from Doctor Ernest Dichter’s The Psychology of Everyday Living (1947)
None of the much flaunted appeals of cigarette advertisers, such as
superior taste and mildness, induces us to become smokers or to choose
one brand in preference to another. Despite the emphasis put on such
qualities by advertisers, they are minor considerations. This is one of
the first facts we discovered when we asked several hundred people,
from all walks of life, why they liked to smoke cigarettes. Smoking is
as much a psychological pleasure as it is a physiological satisfaction.
As one of our respondents explained: “It is not the taste that counts.
It’s that sense of satisfaction you get from a cigarette that you can’t
get from anything else.”
Smoking is Fun
What is the nature of this psychological pleasure? It can be traced to
the universal desire for self-expression. None of us ever completely
outgrows his childhood. We are constantly hunting for the carefree
enjoyment we knew as children. As we grew older, we had to subordinate
our pleasures to work and to the necessity for unceasing effort.
Smoking, for many of us, then, became a substitute for our early habit
of following the whims of the moment; it becomes a legitimate excuse
for interrupting work and snatching a moment of pleasure. “You
sometimes get tired of working intensely,” said an accountant whom we
interviewed, “and if you sit back for the length of a cigarette, you
feel much fresher afterwards. It’s a peculiar thing, but I wouldn’t
think of just sitting back without a cigarette. I guess a cigarette
somehow gives me a good excuse.”
Smoking is a Reward
Most of us are hungry for rewards. We want to be patted on the back. A
cigarette is a reward that we can give ourselves as often as we wish.
When we have done anything well, for instance, we can congratulate
ourselves with a cigarette, which certifies, in effect, that we have
been “good boys.” We can promise ourselves: “When I have finished this
piece of work, when I have written the last page of my report, I’ll
deserve a little fun. I’ll have a cigarette.”
The first and last cigarette in the day are especially significant
rewards. The first one, smoked right after breakfast, is a sort of
anticipated recompense. The smoker has work to do, and he eases himself
into the day’s activities as pleasantly as possible. He gives himself a
little consolation prize in advance, and at the same time manages to
postpone the evil hour when he must begin his hard day’s work. The last
cigarette of the day is like “closing a door.” It is something quite
definite. One smoker explained: “I nearly always smoke a cigarette
before going to bed. That finishes the day. I usually turn the light
out after I have smoked the last cigarette, and then turn over to
sleep.”
Smoking is often merely a conditioned reflex. Certain situations, such
as coming out of the subway, beginning and ending work, voluntary and
involunatary interruptions of work, feelings of hunger, and many others
regulate the timetable of smoking. Often a smoker may not even want a
cigarette particularly, but he will see someone else take one and then
he feels that he must have one, too.
While to many people smoking is fun, and a reward in itself, it more
often accompanies other pleasures. At meals, a cigarette is somewhat
like another course. In general, smoking introduces a holiday spirit
into everyday living. It rounds out other forms of enjoyment and makes
them one hundred per cent satisfactory.
Smoking is Oral Pleasure
As we have said, to explain the pleasure derived from smoking as taste
experience alone, is not sufficient. For one thing, such an explanation
leaves out the powerful erotic sensitivity of the oral zone. Oral
pleasure is just as fundamental as sexuality and hunger. It functions
with full strength from earliest childhood. There is a direct
connection between thumbsucking and smoking. “In school I always used
to chew a pencil or a pen,” said a journalist, in reply to our
questions. “You should have seen the collection I had. They used to be
chewed to bits. Whenever I try to stop smoking for a while, I get
something to chew on, either a pipe or a menthol cigarette. You just
stick it in your mouth and keep on sucking. And I also chew a lot of
gum when I want to cut down on smoking….”
The satisfied expression on a smoker’s face when he inhales the smoke
is ample proof of his sensuous thrill. The immense power of the
yearning for a cigarette, especially after an enforced abstinence, is
acknowledged by habitual smokers. One of our respondents said: “When
you don’t get a cigarette for a long time and you are kind of on pins,
the first drag goes right down to your heels.”
The Cigarette — A Modern Hourglass
Frequently the burning down of a cigarette functions psychologically as
a time indicator. A smoker waiting for someone who is late says to
himself, “Now I’ll smoke one more cigarette, and then I am off.” One
person explained, “It is much easier to watch a cigarette get smaller
and smaller than to keep watching a clock and look at the hands
dragging along.”
In some countries, the farmers report distances in terms of the number
of pipes, as, for example, “It’s about three pipes from here to
Smithtown.”
