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Share your quitting journey

I want you to stop trying to quit.

DOCmarkC
Member
18 19 523

This is a repost from what I wrote March 12, 2009.  It still applies today.

I want you to stop trying to quit.

Yes, I said that. Even more, I mean it.

I browse around here and see post after post from people saying that they are "trying Chantix" or giving the gum a "try". Some are "Trying to quit" for the sixth or seventh time. Others are quite positive. "I tried to quit many times before, but this time I'm going to try something different."

Any of you who have played a sport with a coach can tell you that the coach NEVER said to you: "OK, I want you to go out there and "Try" to win. Give it a good "Try."If they did, then it was for a pickup game or T-ball or something that was more about playing than winning. At a job interview, you never tell your prospective employer that you are going to "Try" to be on time and be a good employee. You don't "Try" to keep your kids fed.

This addiction you are breaking isn't a game. "Trying" is what you do when a failure is an option. As Yoda put it! "Try not!¦. DO!... or do not. There is no try."

When you quit an addiction you do just that. You QUIT it. It means that you put it down and you don't pick it up again. I see many posts about backtracking or slipping up. Invariably the replies are encouraging rhetoric like "It's OK, everyone makes mistakes. Pick yourself up and try again" (That "Try" word again).

Now I understand moments of weakness, and I believe in getting back on the horse, but think about relapse and about having a smoke again! It isn't as if you tripped over a slipper in the hallway and fell mouth-first on an errant cigarette that had been left on the floor next to the fireplace where an ember jumped out and set the smoke alight while the dog jumped up and down on your back forcing you to inhale.

You made a decision that the cigarette was going to fix this intangible stress. Years of conditioning had made that feeling almost subconscious, but it was with a purpose that you got out the smoke and lit it. That was giving up. That was starting the quit counter back to zero. You may have gone a day, a week, a month. But guess what? that no longer matters. Now you have to do it all over again. Was that worth it? After that one smoke were you forever better? I say what you do by "Slipping up" is strap yourself into the rollercoaster again. The nicotine is back in the system and your body is going to scream at you to keep it there. When it was gone your brain still had conditioning telling you that smoking made you happy, but it was a lie you could ignore. Now that lie is compounded with physical withdrawals again. Was that better?

I quit almost a year ago. It was the hardest damn thing I have ever done. I was an Army paratrooper! An infantry medic in one of the most combat deployed units in the military. All of my training, survival testing, and combat was nothing compared to the will it takes to just not put the cigarette in my mouth.

But I'm not "Trying" to quit.

19 Comments
TW517
Member

I love this!  Congrats on your 10 years of freedom!

indingrl
Member

Thanks DocMark for sharing YOUR success! For ME and i am talking about ME - not anyone else. For ME and ONLY by God's GRACE and in HIS love -  I did try and try to quit using 50 death sticks a day on MY own while reading blogs here and watching videos at whyquit.com - eating healthy and exercising.  I would get down to 2 or 3 death sticks a day and then buy another pack the next day and TRY over and over again and again -  trying to quit on MY own -telling MYSELF -  I will do this .- ALL by MYSELF and it was MY goal to DO on MY OWN- i tried and failed and I got sick and tired of being sick and tired of being sick and tired-  so I surrendered MY self will run riot !!! I got on MY knees and  I prayed - dear Jesus if YOU don't take these cigs from ME I will smoke them untill i drop dead in Jesus name amen -  then to bed I went. And the next morning MY Lord Jesus loved ME with a cold turkey quit -  that was EIGHT YEARS AGO!  HOORAY FOR MY LORD JESUS!!!  Please take what HELPS and let go of the rest - thank you.

SimplySheri
Member

Exactly!!  Well said then and now  

JACKIE1-25-15
Member

Gosh, I hope someone is listening. Great Blog. 

anaussiemom
Member

This is lovely. 


I will try to keep this in mind, although most of us are not perfect.


Namate

MarilynH
Member

Awesome post that I wish had a helpful button because I'd be tapping on it right now but I'll have to settle for the like button instead.....

elvan
Member

I "tried" more than once, I FAILED many times...I am SO glad that this time I DID it.  Thanks for an awesome post and, like MarilynH‌ and probably everyone else, I would mark this helpful in a heartbeat!

Ellen

Tamjy
Member

Wow, DOCmarcC.  This is so true.  You're right - by telling myself that "I'm trying", I've been allowing myself an out if I should "slip just once".  It's not easy to get rid of that mindset.  I've printed your post and plan to carry it with me to read and re-read during moments of weakness.  Thank-you! 

Now I'm off to make my pledge for the day

JACKIE1-25-15
Member

WTG!

Mike.n.Atlanta

Too many try things & say "It didn't work for me, I'm gonna try something else." They're looking for a magic bullet to make everything easy. We have to make it work. We have an instant gratification society that would rather not  be patient & work for rewards. Ain't gonna happen without a sincere commitment & willingness.

"A gem is not polished without friction, nor man perfected without trial"~Chinese proverb

M n @ Signature 002-5.JPG

AnnetteMM
Member

I loved reading this. Thanks so much for validating what I know in my soul to be true! Only by knowing we'll never smoke again can we never give ourselves permission to go back to slavery. Well done!

BostonGirl
Member

YES!!!!!! I stopped TRYING, and finally QUIT!

Donna 213 DOF

Giulia
Member

So glad you re-posted this.  It never gets old.  And it's so good!

JonesCarpeDiem

Great Post!

I didn't try.

I was ready

I enjoyed my last cigarette all those years ago and that was the end of our pairing.

DOCmarkC
Member

I'm glad I could help.

Sek4110
Member

My quit date is in two days. I needed this. Thank you 

djmurray
Member

"Now I understand moments of weakness, and I believe in getting back on the horse, but think about relapse and about having a smoke again! It isn't as if you tripped over a slipper in the hallway and fell mouth-first on an errant cigarette that had been left on the floor next to the fireplace where an ember jumped out and set the smoke alight while the dog jumped up and down on your back forcing you to inhale."

I laughed out loud at that one -- I've said I wouldn't smoke a cigarette if one jumped into my mouth and self ignited.  But yours is SO much better.  I smoked heavily for 53 years and I've been quit for over 4 years.  You're so right -- there's no "try" about it.  Fabulous post; glad you re-posted it.

minihorses
Member

That was absolutely awesome!  You hit all the points of treacheries the word try has.  I was once told that we should never 'quit' smoking.  The word quit can also be associated with failure .  To say you quit smoking could set you up for failure from the beginning.  Saying "I'm becoming a non-smoker", "I've stopped smoking", and of course "I don't do that anymore" or any other positive words to replace the word quit.  

Justdeda1
Member

Hi, @DOCmarkC Doc

Heartfelt and inspiring, thanks.

deda