My personal insights into smoking addiction might help you quit, if you want it.

in life •  8 years ago  (edited)

Edit: Added last section.

I was a pretty heavy smoker, unfortunately, for many years. Recently, I quit once and for all. I'm not going to lecture you about how terrible smoking is for your health, or regale you with tall tales about how much better you will feel if you stop.

Instead, I'm going to give you some insights that might help you quit too, if you want to.

Quitting smoking means quitting nicotine.

Let's get clear on what it means to quit.

Quitting means that you will stop using nicotine, let your metabolism break down this chemical and flush it out of your body over time, and then monitor your behavior and psychology to make sure you don't use nicotine again. In perpetuity.

This means that the most direct way to quit smoking is cold turkey, even though it is quite hard and not very pleasant. This also means that limiting smoking, smoking cigars or hookahs, chewing nicotine gum, vaping, or any other altered form of using this drug does not count as quitting. Sorry about that.

Having to monitor yourself for the rest of your life is a handicap. It is what a heroin addict must do. It is not ideal. But it is a small price to pay for your health, and it gets easier with time: just ask someone in a wheelchair.

Understand your metabolism.

How much you smoke is related to how quickly your body metabolizes nicotine. If it does so quickly, then you tend to smoke more often to replenish the nicotine in your addicted system. If slowly, then you can probably go several days to a week without smoking.

Understanding where you fall on that spectrum can be an important tool in your quitting strategy. If you are a heavy smoker, you will have one hell of a quitting week; but on the bright side, you will get through this period quickly and will need to deal mostly with psychological withdrawal symptoms. For lighter smokers, the chemical withdrawal is prolonged and uncomfortable, and to get into the safe zone a long period of time must elapse.

In some sense, being a heavy smoker increases your chances of success. People tend to ignore problems when their symptoms are not pronounced, and when you're a heavy smoker, you will eventually notice the sharp, unpleasant, and inevitable consequences of smoking -- coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath, constant diarrhea, gas, bad breath, poor circulation, just to name a few -- and these are likely to encourage you into action.

Dangerously, the symptoms of lighter smokers may be less pronounced and therefore less motivating.

Relapse is the danger and it's not worth it.

After quitting, if you consume a small amount of nicotine, you will almost certainly begin smoking again at the same rate that you always did, or faster. There is no compromise. The difference between being a smoker and being a non-smoker is black and white.

When you are experiencing withdrawal, your body is telling you that if you use nicotine you will feel better. Basically, it is lying.

You might feel some relief if the time since your last cigarette is not very long. However, as the length of time increases and your body's supply of nicotine wanes, relapsing into a sudden large dose of nicotine is unlikely to give you physical relief in actuality.

The sad truth of a relapse is that it puts you into a doubly losing situation; not only will you continue smoking, you will also not rid yourself of the physical discomfort your body was seeking to soothe.

Therefore, as you go through the quitting process, the short-term benefits of relapsing become very small fairly quickly. You can use that knowledge to psychologically reinforce the idea that the time you have invested in your cessation is much more valuable than the relief you will feel from relapsing.

I have my way to quit, and you have yours.

I don't know what the right way to quit is for you personally. Everyone is different. Our goal is always the same: when the opportunity to smoke cigarettes arises, do nothing. But the implementation of such a strategy can take many forms.

Some people quit through sheer will power. Other people support themselves by writing out their personal reasons for quitting and health goals. Still others have assistants physically or psychologically restrain them from smoking. Read up on some best practices and figure out what strategy is right for you. Throw out your lighter, chew some gum, crunch on some celery, avoid alcohol.

Most importantly, do not give up. It will take hundreds of attempts to quit truly.

Nicotine addiction is a disorder.

Most people probably don't realize this, but in the same way that drug addiction is a disorder, so is smoking cigarettes. Smokers are often asked, "Why don't you just quit?" Or a smoker's significant other might say, "Sometimes it feels like you love smoking more than you love me." This kind of discourse comes from a misunderstanding of what smoking is and that, at the end of the day, it is a disease which keeps victims trapped in a vicious cycle of addiction and powerlessness.

If you are supporting someone who is trying to quit, part of your regimen should be a sympathy to the pain and suffering that quitters go through in their process and the recognition that it will take time and effort to get it right. Smoking is not about inter-personal relationships or will power. It is about a well-defined chemical process that causes people to behave in very specific, almost involuntary, ways and is very difficult to overcome.

The invisible door of quitting smoking.

If you ask me, or other ex-smokers, or read some of the comments on this post, you will see a strange phenomenon. Many people who were the heaviest of smokers report that once they went through those weeks of discomfort, they were liberated and never looked back. In retrospect, people feel that quitting smoking is a lot easier than it seems.

When you are addicted to nicotine, the thought of leaving your addiction sounds very scary. It is like there is a huge locked door in front of you, and you are sure that you will never be able to pass through it. Guess what? That door is invisible. It doesn't actually exist.

