Just you tubed gouching and now a bit less of a sheltered life & feeling like ignorance was bliss!
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Originally posted by cj121 View PostI mean no disrespect, but which service is it that confuses the euphoric state induced by heroin (gouching) and 'clucking', which is a commonly recognised term for withdrawing/cold turkey.
Generally youth service and charity/vol orgs - Have worked with kids in Yorkshire for the past twenty years and it's been a commonly used term for withdrawal. I've never heard of clucking used round here. But looking at the internet it seems both the workers and service users have been wrong!
Sent from deepest darkest Yorkshire, by magic..Last edited by groundhog; 21-09-2014, 05:54 PM.
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Originally posted by groundhog View PostNo worries....
Generally youth service and charity/vol orgs - Have worked with kids in Yorkshire for the past twenty years and it's been a commonly used term for withdrawal. I've never heard of clucking uses round hear. But looking at the internet it seems both the workers and service users have been wrong!
Sent from deepest darkest Yorkshire, by magic..there's one for the next team meeting ay
It's interesting how language, and especially that adopted by young people on certain scenes can get transformed in an almost 'Chinese whispery' way
Sorry folks, I took that a bit off topic : /"Go you good things...geddem int'ya"
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Originally posted by groundhog View PostNo worries....
Generally youth service and charity/vol orgs - Have worked with kids in Yorkshire for the past twenty years and it's been a commonly used term for withdrawal. I've never heard of clucking used round here. But looking at the internet it seems both the workers and service users have been wrong!
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Stopping smoking shouldn't be an economic decision. The health cost is one of loss of quality and length of life, not mere money. We've all seen people suffer with crippling emphysema, COPD and long cancer. These are diseases that destroy your ability to live a satisfying life long before they end your life. Would they exist without smoking, yes but no where near as commonly nor would they progress as fast.
Cigarettes are far worse than cigars or pipes but we have to enjoy this hobby with the knowledge we are playing with addictive, toxic chemicals. Personally, I accept those risks so I smoke the odd cigar. Its probably no worse for me than binge drinking with the rugby club a couple of times a year. But I do so with my eyes open.
Sorry for the rant.
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This interests me because my health was the first issue my wife raised, so I went away and did a bit of research to understand just what kind of risk I was undertaking. We all take discretionary risks - from skydiving to DIY - and do so because there is some kind of reward or benefit, or at least avoidance of some kind of penalty. Most of the time, we don't even bother to quantify what those risks are. Has anyone who's been scuba diving, for example, read up on the incidence of diving accidents? Smoking is, of course, different, because it is so extensively written about, because the health warnings scream at us from every carton or box and because we are told that government taxes tobacco heavily because it is bad for us. It is also an extremely passionate debate!
I am neither a statistician nor medical professional, but it was important to me to come to a reasonably dis-passionate understanding of the risks. I didn't want to be told that 'hey, cigars are perfectly safe' because that seems no more plausible than assuming the dangers of cigar smoking are exactly equivalent to cigarette smoking. In fact, if the risks were the same as cigarette smoking, I would have gone no further, left the forum, thrown away my meagre collection of cigars and found something else to do.
I could write an essay on what I read but ultimately I feel that I am also doing this with my eyes open, with an understanding that the risks are acceptably small, given what I get out of it ... and I should probably get back to work ...
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undercover brother
Originally posted by Undercover View PostI could write an essay on what I read but ultimately I feel that I am also doing this with my eyes open, with an understanding that the risks are acceptably small, given what I get out of it ... and I should probably get back to work ...
in my view one stick a day is generally thought to be a acceptable level of risk for smoking cigars but sometimes i smoke more than taht in my opinion
bbsigpicVaya con Dios, Amigos! -don TJ and the
Coros
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I enjoy tobacco products, but I have to stop inhaling. Being a regular smoker, this is something that whilst I generally don't wish to give up, I realise that in terms of health and longevity it has to happen. We've two lads under five and keeping the financial boat afloat, and enjoying them, means I'm going to give it a go on/around my approaching 50th. I shan't abstain from cigars and a bowl though."Go you good things...geddem int'ya"
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I've been considering buying a motorbike to commute to work on so I can work more normal hours and not get stuck in the rush hour traffic. I've been put off by the accident statistics for motorbikes though, and to me the risks of injury or death from riding a motorbike are far greater than from smoking a couple of cigars per week. I do some other fairly dangerous stuff too that is more of a concern to me. I'd like to see some proper statistics about cigar smoking though, I have a feeling it is no where near as bad as drinking and a world apart from smoking cigarettes.
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