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“I’m terrified the cravings will never go away.”

Dr_Hays
Mayo Clinic
33 120 7,149

Many smokers fear that when they quit, withdrawal will never end. They’ll say, “What if I’m always miserable?”

 

That’s a natural concern. After all, nicotine cravings are real, and they’re not fun! But this doesn’t mean you’ll be plagued by cravings — or that they’ll be strong enough to drive you back to smoking.

 

Here are 3 ways to minimize how hard cravings hit and how long they last.

 

  • Use nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) with a strong enough nicotine dose. When smokers say, “The patch didn’t work” or “the gum didn’t help,” it’s often because they chose a patch with an inadequate nicotine dose or didn’t chew their gum on schedule. A trained tobacco specialist can help you use NRT correctly.
  • Don’t quit medication prematurely. Some newly quit smokers, emboldened by their success, ditch their medication when they’re still highly vulnerable to relapse. Remember: It’s smoking, not medication, that poses a danger!
  • Don’t expect medication to eliminate cravings. Even after nicotine has cleared your body, you can be tripped up by habit or emotional triggers. Be prepared! Learn alternative ways to occupy your hands, mouth, and mind, and work on replacing old routines with new ones.

 

You might hear former smokers say they still “crave” cigarettes years after quitting, but they’re not talking about “my chest is going to explode” feeling common in the first few weeks. They may occasionally think, “A cigarette would be nice right now,” but they quickly move on.

 

As one former smoker put it, “My fear of suffering was far greater than my actual suffering.”

 

Let us know: If you’ve relapsed recently, ? Next time around, what will you do differently to ease withdrawal?

 

If you’ve quit for good, how long did it take for your regular cravings to stop?

Tags (1)
120 Comments
elvan
Member

I can't remember when the cravings stopped.  I quit 3 1/2 years ago today.  I remember the beginning and thinking that I was never going to make it because it was just too intense but I drank lots of ice water, I did all kinds of things to distract myself, I spent a lot of time on this site.  I did NOT use any NRT.  I wanted the nicotine out, once and for all.  I will very rarely have a memory of smoking, not really a crave and it passes with no effort whatsoever.  I don't envy people who are smoking, I understand that they are addicts and they are not smoking because they WANT to or because they enjoy it, they are smoking to feed the addiction.  

JonesCarpeDiem

Everyone knows nicotine is barely perceptible in the system 72 hours after not using it.

MOO

I think the average person who is told to use self dosing NRT''s (NRT''s  other than the patch) may begin thinking of and using the NRT as a cigarette replacement and make it part of a never ending routine or just go back to smoking when they realize they aren't getting the instant kick?

I would be concerned that similar to the opioid addiction problem we currently have, using the prescription for longer than they have pain is the actual cause of long term opioid addiction. So would telling someone to use nicotine longer than they needed to be helpful? What are you gaining using nicotine 3 extra months? I would think nicotine would become as powerful a psychological addiction as the ritual of smoking after a time?

Then what?

coreinstincts
Member

on July 1st 2017 I started my first quit and for the most part, I had minimal cravings I could even be around people that smoked. Everything was going well until I got to the 6th day when my head overrode my willpower and I started smoking again. now here it is the 19th of July, 2017 and I am fighting withdrawals and cravings that I just didn't have the first time around this is horrible and I wish I had stuck with my first quit. 

AbasKid
Member

I'm nearing 3 years not smoking (Aug 9). Unfortunately, I STILL have times of intense desire for a cigarette.  I do keep Nicorette lozenges on hand. I find I can suck on one of those and get backed off the nearly overwhelming urge to go buy a pack!

Yes, I wish it were different. I have even had a few flashes of being glad I no longer smoke. As one who taught mediation, even my meditation techniques do not help----nor does listening to my music. Keeping my hands busy can be of help sometimes. I figure NRT is a better option then smoking. I can go perhaps 2-3 months without using it, and I wouldn't be able to do that with cigarettes for sure!

Blessings all around

elvan
Member

SO GOOD to hear from you!  I am so glad that you are almost at three years!  AWESOME.

