Some people might wonder how big a difference there is in smoking tobacco as opposed to smoking marijuana. There really is not a difference as far as your lungs are concerned. One is probably about as bad as the other. The one big difference is the effect that happens to the brain. While smoking tobacco products is addictive and harmful to your health, a tobacco smoker does not really feel much change in his outlook or behavior during or after smoking. That is, until they can not have any tobacco when they want it.
Tobacco addiction does not impair your vision or judgment in the same way that marijuana will. However, when a tobacco user must go longer than they like to without a fix, so to speak, they can become nervous, irritable, and even depressed. This is because the brain looks forward to the chemicals that are released on a regular basis when a person smokes and when they stop smoking abruptly it can cause these symptoms. This is why it is so hard for people to quit because after a while your body craves the feel good reaction smoking causes.
We all know by now that smoking can cause lung cancer. Long before lung cancer has developed smoking can still cause breathing problems such as coughing, wheezing, and excessive amounts of phlegm. This is where the real similarities between smoking tobacco and smoking marijuana occur. Marijuana smokers will experience these same negative reactions in the lungs. While you might not receive the same kind of high with tobacco as you do marijuana, you will receive the same kind of lung damage.
Marijuana produces a euphoric feeling that is far more noticeable than with tobacco. It can make you feel relaxed and removed from normal feelings. This is one of the big attractions of smoking marijuana. Many people love that feeling they get when they have smoked marijuana. While some people believe that marijuana, like tobacco, is not really physically addictive in the same sense as other stronger drugs, those who use tobacco and marijuana might tell you different.
Whether you believe that smoking tobacco or marijuana either one is physically addictive or not, they do produce physical withdrawal symptoms in a sense. Even though much of the withdrawal is in the mind, it is still a very unpleasant task to try and kick either one of these nasty habits and sometimes it is necessary to seek help before a user can stop using these particular drugs.