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Berlin’s smoking culture drew me here. It also gave me a reason to finally quit

A weekend trip to Berlin in 2014 convinced me to live here, with one of the factors being the freedom to smoke in most bars. Six years on and one year after quitting, I have a very different view of the city’s attitude towards smoking.

Berlin's smoking culture drew me here. It also gave me a reason to finally quit
Source: dpa

I smoked my first cigarette when I was sixteen, in an attempt to convince my classmates that I was not the loser they thought I was. Those early, after-school smoking sessions made me nauseous. But, little by little, the effects became less obnoxious until one day, I was a smoker.

As the great quit-smoking author Allen Carr says: “everyone remembers their first cigarette, but no one remembers when they decided to become a smoker”.

The smoking ban came into effect in the UK in 2007 when I was eighteen, which meant that my love affair with nicotine took place mainly outdoors and ultimately reduced the amount I smoked to no more than a couple of packets a week.

But when I moved to Berlin and was able to smoke inside, I felt like a teenager again, which increased the feeling of excitement of being in this vibrant, laid back city. This was definitely the place for me. Smoking was no big deal, everybody did it and those who didn’t, didn’t seem to mind it.

An official smoking ban was introduced in Berlin on January 1st, 2008 but with its numerous exceptions and lax enforcement, you could be forgiven for thinking it doesn’t exist. So I smoked even more. 

READ ALSO: Opinion: Why Germany needs to take the smoking ban more seriously

All of my Berlin friends smoked, except one who had given up three years before we met and had never touched one since. I marvelled at her ability not to smoke and thought, maybe that will be me someday, but not now. I enjoy it too much. 

Being able to smoke inside made me feel like a teenager again. Source: dpa

In 2016 I started working for a property management company which required me to spend two days a week with their branch in deepest Marzahn. It was like a throwback to East Berlin in the 1960s and everyone smoked in the office. After eating lunch together every day in the meeting room, it was time for Kaffee und Kippen (Coffee and Cigarettes).

The office manager and her second in command would happily chain smoke four to five cigarettes from the cartons they had bulk-bought in Poland. Sometimes I could join them for a second cigarette, but after that my head started to spin and my eyes would glaze over as their conversation and cigarettes smouldered on.

READ ALSO: 'Long overdue': German coalition agrees to ban tobacco advertising

While I was working in this office my dad died. Although his death had nothing to do with cigarettes, it certainly sharpened my awareness of my own impending mortality. I decided it was time to finally act on this feeling of wanting to quit which had been nagging me for years.

Trying to quit

I went to a shiny new E-Cigarette shop in Friedrichshain, where a heavily tattooed local passionately talked me through all the latest in vaping technology and the pros and cons of each device in the glass display cabinet.

I invested in a sleek, turquoise contraption and over the next year I would enter into the cloud of sweet-smelling vapour of that shop at least once a fortnight to stock up on e-liquid. 

Replacing the cigarettes with an E-cigarette. Source: dpa

Despite the alluring array of liquids on offer, (all with ridiculous names, along the lines of Banana Pirate or Pineapple Geisha) I would always opt for the most tobacco-like variety. 

The E-Cigarette all but replaced the cigarette for me. But the problem was, I was sucking on that stick a lot more than I would ever have actually smoked. It became such a permanent feature that my boyfriend started nicknaming me Darth Vader.

And I was spending more than twice as much on the e-liquids than I had been previously spending on roll-up cigarettes (virtually the only cigarettes anyone smokes in Berlin). But the most absurd thing was that I was hooked on nicotine even more than ever. 

The dizzying choice of e-liquid flavours. Source: dpa

After about a year, I eventually gave up the E-cigarette and returned to smoking roll-ups. But it wasn’t the same as before. The cigarettes started to hit my lungs harder and I felt even worse about myself after a night of several beers and countless cigarettes. And I kept getting colds. When I got my fourth cold in as many months at the end of May last year, I thought – it’s time to stop. The habit was causing more mental and physical discomfort than it was giving me pleasure. 

So I stocked up on lollipops, chewing gums, boiled sweets and I stuck them in my mouth every time I thought about having a cigarette. For the first couple of weeks it was torturous. I steered clear of bars for that first fortnight, as I knew that enjoying a beer in a smoky environment would quadruple the difficulty of not lighting up. 

