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Give and get support around quitting

YoungAtHeart
Member

For Our New Years' Quitters (and community members, too)

I'm creating this discussion in the hope it will be helpful to all the New Years' Resolution Quitters, and to solicit comments from current community members, as well.  If you are new here, let us help!  If you have quit or are in the process, please give the newbies your best advice!

The most important thing you can do right now is to educate yourself on what nicotine does to your body and mind. To that end, I highly recommend Allen Carr's “The Easy Way to Stop Smoking.” This is an easy and entertaining read. You can search for a free pdf of it on the net (copyright enforcement won't allow me to post the link here), buy it online, or find it at your local library

 You should also read the posts here and perhaps go to the pages of folks who you think might be helpful. You might visit whyquit.com, quitsmokingonline.com and livewell.com for the good information contained there. Best of EX  has lots of blogs written by members of this site with their experiences and guidance. You should also do the tracking and separation exercises suggested in My Quit Plan My Quit Plan

After you have completed the recommended reading, it will be time to make an informed choice of the quit aid, if any, you will use. If you go that route, I personally recommend the aids that don't let the addict control the dose such as the available prescription drugs or the patch. If used properly, gum, lozenges and inhalers are fine, but they need to be used only as a last resort.  I have seen folks become addicted to them if they substitute them for every cigarette they used to smoke - just trading one addiction for another.  E-cigarettes are proving not to be as safe as originally thought, continue the hand-to-mouth motion and nicotine addiction,  - so I would stay away from them, as well.

The idea is to change up your routines so the smoking associations are reduced.  Drink your coffee with your OTHER hand. If you always had that first smoke with your coffee, try putting your tennies on right out of bed, going for a quick walk, then taking your shower and THEN your coffee! Rearrange the furniture in the areas you used to smoke so the view is different. Buy your gas at a different station. Take a different route to work. Take a quick walk at break time where the smokers AREN'T.

You need to distract yourself through any craves.  You can take a bite out of a lemon (yup - rind and all), put your head in the freezer and take a deep breath of cold air, do a few jumping jacks, go for a brisk walk or march in place, play a computer game.  Don't let that smoking thought rattle around in your brain unchallenged. Sometimes you need to quit a minute or an hour at a time.  You will need to be disciplined in the early days to distract yourself when a crave hits.    Get busy!  Here is a link to a list of things to do instead of smoke if you need some fresh ideas:

https://excommunity.becomeanex.org/blogs/Youngatheart.7.4.12-blog/2013/02/25/100-things-to-do-instea...

The conversation in your head in response to the "I want a cigarette" thought needs to be, "Well, since I have decided not to do that anymore, what shall I do instead for the three minutes this crave will last?"  Then DO it.  You will need to put some effort into this in the early days, but it gets easier and easier to do.

Stay close to us here and ask questions when you have them and for support when you need it. We will be with you every step of the way!

                                 ^4311A04E05BC47F07CDCF56849CF42CBAB93ACC213477253C0^pimgpsh_fullsize_distr.jpg

Nancy

57 Replies
micLaughlin22
Member

Me too me too

0 Kudos
micLaughlin22
Member

I am goin to stop smoking this week

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micLaughlin22
Member

i will do everything I can 

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Annetroue
Member

Thank you for the support I quite the 1 of the year and I am glad I did I started smoking at 14 now I will be 50 in April 

ednamaria1967
Member

Hola 

Llevo 51 dias sin fumar,lo hice durante 40 años pero es muy difícil 

Hedna Escudero
CommunityAdmin
Community Manager
Community Manager


@ednamaria1967 wrote:

Hola 

Llevo 51 dias sin fumar,lo hice durante 40 años pero es muy difícil 


Hola Hedna,
Felicitaciones por los 51 días libres de tabaco y bienvenidos a la comunidad. Es genial verte participar aquí. Creo que hay muchas oportunidades para usted aquí en su viaje para dejar de fumar. Como puede ver, la mayoría de las personas aquí publican en inglés, pero no deje que eso sea una barrera para usted. Publique en español y haremos todo lo posible para apoyarlo. Lo maravilloso es que si usas Google Chrome tendrá una opción para Traducir el texto al español del inglés. También estamos trabajando en algunas actualizaciones más para que una mayor parte de la experiencia sea en español. Disculpe que mis publicaciones utilicen Google Translate, así que lo siento si a veces están redactadas de manera extraña. Estoy empezando a aprender español, así que espero que mi gramática mejore con el tiempo.
EX Community Admin Team
0 Kudos
TBDDAJ
Member

I counted them this morning!

0 Kudos
micLaughlin22
Member

  • <bottom> I wish I could get off for good
0 Kudos

If You've Not Yet Quit

A Way To Begin Changing Your Smoking Routine & Consumption Without Counting Or Stress

Where Does It Come From? 

Once You're Ready

/blogs/jonescarp.aka.dale.Jan_2007-blog/2011/06/26/what-to-expect-in-the-first-four-months 

elvan
Member

Nancy,

What a beautiful idea...I hope newbies and elders and everyone in between reads this...I hope everyone contributes.  We ARE a village!

Remember that no crave ever killed anyone...it WILL pass if you ALLOW it to and you don't fight it every single step of the way.  Allow it to happen, recognize WHY it is happening and then deal with THAT.  If you are completely honest with yourself, you will see that smoking does nothing FOR you...I can promise you that it does things TO you, in a silent and sneaky way...damaging organs, damaging your skin, stunting your emotional growth.  If you make a commitment, make a plan, and stick to it, stay close to this site and accept the advise and support given, you will be stunned at how much growth you will experience...you will be allowing yourself to grow and to become the person you were always meant to be.  I PROMISE you that it does get easier...you cannot smoke just one, they travel in packs and your mantra needs to be NOPE, Not One Puff Ever.  I said it over and over and over again at the beginning of my quit, sometimes silently and sometimes out loud.  You CAN do this and everyone with a successful quit had to start at the beginning.  Smoking does not relieve stress, it does not take away depression, it does not help with physical pain, it does not help you to focus, it does not do any of the things that it has convinced you that it does.  You are an addict and you have to accept that your recovery from this addiction has to be one day at a time...or shorter lengths of time, if needed.  You are not alone, you CAN do this.  NEVER QUIT QUITTING...

We all want you to be successful.

Ellen