A cigarette not only measures time, but also seems to make time pass
more rapidly. That is why waiting periods almost autuomatically
stimulate the desire to smoke. But a deeper explanation of this
function of smoking is based on the fact that smoking is ersatz
activity. Impatience is a common feature of our times, but there are
many situations which compel us to be patient. When we are in a hurry,
and yet have to wait, a cigarette gives us something to do during that
trying interval. The experience of wanting to act, but being unable to
do so, is very unpleasant and may even, in extreme cases, cause attacks
of nervous anxiety. Cigarettes may then have a psychotherapeutic
effect. This helps to explain why soldiers, waiting for the signal to
attack, sometimes value a cigarette more than food.
“With a Cigarette I Am Not Alone”
Frequently, our respondents remarked that smoking cigaretees is like
being with a friend. Said one, “When I lean back and light my cigarette
and see the glow in the dark, I am not alone any more….” In one
sense, a cigarette seems to be something alive. When it is lighted it
appears to be awakened, brought to life. In a French moving picture
(Daybreak) the hunted criminal, played by Jean Gabin, holds out as long
as he has his cigarettes. He barricades himself against the police and
stands siege courageously for some time — until his last cigarette is
gone. Then he gives up.
The companionable character of cigarettes is also reflected in the fact
that they help us make friends. In many ways, smoking has the same
effect drinking has. It helps to break down social barriers. Two
smokers out on a date light up a cigarette as soon as they get into
their car. “It’s just the right start for an evening,” they say.
Immediately they feel at ease, for they have found an interest they
both share.
We could report many true anecdotes to illustrate how cigarettes bring
people together. One such story was related by a middle-aged lady: “A
long time ago, on a steamer, there was a boy I was quite eager to
meet… but there was no one to introduce us…. The second day out, he
was siting at a table right next to me, and I was puffing away at my
cigarette. The ashes on my cigarette were getting longer and longer,
and I had no ash tray. Suddenly he jumped up and brought me one. That’s
how the whole thing started. We are still happily married.”
“I Like to Watch the Smoke”
In mythology and religion, smoke is full of meaning. Its floating
intangibility and unreal character have made it possible for
imaginative man to see therein mystery and magic. Even for us moderns,
smoke has a strong fascination. To the cigarette smoker, the clouds he
puffs out seem to represent a part of himself. Just as most people like
to watch their own breath on cold winter days, so they like to watch
cigarette smoke, which similarly makes one’s breath visible. This
explains the emotional attitudes of many toward smoke. “Smoke is
fascinating,” said one of the people we interviewed. “I like to watch
the smoke. On a rainy day, I sort of lie in a haze in the middle of the
room and let my thoughts wander while I smoke and wonder where the
smoke goes.”
The desire to make things is deep-rooted — and smoke is manufactured
by the smoker himself. Smoking provides satisfaction because it is a
playful, creative activity. This fact was well stated by one cigarette
devotee as follows: “It’s a fascinating thing to watch the smoke take
shape. The smoke, like clouds, can form different shapes…. You like
to sit back and blow rings and then blow another rings through the
first ones. You are perfectly relaxed.”
“Got a Match?”
Some of the appeals of a lighted cigarette derive from the appeals of
fire in general. Fire is the symbol of life, and the idea of fire is
surrounded by much superstition. In this connection, it is interesting
to note that traces of superstition can be seen in the smoking habits
of modern man. For instance some people never will light three
cigarettes on one match. It is said that this superstition is based on
experiences during World War I. As three soldiers were lighting up the
third man was hit when the light of a match flared up for the last
time. Our custom of lighting another smoker’s cigarette for him may
sometimes have an erotic significance, or it may serve as a friendly
gesture. Match and cigarette are contact points.
Smoking Memories
Certain moments in our lives are closely linked with cigarettes. These
situations often leave on people’s memories an important imprint never
to be forgotten. Here is such an occasion, described by an office clerk
of twenty-one. “…I can remember the moments when I returned home - no
matter how late - after having been out with a girl on a Saturday
night. Before going to bed, I’d sit on the fire escape for a while and
enjoy a smoke. I’d turn around so that I could see all the smoke going
up. At the same time, the windows would be bright with lights on the
other side of the courtyard. I would watch what the people were doing.
I would sit, and watch, and think about what my girl and I had talked
about and what a nice time we had had together. Then I’d throw the
cigarette away and go to bed. I feel these were really the most
contented moments in my life….”
“I remember one time we were in North Africa on a trip and it was
evening,” said one of our respondents, a nurse about twenty-seven years
of age. “During the day, I had noticed there was a lovely spot to sit,
across the way from the hotel where we were staying. I went there at
night, and sat looking at the stars and the tall cypresses illuminated
against the night sky. I was far away in my thoughts. I was thinking of
God and the beautiful world he had made. The smoke from my cigarette
rose slowly into the sky. I was alone, and at the time I was a part of
all the world around me….”