Ellen

bonniebee
Member

I think the very hardest craves for me were in the first 3 days and then very gradually  they began to get less uncomfortable . I had quit before so I already knew they would get easier to bear . That knowledge is very  powerful especially for the first time quitter who does not have any idea of what to expect.  I remember very well the first time I quit I was terrified that the craves would get worse and worse with each day . The first day was very hard and the second as bad so I thought they would keep getting worse then I discovered that after day 2 the craves had peaked and leveled off so to speak and from then on it gradually got easier . Deep breathing was very helpful even if i head to do it almost constantly for 2 or 3 days . Cutting straws into 3rds and carrying them with me  to chew on or breathe through was very very helpful to me I am now at 893 days and I still get craves now and then but they are totally different and easier to deal with . These craves are coming from memories of smoking and usually are tied into my emotions for example anger . When I get very angry I think how it might feel good to puff on a cigarette to get through the feelings but I talk myself out of the temptations knowing how awful I would feel to ruin my quit . It passes just like the anger does !

bonniebee
Member

I could not edit but I thought it was important to add that I was also on the patch which I found very helpful I used it the recommended amount of time and would advise anyone using it not to cut the time shorter if it is helping them and especially if they find quitting very hard to do . The patch took the edge off the craves for me ......How do I know  this to be true ? Because the first time I quit I did it cold turkey, I made it 3 1/2 months but it was the hardest thing I have ever done. The first month I cried almost every night  ( and I am not a crier ) the second month I was very  very depressed and the 3rd month it got much  better and easier  but I messed up by having just one puff ! that one puff sent me right back to full time smoking !

Giulia
Member

bonniebee‌  You should be able to edit.  But you have to be on the actual blog, not responding to it from your inbox on the site.  Simply click on the blog title from your inbox.  From there the Action button on your comment should show the edit function.

bonniebee
Member

Thank you Giulia !

coreinstincts
Member

I quit cold turkey on the 1st of July and relapsed on the 6th of July now as of the 19th I am working on my quit again and the withdrawals are worse than before and I am using NRT's I have a 21 mg patch on  I am on 200 mg sr Wellbutrin  2x's a day, and I have a vap pen. So failure is not an option this time; however, the withdrawal symptoms are stronger this time plus I am still having a reaction to the medication Cymbalta that the psychiatrist put me on.  

JonesCarpeDiem

WOW.

"The withdrawal symptoms are stronger this time"

Might you consider that there are going to be two kinds of withdrawal symptoms and that if you are unwilling to face either failure is an option? (Physical and psychological)

The patch is the best NRT because you aren't giving yourself nicotine every time you think of smoking so it doesn't turn into a psychological crutch.

The vape pen only reinforces your connection to smoking. (hand to mouth and inhale ritual.) How will you unlearn that using a vape pen? (and that is if you are using NO NICOTINE in the vape pen)

elvan
Member

You are on a lot of medication...I was put on Cymbalta for pain...they said it would help to relieve pain so I could sleep.  I slept alright, I couldn't get up the next morning.  I took one dose and never took it again.  You have to be willing to go through some tough times.  This is not always going to be a walk in the park...NOR is it going to always be difficult.  The patch works well for many people, you need to give yourself a chance to deal with the emotions you feel.  Not smoking brings emotions to the surface, none of them are going to kill you.  It might seem a little scary at times but all of the negative emotions WILL pass...give it time.

Ellen

maryfreecig
Member

I'll never know whether NRT might have helped me quit easier for I did quit cold turkey and mostly alone save for some online websites, videos and lectures (not participation). I do believe the addiction is often misunderstood, and that persistent craving or yearning is seen as a mental health or attitude issue only, rather than also being a problem in the brain. I have no doubt that NRT alongside support and reality checking can work for quitters. 

Some folks come to Ex desperate for a solution--not really wanting to quit, but feeling like they have to because their doctor has said they must. I keep wondering...how do folks quit in this situation. No bottom is too low in addiction. If some of these folks have to take nicotine via a patch or gum or sucker for a long time, isn't that better than continuing to smoke?

I just barely made it cold turkey. And I am not alone. When I quit, I didn't even know that nicotine does not kill, so I was loath to choose the patch or gum. On the other hand, I think a daily dose of support is invaluable with or without NRT. 

coreinstincts
Member

Thank you maryfreecig I was a very heavy smoker and the patches are from a previous Dr's appointment where I never used them and the Wellbutrin I am now on because I want to quit smoking, however, I also suffer from depression so the medication for me is two fold, not just the one thing. See I also suffer from bipolar depression on top of chronic depression plus PTSD so I am on a lot of medication to prevent an anxiety attack, a melt down, or anything else that might come up; right now I am in the prosses of training my dog to be my SD. 

elvan
Member

coreinstincts  You are DOING this...yes, you have a lot on your plate but not more than you can handle.  You are growing a little more with each passing minute without cigarettes.  I am really proud of you, concentrate on all of the GOOD you are experiencing and all of the things you are handling without nicotine.  Is your dog being trained to be a support animal?  I am not familiar with SD.  I do know that many animals help people overcome things that they could not otherwise handle.  You are doing this...

