A year ago, disposable vapes had become hard to miss. They were in shop displays, coat pockets, school …
A year ago, disposable vapes had become hard to miss. They were in shop displays, coat pockets, school …
Wales’s leading tobacco control charity is today calling on all parties contesting the Senedd election to set out …
This No Smoking Day 2026, we are encouraging the estimated 260,000 people in Wales who smoke to consider …
Tiffany, 54, has lived in Cardiff all her life and now calls Llanishen home. She works as a …
John Weatherbed from Newport was just 14 years old when he smoked his first cigarette. Like many people …
The Senedd has voted to support the Legislative Consent Motion for the Tobacco and Vapes Bill, marking a …
This activity helps young people notice that pressure can come from confidence, noise, agreement or wanting to fit in. It encourages them to pause, question what is influencing them and make their own choice.
Cup Choice links to the way young people can feel pulled by the people around them.
Smoking, vaping or nicotine use can sometimes begin in small social moments: someone offers it, the group reacts, a friend sounds confident, or it feels like everyone else already knows what to do.
The activity helps young people notice how pressure can build, how confidence can influence a choice, and how useful it can be to pause before following the group.
Use fewer cups. Let young people work in pairs. Give a practice round before the discussion starts.
Add pressure cards. Give a few people secret prompts, such as “speak confidently”, “get others to agree” or “say everyone thinks it’s this one”. After the guess, ask what made it harder to choose.
Keep the discussion general and scenario based. Do not ask young people to share personal or family experiences of smoking, vaping or nicotine use. Follow your setting’s safeguarding process if a young person raises a concern.
Download the activity PDF or go back to the resource hub to find another activity.