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YoungAtHeart
Member

Early Withdrawal Symptoms

I copied this in the early days of my quit and thought it might be helpful to the newbies on the site.  The document was noted as written by Nancy Smith.

Nicotine's chemical properties are addictive. If you take that nicotine away from your body, it will miss it and you will experience physical and mental withdrawal symptoms.

These symptoms surface after three-five days of quitting smoking and linger for approximately two weeks. We list out some of these symptoms to help you prepare for these side-effects to smoking cessation. Rest assured that these symptoms, while some are unpleasant, will only be transitory and once you're rid of them, will leave you feeling much better after quitting smoking.

Emotional withdrawal
Depression: You may feel low, sad and hopeless. Hence,  it is important to surround yourself with people, preferably non smokers and friends who support your decision to quit smoking.
Anger: Emotional upheaval can make you angry. Others may not be aware of it, but you know what's happening to your body. The age-old remedy of counting to10 isn't such a bad idea. Stop, think, regain your calm and composure before losing your cool.
Boredom: You may have noticed that when you were bored, tired or depressed you tend to smoke. Now that you are on your way to a smoke free life replace these voids with hobbies or get involved with people around you. Pay more attention to your loved ones.
Loneliness: Withdrawal of smoking can make you feel lonely, impatient and irritable. If your friends are busy, take up a dance class or cooking class. It is important to expect these feelings of loneliness, so stay prepared.
Mood swing: Tempers will flare and tantrums will increase. These are not exactly PMS symptoms. Nicotine was once your evil friend but now you have to bear with the loss of the addiction. This will throw your emotional reactions to daily happenings into a tizzy. Most quitters will need help with these mood swings. Replace the smoking placebo with something else. Invest in some great music and strong coffee, maybe?

Physical withdrawal
Nicotine obstructs the flow of oxygen and nutrients to various parts of the body. Now that you have quit smoking, your body has to hit the reverse button to detox.
Bowel discomfort: It's time to change your diet and fitness once you quit smoking. Quitting smoking can cause cramps nausea, flatulence and constipation, therefore it is important to increase roughage and exercise your body.
Nasal and throat problems: When you stop smoking, your nose and throat will try to clear the mucous that has accumulated over the years. You may experience coughing, dry throat and mouth. Fluids are the key to clearing this process.
Increase in appetite: Craving for cigarettes can be confused with hunger cravings. The best way to stay healthy is to consume fluids and low calorie snacks.

Headaches: Lack of nicotine can lead to headaches, the way out of it is with massages, plenty of water and rest. Gently massage your temple, drink water, take a hot shower and take a deep breath.

Lack of sleep: You may experience insomnia after you quit smoking. Take a hot shower before you hit the sack, do breathing exercises too and most importantly avoid caffeine close to bed-time

Restlessness/lack of concentration: You feel like there is energy bursting in you; transfer this energy into something constructive. In these situations smokes would calm your nerves, but now switch off that thought and cultivate a new habit. You may feel you can't concentrate too; try listening to music or take a break from your routine life.
Weight gain: Increase in craving can lead to weight gain, especially if you indulge in unhealthy food. But don't be dejected, you can cut it out with exercise and the right diet.

Sweating and shaky hands and feet: You will feel that your hands and feet tremble. It is a passing phase that will stop. If you experience these withdrawals you know your body is simply shedding an addiction and leading you to a much healthier life.
Skin trouble: While quitting smoking is associated with healthier skin, the period of withdrawal will cause some skin trouble. Some people with sensitive skin might break out into a fresh acne case or suffer from some ulcers in the inner-cheeks, tongue and mouth. The reason is simply that your body is letting go of the toxins and leveling up.

Instead of losing motivation after reading these withdrawal symptoms, the one thought any quitter must focus on is this: The fact that your body is changing so much when quitting, simply showcases how much it is continuously changed and affected while you still smoke. Avoid poor health and dangerous diseases - stay quit!

Nancy

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51 Replies
jonimarie
Member

okay...got it. I keep ready about the water and will make sure to start carrying

hillaryshea
Member

This is so good to remember and keep at the forefront of your mind. What you're feeling is NORMAL and you're NOT ALONE.... but most importantly... IT WILL PASS! Just keep moving forward one day at a time!!  

Mward90
Member

This is wonderful!  Thank you so much.  It was great to be able to check off most of my concerns and just know they are withdrawal and not something else.

dudley87
Member

Oh wow! This was helpful! I’m five days in and noticed some of this! I’m breaking out on my neck with acne lol. Sweating off and on and I noticed some shaking in my hands yesterday lightly but was unsure so that makes sense. Educating myself on this nasty habit is very motivating 

Rosie1917
Member

The chest pain is the WORST! Lol! I just quit on December 28th and by Jan 1 I was in the ER. Had started getting chest pains and tightness and tingling hands and feet and my breathing was weird. They ran all the tests imaginable and found nothing seriously wrong. After following up with my rheumatologist and GP, they concluded it was not a flare, blood clot, hypertension, heart attack, nothing...just normal effects of my body working hard in repairing itself. 

Unfortunately, I have relapsed since then, and am on Chantix now (which I LOVE and highly recommend because it makes smoking not just dull but outright repulsive - even to smell cigarettes is a vile and painful experience), but am very much looking forward to this coming weekend where I can stub out my last cig and proudly become an ex again. And, this time I know that the chest pains are just my body healing up - kind of like the pain after a surgery. No pain, no gain!

PS. I too am regularly disappointed by the lack of phlegm for exactly the same reason. Have you quit before? I did, for three months, and had begun running daily. During that time, I hacked up rivers of phlegm so I think the lack of gunk being evacuated this time around is because I had already cleared a huge portion of it out in my last serious quit and it just hasn't had the time to build back up (a VERY good thing).

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YoungAtHeart
Member

Rosie1917 

When you are ready, I suggest you write a blog to introduce yourself to the community (Home-top left, then center blue box, "Post To My Blog").  You might include your quit date, your smoking history, why you want to quit, your quit date, the fact you are taking Chantix (I did, too and it worked for me!), and anything else you care to share.

Welcome!

Nancy

Grammy25
Member

Thank you so much this really helped me to understand a lot about what I am going through🤗

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MargieK
Member

@YoungAtHeart I have just read through this. I think it's great that you posted it. I have experienced quite of few of these myself, and there is  a few I didn't know could be caused from breaking my cigarette smoking. I feel more aware of what my body is actually going through now and I like the encouragement at the end.  So thank you for posting this on here ! Have a great day!

Sue7450
Member

@Sue7450 this post was extremely helpful. Thank you.

CommunityAdmin
Community Manager
Community Manager

@YoungAtHeart Hope you saw @Sue7450's post above -- love how much this post still resonates with Community members!

- Megan, EX Team

EX Community Admin Team
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