NogginBoink
Diamond Member
- Feb 17, 2002
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Originally posted by: Moonbeam
The notion that people have a choice in whether to quit or not are full of it. Smoking is an addiction. The addict smokes, not the person. The person and the addict are two different individuals. The person says he will quit or not quit, that he chooses or doesn't choose to smoke, but he is not the one making the decisions. He is the one suffering dimentia, the notion that he is in control. But its the addict that is in control, who lights up, who says we have to have a cigarette, who makes the individual forget all about not wanting to smoke. Only when the smoker knows that he has no power, that all his mental ideas about why he smokes and how much he likes it are all complete and total lies told to him by the addict, can he began to muster the reserves to challenge the hideous monster that runs his life. The addict would rather you die than he quit.
Oh, bullshit.
I'm a smoker. I've been a smoker for about 10 years now. You know who's responsible for me smoking? ME! Not my addiction, not something I have no control over, ME!
Every time I pick up a cigarette and light it, you know who's decision it is to do that? MINE! Not the addictions, not some uncontrollable Force, MINE!
Yes, quitting smoking is very, very difficult to do. Non-smokers seem to have difficulty understanding this, but I compare it to hunger: during the day, you have this biological need that mainfests itself in your body as a feeling of hunger. You eat, and feel satisfied. Smoking works in very much the same way.
However, ultimately, it is the person doing the smoking who chooses to light up and puff away. And finger pointing at "the addiction" or "tobacco companies" or some other external force as the reason a smoker can't quit is simply an excuse that lets the smoker avoid all responsibility for his/her actions.
Many people are so small and weak minded that they just refuse to accept that they are in control of their own smoking. These are the people who will never be able to quit, since they refuse to accept responsibility for their actions.
Many people (myself included) have chosen not to quit because smoking DOES produce a physical pleasure, much like eating does. I see nothing wrong with that as long as the smoker is accepting responsibility for his actions.
As others have said, the smoker makes his/her own choices, and there's not a damn thing you can say or do to make them want to quit. (After they've made the decision is a different story. By all means, lend your support!)
It's obvious from this thread that many of you have never been smokers. While I personally agree that smoking is a stupid thing to do and that anyone who smokes given the known health consequences is an idiot, gues what-- I'm still puffing away.
BUT-- *I* am the one responsible for that, not some phantom alter-ego-addiction-person.
As it so happens, this thread comes at an interesting time. I've been smoke free for a little over 24 hours now. And it's been a cast iron bitch to do.
If I had it my way, cigarettes would be illegal to sell. We'd have LOTS of grumpy people for 2-3 weeks and some black market activity, but the problem really would go away if we quit selling the things.