Smoking Mannerisms
Usually the way we smoke is characteristic of our whole personality.
The mannerisms of smokers are innumerable. Some people always have
cigarettes drooping from their mouths. Others let the cigarette jump up
and down in their mouths while they are talking. Men sometimes complain
about the way women smoke: “A lot of women blow out the smoke with a
gust of wind, right into your face. They just puff it at you.” Some
men, when they want to appear to be aggressive, hold their cigarettes
with thumb and forefinger so that the glowing end shows toward the palm
of the hand.

Often smokers will assume a pose, because they have found that it fits
their personality best, or at least they think so. A not too modest
glamor girl revealed to us some of her “smoking secrets”: “I think it
looks so much better to smoke with a holder. I studied that very
carefully. Don’t you think I’m somewhat of a Latin type? It all really
depends on what type you are…. I always have holders that are long
and dark. I think a long holder is somewhat like a big hat: it’s
alluring and ‘don’t dare come close’ at the same time.”
While every smoker has to go through the motions of lighting and
inhaling the smoke, the way in which these acts are carried out varies
according to his mood. The nervous smoker has a faster smoking tempo
than the relaxed one. The angry smoker blows the smoke in an aggressive
way, almost as if he were trying to blow somebody down. A smoker who is
about to ask for a raise in salary will press his lips tightly around
the cigarette as if to gain courage by holding it that way.
“Smoking Helps Me Think”
The mind can concentrate best when all outside stimuli have been
excluded. Smoking literally provides a sort of “smoke screen” that
helps to shut out distractions. This explains why many people who were
interviewed reported that they cannot think or write without a
cigarette. They argued that moderate smoking may even stimulate mental
alertness. It gives us a focal point for our attention. It also gives
our hands something to do; otherwise they might make us self-conscious
and interfere with mental activity. On the other hand, our respondents
admit that smoking too much may reduce their efficiency.
Cigarettes Help Us to Relax
One shortcoming of our modern culture is the universal lack of adequate
relaxation. Many of us not only do not know how to relax, but do not
take time to learn. Smoking helps us to relax because, like music, it
is rhythmic. Smoking gives us a legitimate excuse to linger a little
longer after meals, to stop work for a few minutes, to sit at home
without doing anything that requires effort. Here is a nostalgic
comment contributed by a strong defender of smoking: “After a long
day’s work, to get home and sit in a chair and stretch my legs ‘way
out, and then to sit back and just smoke a cigarette and think of
nothing, just blow the smoke in the air - that’s what I like to do when
I’ve had a pretty tough day.” The restful effect of moderate smoking
explains why people working under great stress use more tobacco.
“I Blow My Troubles Away”
In times of high tension, cigarettes provide relief, as indicated by
the following typical comments of one of our respondents: “When I have
a problem, and it comes back and back, warningly saying, ‘Well, what
are you going to do about this?’ a cigarette almost acts like a
consolation. Somehow it relieves the pressure on my chest. The feeling
of relief is almost like what you feel in your chest after you have
cried because something has hurt you very much. Relaxing is not the
right kind of word for that feeling. It is like having been in a stuffy
room for a long time and at last getting out for a deep breath of air.”
That man’s explanation comes very close to stating the scientific
reason why smoking brings relief. Worry, anxiety, depress us not only
psychologically but also physiologically. When a person feels
depressed, the rhythm of his breathing becomes upset. A short and
shallow breath creates a heavy feeling in the chest. Smoking may
relieve mental depression by forcing a rhythmic expansion of the breast
and thus restoring the normal pace of breathing. The “weight on the
chest” is removed.
This connection between smoking and respiration accounts for the common
expression, “Smoking helps us to let off steam.” When we are enraged,
we breathe heavily. Smoking makes us breath more steadily, and thus
calms us down.
Cigarette Taste Has to Be Acquired
Most people like the smell of tobacco but dislike the taste of a
cigarette. Frequently we were reminded that “a cigarette never tastes
as good as it smells. One usually very much dislikes his first
cigarette. Taste for cigarettes must be acquired slowly. And whenever a
smoker tries out a new brand, with a lightly different taste, he finds
that he has to repeat this process of becoming accustomed to the taste.
Often smokers who say they do not like the taste of certain brands
really mean that they are not accustomed to it. Few advertisers of
cigarettes realize that it takes time for a smoker to change his taste
habits. No matter how pleasant the taste qualities of a brand may seem
to be, at first the unaccustomed taste will be disliked. One of our
respondents made the following interesting comment on this point: “I
went to Bulgaria once and was forced to smoke Bulgarian cigarettes. I
tried one brand after another till I had gone through five brands.
