2Princes2Princesses
Heavily medicated for your safety!<br><font color=
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2006
- Messages
- 2,250
IMHO, A sweeping statement like "nonsmokers win, smokers lose" is going to get you a bunch of po'ed smokers smoking in their rooms. And I will tell you why I think that.....
Smokers are addicted. They know the habit is killing them, and if they say they don't, they have been living in a cave for the last 20 years.
Here are the facts on it:
Nicotine causes chemical or biological changes in the brain. This effect is called psychoactive and although it is less dramatic than heroin or cocaine, the strength of the addiction is just as powerful. It is a 'reinforcing' drug, which means that users desire the drug regardless of the damaging effects. For example, in research conducted in 1994, only 50% of smokers who suffered a heart attack managed to quit smoking even though their doctors advised them to. Coincidentally, 50% of all regular smokers die as a result of smoking.4
Nicotine addiction is a physical dependency. Withdrawal symptoms are severe and most smokers cannot quit on their first attempt because of these symptoms.
The human body builds a tolerance to nicotine and the effect of the drug is reduced over time. As a result, regular smokers can inhale greater amounts of smoke and therefore greater amounts of toxins, without showing immediate effects (ie coughing, nausea).
Nicotine is extremely poisonous if consumed in large amounts and most people feel sick and dizzy the first time they smoke. These negative affects are quickly overcome. Over time the body builds a tolerance to nicotine, resulting in an increase in the amount of cigarettes smoked.
And this fact has the most relevancy here:
A highly addicted smoker smokes more than 25 cigarettes a day, ranks the first cigarette in the day as the most important, and will smoke within 30 minutes of waking up.
Now, reading how powerful the addiction can be, factoring in the need for a cigarette almost immediately upon waking, can anyone else see why I think there will be people smoking in the rooms??
Say for your morning coffee, which most of us also are addicted to, would you want to get up, immediately put on clothes, and go stand outside for 10 minutes in an area away from your building in order to get that cup of coffee?
I don't think people should smoke in their nonsmoking rooms. With the balconies, I think it depends...at the ones where you are on top of each other?? No. I don't think those low walls at BWV are sufficient to keep the people next door from having to breathe smoke.
My wise DH hit the nail on the head. It is Disney's decision. We, even as smokers, think it is an excellent decision. But we also think smoking is gross, about to start our 75th attempt to quit. And as he said, alot of smokers are going to feel that Disney is basically saying to smokers, "you are gross and nasty, go to that isolated spot. We don't care about you as much as we care about nonsmokers."
Is that true? No....Disney wants everyone's $$ equally!!!
But people who are made to feel that way are going to be resentful, bitter, and possibly out to break the rules. Posts saying things like "thank goodness Disney did this, because smokers don't care about other people, and they probably blow smoke in their asthmatic kids faces and kick puppies!" are NOT going to encourage smokers to follow the new policy.
It is going to make them say "UP yours" and smoke where ever they want, and probably pay the fee with a big fat smile on their face.
Dh and I will follow the policy because I am that kind of person, I tend to put everyone else first regardless of how it makes me feel. DH will go along with me to avoid hearing me whine at him. But how many people are like that?
So....let's see....this is my approach.
To all my fellow smokers, this policy will be inconvenient. I don't smoke as much at WDW, so it is not a problem for me, but those of you who liked to enjoy that last smoke of the evening or that first early morning smoke with a nice hot cup o' joe on your balcony, I feel for you. I always have to drag my butt out (no pun intended) since my son has reactive airway disease, and I never smoke anywhere near him, not even on the balcony.
But, they are Disney's hotels, and they can do what they want with them. I hope the designated areas are nice. The ones in the parks are.....I love the one by the lake in MGM. I wonder where the new ones will be at the DVC resorts. Any ideas???
Smokers are addicted. They know the habit is killing them, and if they say they don't, they have been living in a cave for the last 20 years.
Here are the facts on it:
Nicotine causes chemical or biological changes in the brain. This effect is called psychoactive and although it is less dramatic than heroin or cocaine, the strength of the addiction is just as powerful. It is a 'reinforcing' drug, which means that users desire the drug regardless of the damaging effects. For example, in research conducted in 1994, only 50% of smokers who suffered a heart attack managed to quit smoking even though their doctors advised them to. Coincidentally, 50% of all regular smokers die as a result of smoking.4
Nicotine addiction is a physical dependency. Withdrawal symptoms are severe and most smokers cannot quit on their first attempt because of these symptoms.
The human body builds a tolerance to nicotine and the effect of the drug is reduced over time. As a result, regular smokers can inhale greater amounts of smoke and therefore greater amounts of toxins, without showing immediate effects (ie coughing, nausea).
Nicotine is extremely poisonous if consumed in large amounts and most people feel sick and dizzy the first time they smoke. These negative affects are quickly overcome. Over time the body builds a tolerance to nicotine, resulting in an increase in the amount of cigarettes smoked.
And this fact has the most relevancy here:
A highly addicted smoker smokes more than 25 cigarettes a day, ranks the first cigarette in the day as the most important, and will smoke within 30 minutes of waking up.
Now, reading how powerful the addiction can be, factoring in the need for a cigarette almost immediately upon waking, can anyone else see why I think there will be people smoking in the rooms??
Say for your morning coffee, which most of us also are addicted to, would you want to get up, immediately put on clothes, and go stand outside for 10 minutes in an area away from your building in order to get that cup of coffee?
I don't think people should smoke in their nonsmoking rooms. With the balconies, I think it depends...at the ones where you are on top of each other?? No. I don't think those low walls at BWV are sufficient to keep the people next door from having to breathe smoke.
My wise DH hit the nail on the head. It is Disney's decision. We, even as smokers, think it is an excellent decision. But we also think smoking is gross, about to start our 75th attempt to quit. And as he said, alot of smokers are going to feel that Disney is basically saying to smokers, "you are gross and nasty, go to that isolated spot. We don't care about you as much as we care about nonsmokers."
Is that true? No....Disney wants everyone's $$ equally!!!

It is going to make them say "UP yours" and smoke where ever they want, and probably pay the fee with a big fat smile on their face.
Dh and I will follow the policy because I am that kind of person, I tend to put everyone else first regardless of how it makes me feel. DH will go along with me to avoid hearing me whine at him. But how many people are like that?
So....let's see....this is my approach.
To all my fellow smokers, this policy will be inconvenient. I don't smoke as much at WDW, so it is not a problem for me, but those of you who liked to enjoy that last smoke of the evening or that first early morning smoke with a nice hot cup o' joe on your balcony, I feel for you. I always have to drag my butt out (no pun intended) since my son has reactive airway disease, and I never smoke anywhere near him, not even on the balcony.
But, they are Disney's hotels, and they can do what they want with them. I hope the designated areas are nice. The ones in the parks are.....I love the one by the lake in MGM. I wonder where the new ones will be at the DVC resorts. Any ideas???
