{{{{{{{Scribble}}}}}}} don't give up that fight. You made it once and you can make it again. I managed to give up smoking 35 years ago by switching to chocolate instead. The side effects are somewhat extensive (in every meaning of the word), but being plump is still a lot better than having lung cancer.![]()
My dad says chewing gum is best to stop smoking because you can have it in your mouth all the time, like a cigarette. (I loathe gum, hence the chocolate.)
Expanding our "horizons" are we?

I had quit before with vaping. Smelling like strawberries and cream was much more pleasant than smelling like an ashtray, for sure. I'd gradually reduced the amount of nicotine in my juice (I mixed my own from raw ingredients) until there was no nicotine at all. It really was an oral fixation (no comments from the peanut gallery!) for a lot of it. Not all, though.
Vaping, as it turns out, is not quite as healthy an alternative as was once pushed. I guess that last word is one clue to that fact. I also coughed and hacked a lot more than while I'm a smoker. Lastly, even though others could smell the scent of my fluid, I could not taste anything other than an intermittent hint from time to time. Other than that, it was just a feeling rather than a taste.
And not making excuses here, but I tend to swallow gum shortly after the taste disappears (yes, I also eat the shells of salted in-the-shell peanuts).