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What the heck is a social smoker?


12 years ago 0 2534 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Don't know Aloha - but if you find out, please let me know!!!
 
 
 
 
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13 years ago 0 206 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
I have a friend who is a fire batalion chief in Seattle, and he smokes only after a big fire.  Incredible.  In some ways, I'd like to have that freedom, but I'm going for the bigger of freedom of NOPE.  Social smokers still smell as bad as 2-pack-a-day smokers when they light up.
peteg
13 years ago 0 31 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
I know someone who is smoking only when she is playing a card game
I know another one who is only smoking when he is out having a drink.
So yes, they do exist. They link smoking with some other activity and don't look for it in other situations.
They do enjoy it every now and then, but they don't need it!
 
Becoming addicted is also a process and if you stop in the middle of the way of becoming an addict you can stay there. But if you continue there is no going back, that's why once you are addicted, you are a slave for life.
 
I think some people (like me) are more open to addictions than others though, so it makes it impossible to stop on the way of becoming an addict.
13 years ago 0 1904 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
We've had discussions on this board about whether social smokers exist. I say, Yes they do, although I do agree that most social smokers do become addicted. I've met who've averaged less than a pack a week for as long as they've been smoking--years usually. They smoke because they seem to enjoy it, but can go without it and not feel much in the way of withdrawal symptoms, if any at all. I was addictive very, very early on. I know that because I tried to quit within the first two weeks of starting and couldn't.  I thought I was addicted for life. Not everyone has an addictive personality nor an addictive physiological make-up. However, since we do not know what are genetic make-ups are, it's best not to play with fire. That's why I tend to be against legalizing most drugs. Many people would develop a medical problem with the first toke or pop.
13 years ago 0 653 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Very interesting, Aloha!
 
 
Tiana, Health Educator
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13 years ago 0 3207 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Is there such a thing? How do they do it?
 
While most people who start out as social smokers eventually become addicted, there are a few people who actually can have a cigarette now and then, and then put them down for long periods of time. Some recent biomedical information given at a speech by Dr. Rachel Tyndale of the University of Toronto, entitled "Genetic Variation in Drug Metabolism: The Making and Unmaking of a Smoker" suggests that it is due to the function of an enzyme, CYP2A6, which controls how slow or fast nicotine is metabolized in our bloodstream. 
 
There has been  research done by Dr Tyndale and her colleagues, Sellers and Kaplan, which has examined this difference in metabolic rate of the breakdown of nicotine. I had a hard time completely understanding just the abstract, or simple explanation, of their study, but it seems to suggest that this enzyme is behind the frequent or infrequent need for more.
 
I think it would be safe to say that those of us who become addicted are "fast metabolizers", where those who can remain "social smokers" are "slow metabolizers". Once they've had that hit of nicotine, they don't need more because it's still working in their bloodstream for a longer period of time. We nicotine addicts, however, metabolize the nicotine quickly, and thus we want more (crave it) very soon after.
 
Anyone else want to do more research on this, be my guest. I just thought I'd point you in the right direction. 

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