Ellen

coreinstincts
Member

SD equals Service Dog and yes I am training her to do this. She can be stubborn at times and that irritates me with me being in the beginning phase of the quit. She is like her owner though lol. I have started with the second symptom of the quit and that is the sensitive skin. I do have a question though when does the shaking stop? I am still shaking and now I am into Day 5. 

elvan
Member

Oh...I should have gotten that Service Dog, not sure where my brain was.  We all have different withdrawal symptoms, I did not have the shaking, at least I don't remember it.  I was VERY thin skinned, a dirty look from a complete stranger could send me into tears.  I am NOT like that...normally, I would smile at them, my biggest smile filled with love and happiness (you know fake it until you make it). Try to be patient with yourself, this is a huge lifestyle change, you are in the beginning of a recovery from a horrible addiction.  You are growing...so it your dog.  You are learning together.  You know that dogs want nothing more than to please.  Is there any chance you can get some help with the training?  I cannot imagine doing that myself.

We are here for you...PLEASE hang in there and continue to blog when you feel like you are in need of some help.

Ellen

Anite
Member

Same problem. Quitted 3 months.  I started to feel so healthy and my asthma much better, until a chain smoker visited me and I was a smoker again.  Now I am coughing non stop and short of breath. But I long for the healthy feeling and am going to quit on 31 July 2017.

elvan
Member

Anite‌ I lost more than one quit because I started to feel better and the addiction convinced me that it wasn't the problem.  I figured I was fine, I could smoke and still be healthy.  WRONG, particularly with asthma.  It's a trick addiction plays on every addict, you get really scared and then you quit and then when you feel better, you smoke again.  Getting healthy is a trigger in and of itself.  Just keep in mind that there may come that day when you don't get better, quitting is never wrong.  You CAN do this!

Welcome to EX,

Ellen

Anite
Member

Thank you

On 27 Jul 2017 2:46 p.m., "coreinstincts_101" <communityadmin@becomeanex.org>

Giulia
Member

Found this old blog in the Relapse Prevention group.  Might help someone out there...  https://excommunity.becomeanex.org/thread/1782-when-does-it-get-easy

elvan
Member

You are most welcome.

JessicaF
Member

How was your quit date, Anite? Doing okay?

Anite
Member

No I am suffering bad Jessica.  I don't know if I can get throught this day!!!

Anite 

coreinstincts
Member

Anita, are you using any NRT's? or are you going COld Turkey?

Anite
Member

Cold turkey.  

coreinstincts
Member

Do you have hard candy around you? Or gum? that seemed to help me the 6 days I went cold turkey. I commend you for going CT that is the toughest way to go but YOU GOT THIS! You can beat this nicodemon in the can. Smile it is just those receptors in your brain telling you  "You need to smoke" Say out loud "I DO NOT NEED THAT CIGARETTE" "THAT CIGARETTE HAS NO CONTROL OVER ME"  and go about your day and keep telling yourself that. You need to get through one minute at a time and those minutes will add up. go for a walk. If you are at work take a break and take a stroll Don't go to the smoking pit either. Go somewhere you might not otherwise go, change your direction strike up a conversation with someone new.

JonesCarpeDiem

Logically, If you are only using a lozenge occasionally, every three month, what do you think that's doing to help you stay quit? The need for nicotine is constant, not occasional. It certainly DOES NOT make you think of smoking less. In fact, it may remind you of the feeling you got when you smoked. Either way, you believe the nicotine is your quit.

elvan
Member

I am really sorry to hear that you are struggling.  I don't know how much preparation you did or how serious you are about quitting but I can promise you that if you stay quit, it will get easier.  It is not a fast process, it is one day at a time and some of those days seem endless but I PROMISE you that they are not.  I PROMISE you that you will grow stronger and stronger with each passing moment of freedom.  You will actually grow in ways that you never thought were possible, you will get to know YOU, not this person whose life and emotions have been stuffed into nicotine.  I am seriously stunned by how emotionally and psychologically slowed my development was and probably still is even after over 3 1/2 years smoke free.  Please remember that smoking will not do anything FOR you only TO you and no crave ever killed anyone.  No one can say that about smoking.  

