Never smoke any more. I did smoke cigarets but not very much until military basic training. There, being given a smoke break was an earned privilege, so if you didn't smoke you got nothing. And they were so very cheap in the base exchange, no taxes I suppose.
When I was posted near Izmir Turkey, any time I'd walk around downtown I'd be approached multiple times by local guys who wanted to bum a cig off me. They'd see the square shape of the pack in my shirt pocket. Ungracious to say No but they didn't even stick around to light up when I gave in, instead tucking it carefully away. American cigarets were in high demand, I guess they sold the ones I gave out, or used them for trading. To avoid this I switched to smoking a pipe.
I traded a (cheap) carton of Chesterfields to a guy (who worked in the same building) from Eskisehir which is a center for the making of meerschaum pipes, and with that carton on a visit home he swapped for a beautiful fancy white meerschaum pipe he brought back to me. Quite a deal... never smoked it, more of a display piece.
I finally quit smoking completely in response to gentle constant pressure by my wife who objected to the 2nd-hand smoke, also pointing out our cats had to suffer that too. I chose an opportunity in the early-1980's when we flew to Hawaii for two weeks vacation, and just left my pipes etc at home. Knew I wouldn't be smoking in the terminal or on the plane, and while there we'd be busy swimming, shopping etc so less smoking opportunity anyway. And when we got back I just stayed quit, and after a few months I rather forgot about wanting to smoke. Good move, and well in advance of the societal trend. 🙂
I'll vote the first option in the poll, but the "occasional try" doesn't apply.
When I was posted near Izmir Turkey, any time I'd walk around downtown I'd be approached multiple times by local guys who wanted to bum a cig off me. They'd see the square shape of the pack in my shirt pocket. Ungracious to say No but they didn't even stick around to light up when I gave in, instead tucking it carefully away. American cigarets were in high demand, I guess they sold the ones I gave out, or used them for trading. To avoid this I switched to smoking a pipe.
I traded a (cheap) carton of Chesterfields to a guy (who worked in the same building) from Eskisehir which is a center for the making of meerschaum pipes, and with that carton on a visit home he swapped for a beautiful fancy white meerschaum pipe he brought back to me. Quite a deal... never smoked it, more of a display piece.
I finally quit smoking completely in response to gentle constant pressure by my wife who objected to the 2nd-hand smoke, also pointing out our cats had to suffer that too. I chose an opportunity in the early-1980's when we flew to Hawaii for two weeks vacation, and just left my pipes etc at home. Knew I wouldn't be smoking in the terminal or on the plane, and while there we'd be busy swimming, shopping etc so less smoking opportunity anyway. And when we got back I just stayed quit, and after a few months I rather forgot about wanting to smoke. Good move, and well in advance of the societal trend. 🙂
I'll vote the first option in the poll, but the "occasional try" doesn't apply.
That reminds me, Turkish tobacco, as processed there, smells/tastes like what I'd imagine camel dung is like. Very distinctive...DannL said:Oh BTW . . . I have absolutely no cravings to smoke, even when around smokers. I now think it smells like burning buffalo dung.
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