cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Share your quitting journey

How and why I quit smoking

sdk789
Member
4 8 125

I remember it was a girl. It was 1977 and I was 17 years old and I met her at the local swimming pool. She was beautiful and sexy and a smoker. She lit one up and said "Come on...try it....it will make you look cool and hip and older." etc. I didn't care about all that but what I cared about was getting my "hedge clipped" if you know what I mean. Come on, I was a stupid 17 year old kid with my hormones raging. So I did. I smoked one and then another and within a day or two, I was hooked. But who cares? I got what I wanted. 🙂 Yeah....now I care.

In July of 2017, as my birthday was getting close, I thought to myself "Wow....I have been smoking for 40 years" and it's fixin to be 41 years. Then I thought "No way! There is no way I am going to tell people I have smoked for 41 years......no more....that's it......I am DONE. From now on I am going to say "I quit smoking a month ago....a year ago and maybe some day.....40 years ago" instead. I quit on that day and I am proud to say it has been 54 days since I touched a smoke. Not the longest I have gone but this is different.

Yes I have tried to quit many times throughout my life. The longest I say I went without smoking was 3 months but I didn't really quit. I would bum one here and there from friends when we were all hooched up and drinking together. Bum one after a meal. Bum one after a good hedge clipping. And I would smoke one here and there when my stress level was high. So I was not smoking a pack a day like before so to me I quit. But I didn't and soon after 3 months I was back to a pack a day.

This time was different. I used my past failures as a learning experience. I made notes to myself in my head. I just made mental notes that I can sum up here:

  • I don't want to leave my twin 23 year old daughters fatherless
  • I am going to save close to $200 a month
  • I am ruining my body and I want to be a lot healthier.
  • I am not going to fool myself into thinking if I smoke one here an there.....it's ok
  • I am not going to let a piece of paper with a herb rolled up in it beat me. It is NOT stronger than me
  • I am not going to let the tobacco company exec get rich off me while killing me slowly and legally. Screw those f__ing bastards
  • I am not going to fail during my trigger moments and I am going to use them to my advantage
  • I am sick and tired of smelling like smoke and having to do all I used to do to mask the smell
  • I am sick and tried of my breath smelling like smoke
  • I do not want my house and truck to smell like smoke (It almost impossible to get out now)

Since that day I have not smoked at all. Not one. At first I used the patch. I had tried gum before and hated it. The patch worked well for the first 7 days. I was at level one 21mg per patch and went to the store to get the next weeks patches. As I was holding the $37 box I thought "this is the same cost as cigarettes. Am I now going to get hooked on the patch?" So at that point I admitted to myself that if I am going to quit, then I am going to do it cold turkey. No tricks, no gum, no pills and no patches. It's all me or I must accept failure. So I put the box down and went cold turkey. I set my mind to it and did it.

The challenges:

  • Being around friends that smoke. A lot of mine smoke and light up around me. I don't want to be one of those douches who asks their friends not to smoke around me. But it does make me want one. "Just one" I tell myself but the way I got past these hurdles was to tell myself "Smoke one and you start back at zero. Now its not a month with no cigarettes, its back to day one".
  • After meals. Now I just take a walk. Once, after I quit, I found myself at work, after eating lunch at my desk, standing outside where I usually went to smoke. LOL I said "I don't smoke any more, why did I come out here?"  Now I go there to walk and relax.
  • Stress. I am a network engineer and it gets stressful. I always used to smoke to relieve stress. Now I just deal with it.
  • A reward. Smoking a cigarette used to be a reward for me after accomplishing something at work or home. Solve a big problem and go smoke a cig to celebrate. Now I start on my next challenge.

Lastly, I am 99.99999% sure I will never smoke again. I am past the hurdle I think. I watch people smoke and I can smell it and it makes me sick. I can smell people walk by me who just went outside to smoke and I can smell the stench on them. The first time that happened I thought "OMG is that how I smelled when I walked in from smoking?" Never again. I hope this helps someone out there but I really wrote this for myself. I am proud of me.

8 Comments
JonesCarpeDiem

You sound like an aware, thinking outside of the pack, quitter. 🙂

Thomas3.20.2010

Congrats! You earned the right to be Proud of You! Keep working your Quititude! It will get you to where you want to be!

Giulia
Member

Good "why's" and "hows" in my book.  "I used my past failures as a learning experience."  Nobody teaches us better than we do ourselves by our own experiential defeats and what we've learned from them.  Keep growing.  Keep learning.  Stay free!  And BRAG about it!  You've earned it.

bookee6
Member

Awesome message. I relate to almost of what you wrote.  It does feel great being a non smoker.  We will make as long as we keep at it.   Congrats on you 50 plus days

Diannnnn
Member

Awesome blog. Sounds like you definitely have your head in the right place. You have very well thought out reasons and a great outlook.

Congrats on 54 days!

Dian

elvan
Member

sdk789  Congratulations on 54 days smoke free, that's wonderful.  Yes, we ALL smelled nasty.  It has been over 3 1/2 years since I smoked and I don't miss it.  I don't hang around close to people who are smoking,  I don't ask them NOT to smoke, I just walk away and come back when they are done.  None of my friends smoke inside and I have made it very clear that my quit is a huge priority in my life. I have COPD and I am always short of breath and always tired.  I would not wish this on anyone.  I smoked for the better part of 47 years...quit for pregnancies and some other short term quits but once I found EX, my quit made sense to me.  One day at a time, one experience at a time.  I am SO happy that I quit and so much HAPPIER that I am not always excusing myself to go smoke.  DO read JonesCarpeDiem‌'s recommended reading.  I would suggest coming here to the site to reinforce your quit, if not every day, certainly frequently.  You will reinforce YOUR quit and you will help OTHERS.

Best and welcome to EX,

Ellen

maryfreecig
Member

Thanks for sharing. Eternal vigilance is not such a big price to pay for freedom. Congrats on 54.