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Share your quitting journey

the mental addiction

HazelRay12
Member
2 8 114

Hey I’m not totally sure how this forum works but after reading all of your helpful posts I thought I’d share. Today I decided to look up websites that help you quit and I’m happy I’ve found this one. I started smoking when I was 14 and I remember the moment I realized that I was addicted - I remember it because my boyfriend didn’t “need” a cigarette and I absolutely needed one before I fell asleep. I insisted that we sneak into his garage like we always did at night and smoke a cigarette together. I figured through my teen years that I was young and it’d be fine or that I’d work it out somehow but I never did. For years I have been struggling with awful guilt and shame, like some of you mentioned, because that’s what comes with the addiction. For a long time I believed that cigarettes were my most reliable friend, something consistent to go to when I felt ANY emotion; sadness, loneliness, excitement, etc. I also developed this weird shameful cycle where even though I wasn’t necessarily craving one (because I had usually just smoked one), I would force myself to smoke another one - it was already killing me, so why not?  I wanted to conquer the addiction or rebel against it. Somehow this meant smoking an extra cigarette on my way home from work beyond what I needed to in order to fulfill the craving - I guess to me it felt better because I was taking control of such a deep loss of control that I was experiencing with my nicotine addiction. I’ve always had the “screw it” mentality it’s too late I’ve already given myself a death sentence. Anyway, this is a little bit about my feelings as a smoker. I am desperate to quit, I have been on and off the patch for 7 months. I need to change my attitude for sure because I’m still lingering in the “missing out” phase which is why I’m still here! 

thanks for letting me share  

8 Comments
elvan
Member

Welcome to EX, not sure how long you smoked but it sure sounds like you want to quit.  The psychological addiction was huge for me, I had stuffed all of my feelings into cigarettes for so long that I had no idea how to actually feel and deal with things without that crutch.  I had many failed quits in the past and the biggest difference between them and this one comes from EX.  I read everything that was recommended to me about nicotine addiction and the process of recovering.  I accepted that quitting was not and is not an event, it is a one day at a time, sometimes one hour, sometimes one feeling at a time journey.  I learned to accept what non-addicts already know, it is NORMAL to feel sad or angry or stressed out, it is NOT normal to try to shove those feelings down.  It keeps us emotionally stunted until we accept the feelings and what they bring...crying, tension, what EVER.  I came to this site every morning and every evening when I quit and I read blogs and commented and listened when advice was offered.  I was astounded at the amazing support that I felt here.  I used the mantra NOPE, Not One Puff Ever to get me through, it really helped me because it was so simple.  I smoked for a long time and I am dealing with the consequences of that and will for the rest of my life.  I have not smoked in five years and nine+ months and I have never regretted quitting.  It is a good idea to have a plan and to get rid of any and all smoking paraphernalia and ALLOW yourself to feel, allow yourself to grown.

Ellen

JonesCarpeDiem

Welcome.

Thank you for expressing your feelings.

"I've been on and off the patch for 7 months."

Are you smoking too?

Have you ever stopped?

My Welcome To New Members (12+ Years Of Watching) 

/blogs/jonescarp.aka.dale.Jan_2007-blog/2011/06/26/what-to-expect-in-the-first-four-months 

HazelRay12
Member

Thank you! I have tried to stop smoking about 10 times. I am not smoking currently. I’ve re-started the patch and I’ve gone 72 hours. Thanks so much for the reply! 

JonesCarpeDiem

I used the patch my first two weeks. What strength are you using and how many a day were you smoking the week before you quit?

I suggest you trust the patch is doing what it is supposed to and every time you think of smoking say "I don't do that anymore."

HazelRay12
Member

Thank you so so much for your comment. You mentioning the one day at a time concept is very helpful for me. Thinking of it as a lifetime decision can be very daunting and encourage the “just one more cigarette” feelings to come up. It is so important for me to start feeling my feelings - damn it’s hard. So again thank you for your feedback I really appreciate it. 

elvan
Member

It was the hardest part for me to accept that it was okay to get angry and to feel sad....I have no idea what I thought smoking was really doing for me.  I HAD to take it one feeling at a time, I could not go any further than that.  Keep it in today...keep it in the moment and follow JonesCarpeDiem‌'s advice, he is a specialist on the use of NRT's as well as lots of interventions that help.

Ellen

maryfreecig
Member

Welcome to Ex. All the thoughts you have on smoking are typical of nicotine addiction. Congratulations on 72 hours +. You made that happen and you got yourself here. Ex is here for you day in and day out--for support, for education. Please stick around and keep sharing. Yes you can one day at a time.

/blogs/Marilyn.H.July.14.14.-blog/2019/10/28/with-committment-we-can-will-succeed by Marilyn

Quitting Smoking is a Journey - YouTube Doc Evans

Quitting Cigarettes Journal my story

sweetplt
Member

Hi and Welcome to Ex’s HazelRay12 You have received great advice above me...be sure to read at My EX Plan | BecomeAnEX and keep close to the support site...the mental part is the hardest, but it is doable...~ Happy Friday ~ Colleen 340 DOF