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Cigarette packaging

(32 Posts)
crimson Fri 30-Nov-12 13:01:25

I used to think of the next cigarette as I was smoking the first one! I miss the social side of it; met some lovely people when the ban started in Ireland and we'd stand outside pubs chatting to all the other smokers.

vampirequeen Fri 30-Nov-12 12:38:29

I enjoyed every cigarette I ever smoked. I never went through a phase of wishing I didn't smoke. I gave up to protect my baby.

If they produced a cigarette that didn't kill and didn't smell quite so horrible (didn't notice the smell when I smoked) I'd be hard pressed not to try them. Even now, after 28 years, I sometimes could kill for a smoke.

crimson Fri 30-Nov-12 12:34:25

When you're a smoker you have a mental block in your head about what it's doing to you. I think the smoking ban in pubs will have made a big difference here; I wonder what the stats are for the number of people smoking now compared to before the ban? I always associated pubs with cigarettes and wanted one as soon as I walked through the door [even if I was going through a non smoking phase]. It's a relief now that I can't smoke there anyway [not that I go into pubs very often]. I feel so embarrassed about the times when I have smoked whilst with non smoking friends..they must have found it horrible.

glammanana Fri 30-Nov-12 12:27:53

If advertising just helps a few people to stop and think what can happen to them then I do think it is worthwhile in the end.

Grannybags Fri 30-Nov-12 12:08:32

Packaging wouldn't have made any difference to me as my first cigarettes were sold singly from under the counter while I was in school uniform! As you said vq it was important to be in with the in crowd. I gave up smoking after a really bad bought of flu left me feeling to ill to smoke for several weeks and I just though "I don't need to do that any more!"

vampirequeen Fri 30-Nov-12 11:39:59

Pictures wouldn't have stopped me when I was a teenager. I already knew what cigarettes could do but my peer group smoked and that was more important. Anyway when you're a teenager you're immortal. If something has a 1 in 3 chance of hurting you then there is a 2 in 3 chance that it won't and you're bound to be part of the 2. Even when I stopped smoking it wasn't for my health but because I was pregnant.

absentgrana Fri 30-Nov-12 11:34:02

Closely watched by other governments, including ours, Australia is about to break new ground this weekend when it become law that cigarettes, whatever the brand, must be sold in identical drab olive packaging adorned with graphic images of mouth cancer, gangrenous legs and so on. Obviously, this is an attempt to discourage young people from taking up smoking and persuade older smokers to give up. A praiseworthy plan, but I suspect that it will signal a revival of the old-fashioned silver cigarette case.