Nicotine [English], by Chakayama Tokoroten
A newly married wife, a former delinquent girl who married her teacher, wants to quit smoking. However, withdrawal symptom pains are no jokes, she’s in pain. Fortunately, she finds just in time the safest alternative to cigarette addiction : sex addition, of course =)
Fuck magazine censorship, I don’t care if there weren’t enough pages with actual penetration sex, this was super cute, good vanilla hentai, and I strongly recommend it to everyone ! Great release, Rookie84 !
Open the Complete Pictures Gallery (or the backup gallery)
Here comes the zip link! Help yourselves! ^^
(12 MB, 16 pictures, English)
Or you can also use the Alternative :
Zip Mirror #1 – or – Zip Mirror #2
I never really understood people who say it’s hard to break addictions.
I used to smoke. Then I stopped. I had an urge to smoke for a few weeks, but it was easy to ignore.
Even now, I’m a heavy coffee drinker; have been for over 10 years. I probably drink a lot more than what is healthy. But now and then, I forget to buy more coffee and have to go without for a while. Once, I forgot to buy coffee and forgot to buy more for an entire month, and I wasn’t affected at all.
Aren’t people exaggerating about addictions?
Because I can’t relate at all.
depends on how much you smoke.. some people smoke CRAZY amounts and it just gets into their system, its pretty much air to them, some part of it is also phychological. Quitting smoking if you are a chain smoker takes alot of resolve as it really will bit you in the ass when you quit. Coz there are chemicals in cigs youre body has grown accustomed with and without the constant supply of those youre body will usually react negatively til it gets used to the new situation.
as per Caffeine addiction its not as bad, caffeine affects people differently. When youre a heavy coffee drinker and stop drinking it for a while, you usually just get weak as youre body is used to huge amount stimulants. but for some even that is not really noticable. it is different for smoking though. IF you didnt really get affected when you quit smoking you jsut werent smoking enough. i know chain smokers who use up a pack or 2 every day, sometimes more than that.
It could be that your brain is built differently. My guess your brain doesnt produce quite as much of the "need chemicals" (I don't remember what they're called, and there's more than one so I don't have time to look them all up) as others do, so you don't feel it nearly as bad as the common consensus.
I've been addicted to soda since I was a toddler and always thought that it was the caffeine keeping me hooked. When I switched to caffeine free for a year as a measure to work my way up to quitting I thought I'd be set, but I'm just as addicted to the Free as I am to the normal. Your brain produces a "need chemical" that makes it just as hard to quit the actual act as the addictive substance itself.
The most likely explanation is that you were able to unconsciously do the one thing that helps people stop an addiction, KEEP YOUR MIND OFF IT. If you're able to completely forget about something and keep it off your mind then it wont control you.
So other people aren't overstating nicotine addiction, you're UNDER stating it because it never got its hooks in you like it does most people
I did smoke a lot.
Started smoking because the cool kids did. Kept it up for 4 years after that. I didn’t go through a pack a day, usually, but at least 4 or 5 deathsticks per day minimum. I only stopped because I once had the option to buy either cigarettes or a coke. It was hot that day and didn’t have money for both.
I decided smokes were too expensive after that and just stopped ‘cold turkey,’ as they say. It wasn’t a great battle of willpower. It wasn’t even difficult. It’s not like I didn’t feel like smoking at all, I did; I just ignored it until I forgot about it.
Because of my personal experience with nicotine addiction, stories that makes it out to be some sort of epic struggle just feels wrong. I’ve had greater struggles with stairs, having lived on the third floor of an apartment building for years.
Some people have it easy. I know my grandfather struggled with quitting all his life, and only finally quit a couple years ago because his doctor forced him too (he would die if he kept smoking; he's got emphysema). He had tried to quit throughout his life, but each time failed, and the failure made him feel horrible about himself, and thus it made the next time even harder to quit. My father only quit smoking because my mother said she wouldn't marry him if he didn't quit. But even then, he snuck out and smoked for years with high school and college buddies. I remember seeing him sneak out, though he still denies that he smoked while we were growing up. But now he thinks they're disgusting and has no desire to touch the stuff. But he also doesn't really spend any time with his smoker friends anymore. Once he cut himself off from them, he pretty much cut himself off from the social aspect.
And then my brother got into smoking in high school, and he still hasn't quit, and hides it from the family, because our family is so anti-smoking. He pretends he doesn't, and he can't get himself to quit, even though he wants to.
My point is, the psychology of addiction – the people you surround yourself with, the family situation you were brought up with, guilt and desire and all those little demons that bite you in the ass in the end – these are intertwined with the psychiatry of addiction, that is to say, the chemicals in nicotine that make it so that your body craves more and goes through withdrawal if you don't get it. Some people are hit with worse withdrawal because of their psychology, and then some people are hit with worse withdrawal because of the psychiatry of their brain (the way their brain formed pathways as they grew up, and the way they were born due to genetic inheritance).
It's great that you didn't have an epic struggle with addiction, but you have to understand that some people DO have epic struggles with addiction, because they were not as well psychologically or psychiatrically prepared to use an addictive substance as you were. And really, that's something that you really can't know whether you will be or not until you get addicted. This is why it is recommended by doctors to stay away from addictive drugs altogether. Some people CAN quit. Others, just one cig, and they're hooked for life. It's dangerous. You were one of the lucky ones, and you should be happy about that.
I know people have trouble with it.
I'm just saying is that I can't relate because my personal experience with it is fundamentally different.
Gotcha.
This really made my day, vanilla, funny moments and a nice drawing style.
Thanks so much Oliver for the share, and thanks to Rookie84 for his work.
Best hentai I've read in a very long while. Stands on top together with the likes of Dr. P and Homunculus.
(By the way, am I the only one that thinks that this story could EASILY span a whole volume and be much better than most modern romances?)
I think it could be awesome. I'd love to see something like this, maybe less porn and more story, on Batoto. >_>
Then again, that would defeat the entire purpose. But yes, I could see a whole volume on this. I could also see someone writing a story about it.
My one problem with this comic was that he said, "She's more aggressive than usual." That's a cliché line used by the Japanese because wives are supposed to be meek, and you see it in hentai EVERYWHERE. But this girl was supposed to be a delinquent. Why isn't she USUALLY aggressive?