When you first began to transition from smoking to vaping, which aspects of this did you find the most challenging?
It was a different time back in 2014 — stop smoking services practically didn’t exist here. A pack of patches cost £25 to £30, gum was expensive, and there was no spray. Subsequently, a lot of people fell through the net.
When you compare the cost of a pack of five patches to the cost of a cheap cig-a-like that you can get from a local vendor, vaping provides much better value for money.
I was recommended a cig-a-like by a surgeon when I was having my gall bladder out, and he was one step ahead when you look back at that moment in hindsight. He knew that a pack of patches only really lasted a week and cost £25, which is a hell of an outlay – it’s not sustainable for most people.
Even though vaping is a much cheaper alternative to smoking and some of the ‘old school’ cessation methods you mentioned, did you underestimate how much liquid you needed at the start and actually overspend?
It was difficult to judge how much I needed initially. I started with the little cartomisers, and I didn’t have a clue how many I was going to go through because the battery was screwed in.
None of the e-cigarette reviewers or websites back then covered anything to do with smokers switching to vaping, so I spent a fortune on cartomisers. It turned out that one single cartomiser could last me two to three days, but because I didn’t know this, I had packs of the fu***g things lying around!
Thankfully, I still saved a bit of cash, as the retailer I bought them from was running a discount on bulk orders, but I definitely wouldn’t have bought as many had I known what I know now.