Blog if you need help, stay close to the site, come here every day...every morning and every evening if possible.  Read the blogs of people who are on this journey WITH you...read how they are handling things, read the advice offered by elders.  Click on an avatar of an elder and look at where they have come from and how many things they have overcome WITHOUT smoking.  I am stunned when I think about our fellow travelers and how far they have come and how many obstacles they have surmounted.  You can be one of them. 

Please let us know if there is anything we can do to help...reach out.

Best,

Ellen

sch5700
Member

Just set another quit date and try your best to stick to it.   Try reading Allen Carr's The Easy Way to Quit Smoking.  I was all set on May 1st to use the patch and finally quit, but after reading the 111 page pdf., I quit all by myself.  Quite exhilarating to accomplish quitting and as the book suggests, celebrate the victory.   No matter how bad a day may be, I will be able to say "at least I quit smoking"!  Satisfaction feels great and it can be yours' too.  Be patient with yourself, IT WILL HAPPEN if you want it bad enough.  Im pulling for you

friskiekim
Member

Hi, my name is Marty and I am like alot of people on hear. I have tried many quits here lately and none have worked. But, this time I am determine to quit. My worst thing is getting in touch with my doctor to get any help with quitting. I have been on the patches and doing the inhaler and it help. But, I just don't want the nicotine.. I've tried other different things that didn't help. I truly think chantix  will help me this time. The only thing is, Is getting in touch with my doctor and getting him to help. He knows how hard this is for me. Every time I try I fail. It's just not a option this time around. I've got to quit. I'm glad I found this web site. Because I truly see how quitting affects others people and I'm not alone. And yes it helps to read and write about quitting.

elvan
Member

Welcome to EX.  I hope you can get in touch with your doctor but I also really hope that you realize that nothing will quit FOR you.  You need the education, the commitment, and the support that come from this site and the people on it.  I would NEVER have made it to where I am today without these people teaching me...without accepting that this is an addiction and not just a habit.  It has to be treated as an addiction.  I never used NRT or any other meds to quit although I have been on Wellbutrin for years to help enhance pain medication...or so they tell me.   

I would strongly recommend reading and I am going to share some links from some of our star elders with you...links that I never get tired of reading or sharing.  From JonesCarpeDiem‌ /blogs/jonescarp.aka.dale.Jan_2007-blog/2011/06/26/what-to-expect-in-the-first-four-months  and My Welcome To New Members (10 Years Of Watching) and JACKIE1-25-15‌ /blogs/JACKIE1-25-15-blog/2017/08/07/plan-prepare-practice-to-protect and https://excommunity.becomeanex.org/groups/newbie-quitters/blog/2017/07/20/are-you-new-here 

The following is an entire comment written to a newbie by YoungAtHeart‌ (I cannot possibly say anything better than this so I am sharing their amazing support with you).

From YoungAtHeart

The most important thing you can do right now is to educate yourself on what nicotine does to your body and mind. To that end, I highly recommend Allen Carr's “The Easy Way to Stop Smoking.” This is an easy and entertaining read. Here is a link to a free PDF version of it:

 

http://media.wix.com/ugd/74fa87_2010cc5496521431188f905b7234a829.pdf

 

 You should also read the posts here and perhaps go to the pages of folks who you think might be helpful. You might visit whyquit.com, quitsmokingonline.com and livewell.com for the good information contained there. @https://excommunity.becomeanex.org/groups/best-of-ex has lots of blogs written by members of this site with their experiences and guidance. You should also do the tracking and separation exercises suggested in My Quit Plan http://www.becomeanex.org/my-quit-plan.php

 

 

After you have completed the recommended reading, it will be time to make an informed choice of the quit aid, if any, you will use. If you go that route, I personally recommend the aids that don't let the addict control the dose such as the available prescription drugs or the patch. If used properly, gum, lozenges and inhalers are fine, but they need to be used only as a last resort.  I have seen folks become addicted to them if they substitute them for every cigarette they used to smoke - just trading one addiction for another.  I do not recommend the e-cigarette for three reasons: 1) the vapor has been compared to the polluted air in Bejing on a bad day, 2) they just provide another nicotine delivery system while continuing the hand to mouth smoking motion, and 3) the batteries can spontaneously catch on fire. . But – any method that you think will work well for you will be best for you.

 

The idea is to change up your routines so the smoking associations are reduced.  Drink your coffee with your OTHER hand. If you always had that first smoke with your coffee, try putting your tennies on right out of bed, going for a quick walk, then taking your shower and THEN your coffee! Rearrange the furniture in the areas you used to smoke so the view is different. Buy your gas at a different station. Take a different route to work. Take a quick walk at break time where the smokers AREN'T.

