bookmark_borderLoofah self-abuse explained

“Research into tobacco dependence published online today (Friday 17 October 2008) in the November issue of Addiction, has shown that recent ex-smokers who find exposure to other people’s cigarette smoke pleasant are not any more likely to relapse than those who find it unpleasant.”

But what about those of us who find it both pleasant and unpleasant at the very same time? That’s me. I smell cigarettes and I feel an overwhelming desire to light up coupled with an equally overwhelming desire to escape the foul smell.

I think this must have something to do with the fact that I was hypnotized. Maybe that’s why I also whack myself in the head with the loofah when I’m taking a shower.

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My pharmacist is named Steven. He and his wife Tiffany run their own little community pharmacy.

Steven and Tiffany know my name, too. And over the years they have helped me in so many ways — with potential (and realized) allergic reactions, addressing my concerns about my medications and with my smoking cessation efforts —just to name a few. They make me feel like a person — not a number.

They care and so do I.

StopCuts.ca