Finally, the sixth brand seemed to be perfect. I discovered much later
that any of the other brands might have become my preferred brand if
only I had tried it in the sixth place. It just took me that long to
learn to appreciate Bulgarian tobacco.”
How Many a Day?
Despite all the millions spent on comparing the potentially harmful
effects of different brands of cigarettes, our respondents seemed very
little concerned about this matter. But all of them, even those who do
not smoke excessively, worry abbout the quantities they smoke.
Scientific and medical studies on the physiological effects of smoking
provide a confused picture: Some conclude that smoking is harmful;
others deny it. This same confusion prevails among smokers themselves.
Nevertheless, all of them worry about smoking too many cigarettes, as
shown by the fact that nearly everyone has tried, at one time or
another, to “cut down on” smoking. “I’ll tell you something I do,” one
smoker confided. “I give up smoking cigarettes every year for one
month, and I say to myself that I’ll prove to myself I can still do
without them.” Periodic abstemiousness of this kind indicates an
underlying feeling of guilt. Such individuals really think that
constant smoking is not only harmful, but also a bit immoral. Efforts
to reduce the amount of smoking signify a willingness to sacrifice
pleasure in order to assuage their feeling of guilt.
The mind has a powerful influence on the body, and may produce symptoms
of physical illness. Guilt feelings may cause harmful physical effects
not at all caused by the cigarettes used, which may be extremely mild.
Such guilt feelings alone may be the real cause of the injurious
consequences.
The First Cigarette
Much of this guilt feeling can be traced directly to one’s first
cigarette, which the older generation remember as a forbidden and
sinful thing. Their fathers considered the habit an educational
problem, whereas many parents nowadays have adopted a “modern” attitude
toward smoking. Here is what one such father said: “I told my son I
thought he was a little young… He is seventeen. It might not do him
any harm to wait another year or two. Then I remembered my own first
cigarette and what awful stuff I had to smoke in secret. In a way, my
son is lucky to be able to start with a good cigarette without running
the danger of ruining his health. I gave him a pack of the brand I
smoke.”
Most of us remember vividly the first cigarette we smoked. “I certainly
remember my first cigarette,” said one of our respondents. “We were a
bunch of boys on our way to a football game. I had trouble lighting my
cigarette, and at that moment a man passed by and yelled at me: ‘Throw
that cigarette away, you rascal!’ I was so shocked and frightened that
I obeyed his command without hesitation. But only a few minutes later,
I lighted another one just to demonstrate to myself that I was not
afraid.
“No, Thanks, I’ll Smoke My Own”
This is the reply of most smokers when they are offered a brand
different from their own. Brand loyalty among smokers is strong and
persistent. Individuals smoke one brand consistently, so that they
become identified with it. A guest who discovers that his host smokes
the same brand considers this a personal flattery. If a young lady
changes to the brand of an admirer, he understands that he has surely
made an impression. Here is the experience of one young man, and his
interpretation of it: “I was very fond of a girl. She was giving a
farewell party before leaving the country. I didn’t have any idea how I
stood in her affection. The only clue was that at her party she had my
brand of cigarettes. I always felt that that was in deference to me.”
“My brand” has a special significance, as if it were a part of the
smoker’s credo and personality.
A Package of Pleasure
A new pack of cigarettes gives one a pleasant feeling. A full, firm
pack in the hand signifies that one is provided for, and gives
satisfaction, whereas an almost empty pack creates a feeling of want
and gives a decidely unpleasant impression. The empty pack gives us a
feeling of real frustration and deprivation.
During the seventeenth century, religious leaders and statesmen in many
countries condemned the use of tobacco. Smokers were excommunicated by
the Church and some of them were actually condemned to death and
executed. But the habit of smoking spread rapidly all over the world.
The psychological pleasures derived proved much more powerful than
religous, moral, and legal persuasions. As in the case of the
prohibition experiment in the United States, repressive measures seem
to have aroused a spirit of popular rebellion and helped to increase
the use of tobacco.
If we consider all the pleasure and advantages provided, in a most
democratic and international fashion, by this little white paper roll,
we shall understand why it is difficult to destroy its power by means
of warnings, threats, or preachings. This pleasure miracle has so much
to offer that we can safely predict the cigarette is here to stay. Our
psychological analysis is not intended as a eulogy of the habit of
smoking, but rather as an objective report on why people smoke
cigarettes. Perhaps this will seem more convincing if we reveal a
personal secret: We ourselves do not smoke at all. We may be missing a
great deal.
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