 

You need to distract yourself through any craves.  You can take a bite out of a lemon (yup - rind and all), put your head in the freezer and take a deep breath of cold air, do a few jumping jacks, go for a brisk walk or march in place, play a computer game.  Don't let that smoking thought rattle around in your brain unchallenged. Sometimes you need to quit a minute or an hour at a time.  You will need to be disciplined in the early days to distract yourself when a crave hits.    Get busy!  Here is a link to a list of things to do instead of smoke if you need some fresh ideas:

 

https://excommunity.becomeanex.org/blogs/Youngatheart.7.4.12-blog/2013/02/25/100-things-to-do-instea...

 

The conversation in your head in response to the "I want a cigarette" thought needs to be, "Well, since I have decided not to do that anymore, what shall I do instead for the three minutes this crave will last?"  Then DO it.  You will need to put some effort into this in the early days, but it gets easier and easier to do

I really hope that something here grabs you and helps you to start and then STAY on your journey.

Welcome to EX,

Ellen

CommunityAdmin
Community Manager
Community Manager

We're talking more about this topic tonight in 5 minutes.  Visit https://excommunity.becomeanex.org/events/1034-ex-live-chat-i-m-terrified-the-cravings-will-never-go... for details on how to join.

Mark
EX Community Manager

NewRetiree
Member

Anite, I am just about to enter my third month as a non-smoker. Since weight gain is a constant concern, I chose to find a substitute with no calories that sort of mimicked smoking satisfaction. For me the answer was Flavor Forest Hot Cinnamon toothpicks. I felt that the cinnamon flavor removed the craving for the cigarette taste. And, since they're so strong that you have to keep moving them around in your mouth, they satisfy the busy-mouth craving, too. They're not cheap, but your breath will be amazing. I don't think I can give you a link, but you can figure out the address if I tell you to go to flavoredtoothpicks dot com. They get stronger when you chew them a bit, but be gentle: you don't want to swallow pieces of splintered wood!

I hope this helps!

CommunityAdmin
Community Manager
Community Manager

Congrats on your quit.  Thanks for the suggestion about toothpicks.  We're okay with you providing links as long as there is no personal monetary gain/vested interest or promoting other cessation programs/services that are for a fee.

Mark
EX Community Manager

NewRetiree
Member

Thanks Mark. The only benefits I received from the toothpicks were craving relief and great breath, so I'll go ahead and write out the link (even though it's probably pretty obvious): www.flavoredtoothpicks.com. Other flavors are pretty good, but I personally believe that cinnamon is the one that really helps cut cravings.

lavenderunicorn

I'm just starting out quitting smoking and am not supposed to start my patch until January 19th.  Any tips on cutting down on cigarettes until then? 

Anite
Member

The cravings get better but in my case never go away.  Leave your scigarettes in your car or far from where you are. You will think twice about lighting up.

Giulia
Member

Begin by reading the material in Best of EX‌ and then just get on here every day and read blog posts and discussions.  You will learn everything you need to know.  Take what you like and leave what you don't.  If you haven't checked out the other side of the site, do.  Click on My Quit Plan (upper right), fill out the material for yourself and work through the various headings offered.  There's much helpful information there and here within this support community.  I was never a "cutting back" type.  I'm an all or nothing gal, so can't give you any tips on cutting back.  But heed jonescarp's advice.  He just waited a  little longer until his next cigarette, which took the pressure off thinking in terms of "today I can only have x number of cigarettes... aaaaaah!"  Do what works for you.  But don't reject suggestions out of hand.  Try everything and anything.  This journey takes a very open mind to growth.

JonesCarpeDiem

Your comment is self explanatory. In September you said you were quit for three days and still craving a cigarette. That would indicate you have done no reading here or research or you cannot process the information.

How long have you been quit at this point?

Dr_Hays
Mayo Clinic

I am so glad to hear your planning to go tobacco free LavendarUnicornAngel

There is no better thing you can do for your health than stopping, and cutting down before stopping can help. 

There is some research that shows that abrupt quitting is slightly more effective that cutting down to quit, but it seems like you are in a great place to take advantage of both approaches.  A structured approach to cutting down seems to work somewhat better - meaning cut down a few cigarettes per week, so that you are smoking about 1/2 of your current amount on the day you plan to stop.   Use these times for personal 'research'.   

