Let’s clear something up real quick: Nicotine doesn’t just mess with your lungs, your teeth and your wallet. It messes with your brain. Especially when you’re young. Whether it’s cigarettes, vapes or nicotine pouches, it can seriously impact how you feel, how you think and how you handle stress.
It’s all in how brains and chemicals work. So let’s talk about it.
FACT: Your brain keeps developing until about age 25.
That means it’s still wiring itself, especially the parts that control mood, focus, decision-making and emotions. Nicotine hijacks that process. When you use nicotine, your brain releases dopamine, a chemical linked to pleasure and motivation. (Sounds nice, right?) The problem is, your brain starts depending on nicotine to get that feeling. And over time, with repeat use, this can mess with how your brain naturally regulates your mood and leave you out of control of your own emotions.
So many studies have been linked to the ways in which all forms of nicotine can jack up your mental health, in ways that can be hard to reverse unless you commit to the quit:
A lot of people say nicotine helps them relax or cope with stress. But here’s the twist: Nicotine often creates the stress it claims to fix. When nicotine leaves your system, your brain wants more. That can cause anxiety, irritability and low mood, which then makes you want nicotine again. It’s a loop, not a solution. (And an expensive one, no less.)
One big misconception is that one nicotine product might be “healthier” or “less addictive” than another. (That would be a big “heck no.”) In fact, it’s a myth that vaping or pouches are somehow “better for you” than, say, a cigarette. Cigarettes are still full of nicotine like they’ve always been, vapes often deliver more nicotine than cigarettes and nicotine pouches don’t contain smoke but plenty of nicotine (it’s right there in the name, after all).
Different products. Same chemicals. Same brain effects.
If you’re thinking about cutting back or quitting nicotine, support is available. And it’s available for those 13 or older, not just adults and long-term smokers. Make the right choice for your mental health. Start the quit at SDQuitLine.com.
Free help. Real info. Your choice. Visit SDQuitLine.com to learn more.
Sources: Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, National Institute of Mental Health, U.S. Surgeon General, National Institute on Drug Abuse, American Academy of Pediatrics