• @[email protected]
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    6828 days ago

    Besides the chemical addiction part, it’s also a genuinely social one as well.

    Smoking areas are designated places where strangers talk to each other. Asking for a light or offering one is a super simple way to break the ice. My dad quit cold turkey several times but he always fell back into the habit hanging with his friends

      • @[email protected]
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        628 days ago

        I had a job where breaks were working breaks unless you were a smoker. That’s when I went from only smoking socially to being a regular smoker.

      • @[email protected]
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        1328 days ago

        Also, nicotine serves as a pretty fair appetite suppressant and stimulant, thus why some of us fell into the habit in early college. Easier to justify the cost of a meal a day and a smoke than it is for the supplies to make three squares a day, at least in a food desert.

      • @[email protected]
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        3128 days ago

        My grandfather picked up smoking in WWII because non-smoke4s didn’t get any breaks from digging trenches.

        It took over 50 years, but WWII still managed to kill him.

        • @[email protected]
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          1428 days ago

          Still a big reason a lot of joes start smoking. If you don’t have nicotine and alcohol issues going in, the Army is happy to issue you some.

            • @[email protected]
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              228 days ago

              Wouldn’t be at all surprised if most of those AAF guys had a flask in the bomber jacket. Gets cold at altitude you know.

      • @[email protected]
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        728 days ago

        I’ve worked at a cleaning job where the smokers were allowed to go outside whenever. Some even went on a smoke break several times per hour. The nonsmokers like me on the other hand were reprimanded if we sat down and drank something outside of the scheduled break. I complained, but the boss was a smoker and just told me they need their smoke break but I don’t need coffee… One coworker whom I talked to about that even said they started smoking because of this and because the non-smokers were expected to work more and cover for the smokers on their cigarette breaks.

    • @[email protected]
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      1628 days ago

      Yeah, my coworkers take smoke breaks together and I genuinely think I missing some important socialization because I don’t smoke

      • @[email protected]
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        28 days ago

        Take a cup of coffee or tea and go with them. There are multiple modern addictions that you can choose from.

      • Alaknár
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        1128 days ago

        I never understood this argument.

        Colleague goes for a smoke break? I go with them, just don’t smoke.

      • @[email protected]
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        1528 days ago

        When I smoked, we had people that would just come and hang out for the break and the conversation. Go for it, it’s fine. Just don’t complain about smoking or you won’t be welcome, predictably enough.

        • @[email protected]
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          327 days ago

          One of my colleagues will even occasionally ask me “Heading for a smoke, wanna come along?” I just love chatting with him, I’ll try to stand upwind so I don’t catch as much second-hand smoke, he gets some company too, everyone’s happy.

        • @[email protected]
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          728 days ago

          This is what I used to do, the smoking area outside was a nice little shaded area, i just generally stood upwind of the smokers or slightly askew to avoid the 2nd hand smoke. No one gave me shit, I was just asked occasionally if i smoked.