Some people
would argue that smoke-a-holic is just a cute euphemism which should
not be compared to what they consider degrading syndromes. Contrary
to this belief, nicotine addiction can be equally as strong and deadly
as any of these other conditions. In fact, if you total the number
of people who die yearly of all these other conditions combined, they
would not add up to the number of premature deaths attributed to cigarette
smoking.
Until recent times, the idea of nicotine being a physiologically
addictive substance was controversial in the world-wide medical
community. For a drug to be considered addictive, it must meet certain
criteria. First, it must be capable of inducing physical withdrawal
upon cessation. Nicotine abstinence syndrome is a well documented,
established fact.
Second, tolerance to the drug usually develops. Increasingly
larger doses become necessary to achieve the same desired effects.
Smokers experience this phenomenon as their cigarette consumption
gradually increases from what probably was sporadic occasional use
to a required daily consumption of one or more packs.
The third criterion is that an addictive substance
becomes a totally consuming necessity to its user, usually resulting
in what is considered by a society as anti-social behavior. Many
have argued that cigarette smoking fails to fulfill this requirement.
True, most smokers do not resort to deviant behaviors to maintain
their dependency, but this is because most smokers do manage to
easily obtain the full complement of cigarettes they need to satisfy
the addiction. When smokers are deprived of easy accessibility to
cigarettes, the situation is totally different.
During World War II, in concentration camps in Germany,
prisoners were not given enough food to fulfill minimum caloric
nutritional requirements. They were literally starving to death.
A common practice among smoking prisoners was to trade away their
scarce supplies of life sustaining food for cigarettes. Even today,
in underdeveloped countries, such as Bangladesh, parents with starving
children barter away essential food for cigarettes. This is not
normal behavior.
During the "stop smoking clinics" I conduct,
numerous participants admit to going through ashtrays, garbage cans
and, if necessary, gutters looking for butts which may still have
a salvageable value of a few puffs when their own supplies are depleted
due to carelessness or unforeseen circumstances. To them, it is
sick to think that they ever performed such a grotesque act, but
many realize that if they were currently smoking and again caught
in a similar predicament, they would be fully capable of repeating
the repulsive incident.
Nicotine is a drug. It is addictive. And if you let
it, it can be a killer. Consider this when you get the urge for
a cigarette. One puff can and most often will reinforce the addiction.
Don't take that chance.
Table of Contents
1. Why
People Smoke
2. I
Smoke Because I Like Smoking!
3. I
Smoke Because I'm Self-Destructive!
4. You
Smoke Because You're A Smoke-a-holic!
5. I
Have to Smoke Because of All My Stress!
6.
I've Smoked for So Long and So Much, What is the Use in Quitting
Now?
7.
What A Relief, I Think I Have Cancer!
8. The
Power of Advertising
9. A
Safer Way to Smoke
10.Are
You Smoking More and Enjoying it Less?
11.A
Fate Worse than Death?
12. Quitting
by Gradual Withdrawal
13. I
Can't Quit or I Won't Quit
14.Why
Did I Start Smoking? Why Did I Quit?"
Quit
Smoking Tips
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