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Share your quitting journey

For those in no man's land and beyond who still are struggling with urges

healthyjayjo
Member
0 14 68

I found this on whyquit.com. These kinds of thoughts have been my downfall in the past. Now I'm on guard for them. Hope this helps.

                                       
     
      
       
        
         

The urges that happen weeks or months after initial quitting can catch you much more off guard than the urges encountered during the first few days. When you had an urge at 10:00 am the day you quit smoking, it was no big deal. You likely had one at 9:55 am just before it. In fact, the first few days if you went to long without an urge you would have felt something was wrong. Although, some people just have one urge that first day. It hits them when they wake up, goes away when they go to sleep, at which point they dream about smoking all night. In essence, it was chronic.

         

When you start to get more time under your belt not smoking, the triggers become more sporadic. At first separated by minutes, then hours, eventually days and weeks. But they still happen. When they occur after a long period of time they catch you much more off guard.

         

Also, in the beginning, when your guard is up and urges are frequent, you are constantly talking yourself through them. You are then basically reinforcing your resolve over and over again all day long. When you stop having chronic urges, you naturally stop reinforcing your resolve throughout the day. Then when the trigger hits, not having talked yourself through it very recently, you sometimes have a harder time mustering up the initial motivation for quitting and ammunition for staying off.

         

One other factor happens with time making urges feel stronger. You start to forget smoking but still remember the "good" cigarettes. You forget the ones you smoked automatically, paying no real attention to even as you smoked them. You forget the nasty one you despised as you smoked them. You forget all the associated annoyances that went with being a smoker. Then you start to remember the best cigarette you ever had in your life. If you focus on this cigarette without recalling all the others and the problems that went with the others, it is hard to not want it.

         

But that "one" cigarette concept is a fantasy. Not smoking will never be as good as that fantasy, but smoking will not be like that fantasy either. Smoking is what it was at the end, the day you quit-not what it was like early on when it initially hooked you. At the end, smoking was annoying enough to make you want to quit, even though you were going through a horrid withdrawal and psychological readjustment process to do it. You then understood that smoking was making life complicated, ruining your health and basically slowly killing you. Well, cigarettes haven't changed. Just your memories of them have.

         

Remember cigarettes as they really were, not how you wished they were. Then when the urge is triggered, you will have the ammunition to squelch it. You will recognize that you were just having a bad moment, when you were quitting you were having "bad days." When you were smoking you were a slave to a product that was killing you. You fought long and hard to overcome that control and you never want to relinquish your freedom of choice over such a deadly product again. To keep the control, remember, when the urge is triggered-never take another puff!

        
       
       
      
     

 

     
           
     
           
14 Comments
lisa11209
Member

Great piece, thank you so much for posting this.

vickys79
Member

Great blog. So very true. I hope those in no man's land read this and it helps them get through it.

JimTaddeo
Member

Here is something else to consider as well.......what is this URGE? Is it really an urge to smoke or is something else that we responded to BY SMOKING in the past and that is the tag or label we have put upon it? Good stuff! Great food for thought and positive action!

I personally find that I always have urges to do better, to FEEL better, to get some satisfaction and make better my way in this world and beyond to the best of my abilities and luck. I have the urge to do something and now I find positive things to do instead of negative.  

red34
Member

Thanks for the blog.. I had forgotton about no mans land..and am looking forward to getting there again..I appreciate and needed this reminder...I will be doing some reading on whyquit.com again.. It is a great resource and motivator..

JonesCarpeDiem

Great Blog Jill!

JonesCarpeDiem

Great Blog Jill!

pir8fan
Member

Thank you for this contribution Honey! May I hold your hand now?

mikecity
Member

Thanks for the advice.  I'm in no man's land.  I've read the cravings may be worse.  Thanks again.

maggie_8-1-2010

Jill, I am so gLad you found and posted this. Very helpfu for so many - a keeper and a repeater. You should repost this every once in a while - say every 30 - 60 days or so. Good job! My thoughts and prayers are still with you. Have a good day Jill.

Thomas3.20.2010
EXcellent Post, Jill! Right ON! I pray for you daily! Great Wallpaper BTW!
jojo_2-24-11
Member

Thanks sweetie, I really needed to hear that!

Ex_Nancy
Member

Love this Jill...xoxo

Sootie
Member

Amen  Jill!!!! Great blog and great reminder!

newlife5
Member

At the end, smoking was annoying enough to make you want to quit, even though you were going through a horrid withdrawal and psychological readjustment process to do it

... amen sister,amen