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Share your quitting journey

What is normal?

Chuck-2-20-2011
1 6 113

Often, I find myself wondering why I make the decisions I do. What drives them? And what makes us make bad decisions? I know that I started creating my addictive personality as a teenager. At that young age, I felt invincible. And thought bad things only happened to other people.

I took up smoking at a very young age because I wanted to “fit in” with everyone else that was doing it. As if a cigarette alone would buy me friendship. What a silly thing to think! But at a young age, we all do things that might not be in our own best interest.

And once I made the decision to smoke when I was younger, I didn’t give it much thought after that. And so my addiction was built into me as my mind was still developing. Throughout my life, many of my decisions were based on this addictive personality that I created for myself.

I think a lot of us have done the same thing. Creating the addict within at an early age and somehow as we got older, it all seemed perfectly normal. As if I’d been BORN a smoker! I continued on with what I called my “habit” for thirty or forty years before I ever even entertained the thought of doing something different, and I think this has a lot to do with the fear I felt when I first thought of quitting this last time.

You see, I’d developed the addict within at a very early age. And while at that early age, I nurtured my “friend” that was always with me. I kept doing what I perceived as normal for so long, that I forgot what life was like without smoking.

Hence the panic attack when I first called the Colorado quitline. I remember calling them and when a very pleasant voice answered, I hung up! I was shaking and sweating and wondering what the heck I thought I was doing! After all, I knew that smoking was normal because as far as my addicted mind could see, I always had. It was just part of life.

Thankfully after calming down a bit, I did call the quitline back and had a very good conversation about triggers and urges, and what to do to begin to win the war with myself.

I guess my point here is that there are reasons that quitting is so hard that go beyond the physical aspect of it. It’s literally considered the “normal” part of our lives by the addicted mind. The addicted mind is very good at convincing us to continue to feed our addiction.

But it doesn’t have to be that way! We actually have to change our entire perception of what is normal in our lives when we quit. I think this is where the voices come from. Our very being doesn’t understand that what has been normal for so long no longer is, and our mind wants to understand what has changed.

There’s so much more on these thoughts, but they will have to be for another blog as I don’t want to write an entire book here.

Anyway, have a fantastic smoke free day and understand that quitting is also normal. All we have to do is convince ourselves that this is really what’s normal!!

ONWARD TO FREEDOM!!!

Chuck

6 Comments
JustSharon
Member

A very good blog, Chuck. When you talk about fear in quitting, I'm right in line there. Afraid to go all through the beginning again. I know what the addiction is saying and that only I can choose to listen, or not. Spent a good couple of hours this morning reading all about addiction, learned what nicotine actually does to our brains. I've quit before and I don't lose sight of doing it again. I was thinking tomorrow might be a good time.

YoungAtHeart
Member

It is ALWAYS a good time.  Make your decision, then honor it.  Promise yourself you will not smoke another cigarette NO MATTER WHAT!  Get your tools handy to cope with the "No Matter What" times.  Don't allow yourself to argue (or bargain) with yourself - you can't win those!

ccrider
Member

Every day is a great day to stop, remember the reasons to quit, it will help as you well know!

Chuck-2-20-2011

I'm so glad you stayed on track! So often, people who relapse feel so horrible that they just throw in the towel and forget about it. That's a crime and a waste after all the preparations. I mean, most of us work hard toward our quits. Just be sure that you do as much soul searching as you need to so that you're ready to win! You can do this! Go for it!!

Chuck

elvan
Member

There is no bad time to quit, there are nothing BUT bad times to START.

Genesislazarus

Great writing chuck-2-20-2011‌! I feel the same way about cigarettes. It wasn't so much the nicotine that gave me trouble, it was letting go of that friend I had since I was so young. Now I keep my count of days like a crown when I feel the triggers pulling. We just can't go back. We just can't start over. Stay strong and go ahead and write that book!