I remember being in the smoking area of Ä bar in Neukölln last July with a group of around fifteen people. Everybody drunk, everybody smoking. I was digging my nails into the sofa in frustration trying to hold back the overwhelming tide of desire to light up a smoke and join in. But I didn’t. And despite how hard it was, when I saw the pale faces and heard the scratchy voices of my friends in my kitchen the next morning, I was very glad that I hadn’t smoked. 

Although I still stank of it. 

Seeing smoking culture through different eyes

After that it started to get it easier. I kept my motivation levels up by reading and watching documentaries which debunk the myths that smoking is pleasurable and expose the insidious tactics employed by big tobacco companies to brainwash us into thinking that smoking is cool, relaxing and sexy. A myth, I began to realise, which was and is still pervasive in Berlin. 

The image of smoking gradually became less alluring. Source: dpa

I began to see the smoking culture in Berlin through different eyes. Instead of seeing it as a sign of an emancipated, liberal and free place, I started to see it as entrapment. If you ask any smoker if they would like to quit, even in Berlin, I guarantee you at least 90 percent will say yes.  So why do they keep doing it? Because they are trapped, not only by the addiction, but by the illusion that if they stop smoking, they will be sacrificing something pleasurable. 

It seems to me now that the whole city of Berlin is under this spell. It’s worried that if it stops allowing smoking in bars and clubs it will deprive its citizens of their freedom of choice. But this freedom is a myth.

After twelve months of quitting smoking, I am still at the beginning of my journey, but I can honestly say that I feel free. I have finally managed to shake off a dependency which made me feel guilty, dirty and sick, much more than it ever made me happy. If Berlin was to enforce the smoking ban more strictly, it wouldn’t be depriving its citizens of freedom, but helping them to claim it back.
 

Member comments

  1. Congrats on quitting; I wish you a new, favorite smoke-free bar and friends who will join you there. (I’m partially in Berlin and partially in another part of the former DDR, and I know, it’s hard to find smoke-free spots.) Keep up your motivation by remembering that quitting is a means of promoting social and environmental justice. You’re protecting the rights (and lungs) of wage workers in bars, combatting destructive forms of agriculture and waste, and taking a stand against child labor, which is pervasive in the tobacco industry. In other words, quitting is super sozial.

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HEALTH

Lengthy waiting times at Danish hospitals not going away yet: minister

Danish Minister for the Interior and Health Sophie Løhde has warned that, despite increasing activity at hospitals, it will be some time before current waiting lists are reduced.

Lengthy waiting times at Danish hospitals not going away yet: minister

The message comes as Løhde was set to meet with officials from regional health authorities on Wednesday to discuss the progress of an acute plan for the Danish health system, launched at the end of last year in an effort to reduce a backlog of waiting times which built up during the coronavirus crisis.

An agreement with regional health authorities on an “acute” spending plan to address the most serious challenges faced by the health services agreed in February, providing 2 billion kroner by the end of 2024.

READ ALSO: What exactly is wrong with the Danish health system?

The national organisation for the health authorities, Danske Regioner, said to newspaper Jyllands-Posten earlier this week that progress on clearing the waiting lists was ahead of schedule.

Some 245,300 operations were completed in the first quarter of this year, 10 percent more than in the same period in 2022 and over the agreed number.

Løhde said that the figures show measures from the acute plan are “beginning to work”.

“It’s positive but even though it suggests that the trend is going the right way, we’re far from our goal and it’s important to keep it up so that we get there,” she said.

“I certainly won’t be satisfied until waiting times are brought down,” she said.

“As long as we are in the process of doing postponed operations, we will unfortunately continue to see a further increase [in waiting times],” Løhde said.

“That’s why it’s crucial that we retain a high activity this year and in 2024,” she added.

Although the government set aside 2 billion kroner in total for the plan, the regional authorities expect the portion of that to be spent in 2023 to run out by the end of the summer. They have therefore asked for some of the 2024 spending to be brought forward.

Løhde is so far reluctant to meet that request according to Jyllands-Posten.

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