence. So, if there are withdrawal symptoms associated with smoking cessation (especially in long time smokers) the dependence must be attributed to something other than nicotine. See my post above.
Hi Andria,
Yes, and that is because alcohol leads to a real physical dependency, and any nicotine dependence is psychological. That doesn't mean that physiological brain mechanisms are not involved, it is just that the nicotine really doesn't have much to do with the dependence, since what smokers are dependent on is the whole behavioral chain.
Wow, you are breathtakingly unbelievable, @Racehorse. Speaking strictly for myself, because I am the only one I can speak for here, I believe nicotine, delivered to never-smokers without the use of tobacco, is not addictive for one reason and one reason only, the great body of scientific evidence. It has nothing to do with my personal beliefs. In fact, if it were not for that body of evidence, I would believe that nicotine is equally addictive in never-smokers, just because I would have no reason to believe otherwise, having always believed in the addictive nature of nicotine at a general level. I have no skin in the game for wanting any particular outcome in that. Science and the vast preponderance of evidence trumps anything I might "feel" otherwise. Some of us actually think, although from the above I don't think you are one of us.I understand behavioral chains.
However, I also understand that people are invested in believing a certain thing over another and there are reasons for that, esp within groups, ie. they are blinded to things an outsider might see.
Read the rather brilliant book by Daniel Kahneman "Thinking, Fast and Slow" he is a nobel prize winner. It is really an amazing book, on how we think, the conclusions we draw, etc. (I am working thru it slowly). Look it up on amazon.
Now I can't say I agree with you or Stevegmu, but I will say that on a vaping board, where people are going to be heavily invested in the idea that nicotine isn't addictive, or even causes dependency, people are going to *agree* with the person who says that, more than than with somebody who says the opposite. The investment in knowledge that supports their behavior/lifestyle is obviously going to be that which they pay more attention to.......it is self preserving.
(WYSIATI. We often ignore that our conclusions may be biased because we are using the information of fellow insiders instead of incorporating information from outsiders). The book challenges many ideas about judgments and decision-making, including that of experts.
(What I was thinking about during some of the diketones in eliquids debates is covered in the book, that people are more willing to take possibly unreasonable risks when all the alternatives are bad.....)
Other book at my bedside I am also working thru is The Power Of Habit by Charles Duhigg
http://www.amazon.com/The-Power-Hab...8160X/ref=cm_cr_pr_sims_t/175-2478124-6708610
I think in order to have a truly honest conversation, about anything, you have to be within a group with individuals where many have very differing viewpoints and are not invested in the SAME outcome. (Unfortunately, this is harder to do in the last decade or so, because people have been groomed to see disagreement as someting combative instead of an ILLUMINATING EXPERIENCE.)
To be clearer, you have a smoker. He quits smoking and takes up vaping with a heavy dose of nic in his juice. A few weeks later you give him 0mg juice. He will, as best I understand things, complain loudly when you do that.
There is something going on with that chemical (nicotine). I will fully acknowledge that there is a lot of behavioral dependence in there, that the vaping should mostly replace (it did with me, as best I understand myself). But the nic is important too, somehow.
You are a mindless idealogue on the other side of the argument that nicotine really is not...nicotine.And you are the other one here telling us you are a mindless ideologue and we should not try to reason with you.
There's been speculation that the dependence is related to the presence of other chemicals in tobacco. Not in the sense that those other chemicals create dependence themselves, but in the sense that they facilitate the dependence creating potential of nicotine. I don't know where that idea comes from, though it sounds right for what that's worth. Do you have an opinion on this?
This is mindless idealogue coming to a conclusion based on bunk science and peer review studies. Comical.Wow, you are breathtakingly unbelievable, @Racehorse. Speaking strictly for myself, because I am the only one I can speak for here, I believe nicotine, delivered to never-smokers without the use of tobacco, is not addictive for one reason and one reason only, the great body of scientific evidence. It has nothing to do with my personal beliefs. In fact, if it were not for that body of evidence, I would believe that nicotine is equally addictive in never-smokers, just because I would have no reason to believe otherwise, having always believed in the addictive nature of nicotine at a general level. I have no skin in the game for wanting any particular outcome in that. Science and the vast preponderance of evidence trumps anything I might "feel" otherwise. Some of us actually think, although from the above I don't think you are one of us.
And despite the discussions today with mosspa, and what I learned peviously from his thread, I have a great difficulty buying his argument that nicotine is not addictive even in smokers, simply because that is not what my brain tells me my body is telling me. But I do have tremendous respect for mosspa, for his lifetime of academic work in the field of neuropsychology as well as his obvious intellect. So I am keeping an open mind on that and trying hard to understand his viewpoint on that. if he is right, he is right, regardless of what I think or previously thought.
The fact that you are so desperately trying to to ascribe some sort of bias to us, and completely ignoring the body of evidence, is a clear sign that you yourself are the one with some sort of agenda.
You are free to speak of your own personal biases. But I must demand that you not attempt to speak for me, individually. And therefore it would behoove you not to try to speak for us collectively because I am quite sure I am not alone on this, based on the discussion here. It is clear to me you are so far out in left field on this, you aren't even in the park.
Hey Doc, post your full real name and accredation otherwise take your professor title and...... Your views are discounted at face value throughout this thread. They are entirely meaningless to me. A "teacher" on an internet blog blathering about dosing himself with nic patches...REALLY?Just to set the record straight. I drag on my cartomizer as though it were a cigarette. Mouth to lung, with a little swishing in the mouth.
Cognitive enhancement...LOL. How much is that class Teach. Talk about selling Snake Oil...Is your middle name Barnum or Bailey...Hilarious. Psychological Buzz Word Enhancement....Duh, for cognitive enhancement, for example. BTW, I strongly you suggest you substantially up your nicotine dose![]()
All I know for sure is it has been a struggle for me to reduce nicotine, I started at 36 mg nic, now vape 6mg nic using + ohm & 3 mg nic sub ohm.
I still get strong cravings to smoke, using a higher nic mg doesn’t help, clouds, heat & throat hit doesn’t help. No matter the nic%, clouds, heat & throat hit I vape more frequently than I smoked, which was 2 -3 packs per day.
Vaping 0 nic has the same effects on me that attempting cold turkey smoking cessation did.
I can’t be around anyone that is smoking not because it smells horrid or any other reason popular on this forum.
I haven’t lit, taken one drag or even held an unlit cigarette since 12 2012, because I know what would happen if I did.
You’d think after 2 years & 7.5 months + without a single drag from a cigarette, slowly reducing nic along the way, someone that sincerely wants to be nicotine free would be.