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#11
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"Chris" wrote in
m: One thing I learn from my days flying Hueys- if you're on a check-ride and the IP asks if it's alright with you if he "lights one up", the answer was always - sure, go right ahead! It helped immensely on the outcome of that ride. Absolutely. And I never cared, because I smoked, too. You never wanted a cranky CW3 grading your ride - get some nicotine in his system (make sure he has plenty of caffeine before you go out also) and he's much easier to live with. I swore when I quit that I would never be a 'reformed smoker' so I don't complain about other people smoking, I just wish I had never started. Lots of money burned up, nevermind the lung damage, although they were dirt cheap at the commissary. I was paying $1.86/carton in Germany in 1982 when I got out. The sticker shock in the civilian world was a big incentive to quit. -- Regards, Stan |
#12
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Understand..I was paying $1.00/carton whilst working for the USAF in Puerto
Rico. Even then we knew that they weren't doing anything positive for our health Recent DER inspection on a new homebuilt Safari required the builder to add a "no smoking" decal to the dash. It seems that FAA can reach further than I thought. Stu Fields. "Stan Gosnell" wrote in message ... "Chris" wrote in m: One thing I learn from my days flying Hueys- if you're on a check-ride and the IP asks if it's alright with you if he "lights one up", the answer was always - sure, go right ahead! It helped immensely on the outcome of that ride. Absolutely. And I never cared, because I smoked, too. You never wanted a cranky CW3 grading your ride - get some nicotine in his system (make sure he has plenty of caffeine before you go out also) and he's much easier to live with. I swore when I quit that I would never be a 'reformed smoker' so I don't complain about other people smoking, I just wish I had never started. Lots of money burned up, nevermind the lung damage, although they were dirt cheap at the commissary. I was paying $1.86/carton in Germany in 1982 when I got out. The sticker shock in the civilian world was a big incentive to quit. -- Regards, Stan |
#13
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In message , Stu Fields
writes Understand..I was paying $1.00/carton whilst working for the USAF in Puerto Rico. .. Well, as someone who quit aged 9, (one crafty drag in the schoolyard, and I thought "these are awful, why does anyone DO this?") I'm amused by the current costs in the UK. As far as I can tell, a 20 pack is now around UKP 4. Call it $6???? (Mostly due to very high Govt tax - there's a lively smuggling industry bringing tobacco in from the continent, where cigs are much cheaper. Paradoxically, we're told that most of the tax on tobacco and booze goes to fund our more-or-less free Health Service. Er - guys, if people didn't drink and smoke, the costs of the Health Service would be less than half what it is!) And still people queue up to kill themselves, paying around $42 a week or more for the privilege...who says there's intelligent life on earth? What puzzles me is this: How does anyone stick it long enough to get addicted? I mean, no kid EVER lights up his first ciggy, and thinks...."Oh, GREAT, this is what I've been waiting for all my life" Let's face it, they all taste absolutely crap at first, no? So why does anyone persist with it until they can't do without it? I'm interested to know..... -- Rod Buck |
#14
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In message , toadmonkey
writes I've seen a lot fo family and friends fall to that. Maybe they'll be getting jobs left and right, that's just fine. I'd rather be an honest poor man that has respect for himself than a rich druggie that has to bend over and kiss ass for a living. TM Yeah, I can see that some firms might want guys that fit into the corporate culture (IE respond to peer pressure). Original thinkers usually ask too many awkward questions, don't they? -- Rod Buck |
#15
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In message , Stan Gosnell
writes . Nicotine is highly addictive - probably at least as addictive as cocaine, heroin, or any other drug. Once you get started, it's very, very tough to quit. I think it's probably far MORE addictive - although never a smoker, like I say, I rejected them as a kid - one only has to look at the numbers involved, and compare it to other drugs to see that nicotine is by far the most addictive. I speak from experience, too - after a bad accident at work, with a 30ft fall from a rooftop into the yard, (the worst landing I ever made!) I had a month-long stay in Intensive Care, with many broken bones. I was on large doses of Heroin and Morphine for pain relief for 2 months afterwards - in fact ,when my wife went to the pharmacist to get the supplies, he thought I had terminal cancer when he looked at the doses... Anyway, I never got the slightest "high" from either drug - I was just damn glad of the pain relief - and did staged withdrawal over 3 months or so without any addictive problems at all. Later on, the Senior Anaesthetist (Anaestheologist in USA?) later told me that, if people are in severe pain ,you can whack enormous doses of morphine etc into them, and they don't get addicted at all - the brain breaks it down as fast as you provide it whilst countering the pain stimulus. He said that people only get addicted if you provide large doses to them when they're NOT in severe pain. And even then, it's only a minority of people that have any great problem getting off - the personality has a lot to do with it, he said. People get addicted to shopping, gambling, sex, you name it. Narcotic drugs is only one other example. But nicotine is far more insidious, and affects a wider band of people - and addiction is easily obtained, as, of course, no one NEEDS the stuff before they get it - like wounded guys need morphine. So, you try it a few times, and... -- Rod Buck |
#16
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Later on, the Senior Anaesthetist (Anaestheologist in USA?) later told
me that, if people are in severe pain ,you can whack enormous doses of morphine etc into them, and they don't get addicted at all - the brain breaks it down as fast as you provide it whilst countering the pain stimulus. When I had a kidney stone about 14 years ago they had to use morphine to ease my pain. It worked and I never felt...high or buzzed. Just happily NOT in pain anymore. Gerard |
#17
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I had a ruptured appendix, last year. I _LOVE_ morphine.
Joe "Micbloo" wrote in message ... Later on, the Senior Anaesthetist (Anaestheologist in USA?) later told me that, if people are in severe pain ,you can whack enormous doses of morphine etc into them, and they don't get addicted at all - the brain breaks it down as fast as you provide it whilst countering the pain stimulus. When I had a kidney stone about 14 years ago they had to use morphine to ease my pain. It worked and I never felt...high or buzzed. Just happily NOT in pain anymore. Gerard |
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