  • Write down the benefits you'll experience once you've stopped.
  • Keep track of your cigarettes each day, and select a couple of specific ones to practice not smoking like in the car or after one meal. 
  • Be mindful about the circumstance in which you want a cigarette. 
  • Practice different ways to distract like having a drink of water, walking to a place you normally don't smoke, or taking a deep breath.
  • Notice how cravings come and how rapidly they go as you do things other than smoke.
  • Use the good advice from the community here to select strategies that you think will work. 

Best of luck for a smoke free New Year.  

elvan
Member

Welcome to EX...stay close to the site, make your plan, do the reading.  Make a commitment to being an ex smoker...you CAN do this. I tracked my cigarettes and paid attention to what the triggers were that were leading me to smoke...then I planned to do something OTHER than smoke when the triggers came and they WILL come.  Some will be stronger than others, some will take more time to get through...the fact is that you CAN get through those times and each time you get past a crave, you get stronger.  You get to know yourself better and you get to know the person you would have been if you had not started smoking...the person who dealt with life without stuffing feelings down into your addiction.  Smoking does nothing FOR you but it does lots TO you and none of those things are good.  When you smoke...think about why and think about what your expectations for that cigarette were and then be completely honest with yourself about whether or not your expectations were met.  I can tell you that mine were not and once I accepted that, once I was completely honest with myself, I realized that smoking really did NOT do anything for me.  It did not help with stress, anger, sadness, depression, or physical pain.  It did not make ANY of those feelings go away...it did not help me to deal with them.  I suspect that if you do a close examination of your expectations and the results of smoking that you will find the same thing.  Oh...I stopped smoking on January 19th in 2014.  It's a FINE date.  I stopped because I got so sick that I thought I was going to die.  I knew it was my last chance...I am so glad I stopped and I started to take care of myself.  I did all of the reading and I stayed very, very close to this site.  I blogged, I commented on blogs, I asked for advice and when I received it, I accepted it.  Stopping smoking is a one day at a time journey...a journey is worth every step.  I got rid of all the cigarettes and smoking paraphernalia so that if I was tempted to smoke, I would have to drive to a store to buy cigarettes.  I changed my routines, changed the set up of the place where I smoked...it was not inside, it was on a deck.  You can start getting ready at any point and you can begin your journey with a very strong commitment...you will never be sorry for quitting.

Again, welcome to EX.

Ellen

lowic_969
Member

Please help me I've smoked since 15 and in 48 disabled now so I smoked 3 packs a day and can't breath.

Giulia
Member

Welcome lowic_969‌  The best way to get help on here from the community is to write a blog.  You could simply say what you just did above me.  It will be more widely read that way and people will be more likely to respond.  From your page, click on the pencil icon (upper right side). 

pastedImage_1.png

Then select Blog Post or discussion.

pastedImage_2.png

Give it a title, write the main body of it and press Post.  If you haven't yet begun the Quit Plan side of the site, do.  Click on My Quit Plan (upper right) and begin working your way through the topics.  A lot of good information there.  Glad you've joined us.  This is a wonderful site and we will walk the walk with you.  

elvan
Member

Welcome to EX...please do the recommended reading and commit to your quit...you will get support and advice from the people here. I suggest that you read two blogs in particular that I will link here, the first one is by YoungAtHeart‌ For Our New Years' Quitters (and community members, too)  the second one is by JonesCarpeDiem‌ /blogs/jonescarp.aka.dale.Jan_2007-blog/2011/06/26/what-to-expect-in-the-first-four-months  Write a blog as Giulia recommends and introduce yourself to us...we all want you to be successful and we all had a day one.

Best,

Ellen

Thapterefor
Member

I had quit sigs like 4 years ago, i was smoking about 5, i had tried many times to quit but thats was like i want to quit but i still smoke, in conclusion i just had decided to quit without any compromises, i had addiction, u just have to resist addiction 1 or 2 week after it it goes easier! [removed unrelated topic/solicitation]

Edited by Mark‌ to remove unrelated topic and link. Please consider BecomeAnEX Community Guidelines when posting.

DMN225
Member

Driving home from a concert alone with my ESA 2 1/2 weeks ago on a busy highway through traffic and construction. I was late for the concert and was feeling extremely anxious. 

About the Author
An expert in tobacco use and dependence, Dr. Hays has authored and co-authored over 70 peer-reviewed scholarly articles and book chapters on various aspects tobacco dependence and its treatment. Since joining the Nicotine Dependence Center in 1992, he and its staff have treated more than 50,000 patients for tobacco dependence.