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Share your quitting journey

Positive Smoking Triggers

shadoza
Member
0 4 7

Sounds odd, this I understand.   When I first started actively quitting, I paid attention to where I was smoking and when.  I was focused on location triggers at the time.  Many of my triggers were location related, even though some were also occassion or time related.  I wrote the locations that were the most serious of offenders, the proceeded to remove them from my permissions list.

No smoking in the car (anyone's car)

No smoking in public (other people's homes were considered public)

No smoking in my own home except for the designated smoke area

What this came down to is that the only place that I could smoke was at the smoke station in my own home.  There is one ashtray in the house and it is at this station.  All visitors who want to smoke must also smoke in that location.  I empty the ashtray once a day, first thing in the morning: this forces me to see how many cigarettes I smoked the previous day. 

The positive part comes this way:  I don't get cravings for cigarettes when I am out in public.  Even during a seven hour shopping tour...nothing.  I beleive this is truth because being in public triggers the "I can't smoke here" mentality, so I don't think about it.

I noticed when I am in a place that I am not allowed to smoke, I do not think about smoking.  Now, wouldn't it be perfect if I can say: no smoking in my home.  Then everywhere would be off limits to smoking.  It doesn't work that way.  My brain is a logical thing and if Everywhere was off limits that would negate the location restictions.  It would change the message from "you can only smoke here" to "you are not allowed to smoke at all."  The latter message would light up my inner rebel and I would be smoking more because not smoking at all seems like I am being deprived.  The message: you can only smoke here, gives me an option to smoke at that location, but does not force me to.  It prevents the feeling od deprivation, while making smoking feel like a bore.  When I am in the smoking station, I can only smoke, no wirting in the journal, no convesation, no coffee, no reading, no planning, no activity other than smoking.  Smoking is no longer relaxing, it is a boring "have to" that I really consider before doing.  Most times, I do not want to stop what I am doing long enough to smoke.  Sometimes, I will light a cigarette, smoke a couple draws, then put it out and leave the station because it is lonely there....and boring.

I have taken 12 cigarettes out of the original count this way.  30 - 12 = 18

(I am currently at 9 count and moving toward 6; but that is from other efforts added to this one.)

4 Comments
annb
Member
Good job on your prepping. Looks like you are learning life without the poison pals. But beware of creeping back up the other way. Happened to me as I was doing something similar. I learned here when you get to 5 you need to quit entirely or be in constant withdrawal making it harder on yourself!!
shadoza
Member

@annb--thank you for your supportive comment 🙂

My quit count, according the the step schedule, is at 4.  It drops from 9-6-5-4.  At four, I am expected to have mastered my triggers and be dealing with avoiding the urges of the addiction.  I feel if I can master the triggers, the addiction will be gravy.

I understand the creeping backwards.  I have failed to completely quit before now and am not afraid of trying again if I need to.  I only do not what the need to.

JonesCarpeDiem

When you get to about 5 cigarettes or below (if you are cutting back) you may put yourself into withdrawal.

Have your plan in place and be ready to quit at that point in time.

If you are going to use an NRT, I suggest you stop smoking at 5 and start the NRT.

If you are not using an NRT, I suggest you be ready to stop at that point in time. Nicotine leaves your system in 72 hours. Why spend a week and 72 hours in withdrawal?

shadoza
Member

@Jonescarp--doctor is concerned that if I stop the nicotine too suddenly, my heart rate and blood pressure will drop again.  He suggested to stop at 3 cigarettes a day using those cigarettes as needed to keep the heart rate from reacting to the lack of nicotine.

If I don't do it this way, then I will need medication to incease my blood pressure, which has side issues that will require other medication.  I have not taken medication beyond an antibiotic or a headache tab, so this concerns me.

I understand withdrawal, I had quit completely a couple times before...I know how rough the can be and the increased risk of failure there.  Thank you for you comment.