Step through this door today, you'll wish you had done it sooner.

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I love this! It's poignant, it's true to life, it's INCREDIBLY familiar and relatable. I smoked consistently for 10 years, and the relapse section is entirely true: start, stop, repeat...that's typically the pattern. Quitting can tend to lead to "social smoking," which can easily tend to lead to more. I really appreciate the factual approach here. Quitting is EXPONENTIALLY difficult - it takes true tenacity to be able to overcome the hurdle; but, once you do...life allows you to live.

"When you are addicted to nicotine, the thought of leaving your addiction sounds very scary. It is like there is a huge locked door in front of you."

I am one of these, in my country it is very hard to obtain herbs, but cigarettes are cheaper and in every store... when I try quitting cigs I feel like shit for a whole week, when I take a break from toking I feel fine a day after.

Its like one makes you feel ill physically and mentally, the other is just mentally and a lot easier to take breaks from. Plus Tolerance breaks are awesome! <3

Thanks for this awesome blog post.

@sillyfilthy Thank you for posting this. Knowing yourself is a great step toward quitting an addiction. The information you posted is immensely helpful, as an ex-smoker I wish I'd had this information years ago.
Look up http://emofree.com Removing known/unknown issues will drastically reduce the addiction cravings. When the mental issues are gone, the physical addiction is much easier to quit.

There Is Life After Tobacco!

@trees Without cannabis it will definitely be more difficult. Not impossible though. Start setting areas/times you won't smoke. Each week or month, increase the number or areas or amount of time during each no-smoking session. Eventually you will quit.
The Emofree.com stuff is very powerful, look in to that as well. :)

Haven't had tobacco in nearly 15 years now, and no desire or cravings to deal with. :)
Keep it Clean!


My Blog Posts, Neatly Categorized!

Have been of the cigs for about 6 months now as well. I have smoked from the age 15 - 30. I noticed when i gave up it wasnt any where near as hard as my mind had let me believe through the years of contemplating stopping. Sure i was a little stressed to start with and i had some rather crazy dreams but this all passed soon enough . I can now breath again ! Im now kicking myself for not giving it a good go earlier. good post . upvoted.

Yes, this is exactly my experience!

i stopped smoking 6 years ago. I will never look back at it. Best decision i ever made.

High five!

Great info. I quit 8 years ago, after smoking for over 20 years. I did a lot of reading while I was quitting to take my mind off it. White knuckle reading for the first two weeks, Ha!

Congratulations!

.

...

Just tweeted this for you. Thank you for the post! Wish there was another way to spread your insight or even save it on steemit to read it later before it gets lost in the shuffle. 👍🏻

I bookmark posts that I want to get back to. Yes, I have quite a few now but it works for me.

Thank you, much appreciated.

Quitting was the gift I gave myself for my 28th birthday. It's been 8, great, smoke free years.

It wasn't easy, but I treated it like any major goal I wanted to accomplish, I researched, thought hard, developed a plan, researched more and revised my plan, then followed through as though it mattered to me, because it did.

I really love to destroy to myself and Tobacco help me to do it, but thanks for the suggestions

All addictions will typically have some emotional condition attached to them which is re-inforcing it. It is usually easier to get over an addiction if the underlying emotional issue or feeling of lack in something, is solved.

Thanks for sharing!

I use Vaporizer to stop smoking

Great post.
I quit my self when i get a baby girl a month ago.
I dont longer see the point of poison my self, and think about my doughters life without the ugly smell from mee.

I hope all you guys that smoke, can do it.
You can if you have a strong ability for it.
Nothing is unposible.

-Regards

This was really helpful. Thanks.

Thank you for such usefull informations that should help those people who still can't stop smoking.

I was a smoker (20 cigs a day, 6 or 7 years). And suddenly I decided to give up smoking. I like this story :)
It was a shady working day in February 2014 (winter in Saint-Petersburg, Russia is usually disgusting, wet and all gray), I was sitting in office thinking about things I’d like to change in my life. Surprisingly the only thing I could come up with was to give up smoking. So I gave away all the cigarettes I had to my colleagues explaining them nothing and decided that I’m not a smoker. That’s it!
I can’t say that it was a chemical or physiological addiction. It was psychological addiction only. To cope with it I bought green tea in the local shop and every time I had a feeling that I would like to smoke a cigarette I drank a cup of green tea instead.
Nearly two and a half years have passed. Surely my health is better now as well as my results in sports.
Moreover now I can afford myself a couple of cigars or hookah once a month and I don’t feel necessity to get some nicotine after that.
P.S. Saving money is also a nice bounty :)

I now also smoke and can not quit , @sillyfilthy

Quitting is seems really hard before you do it, and really easy in retrospect. I smoked at least a pack a day for 15+ years. Three months after I quit, it was like I never smoked at all, or thought about it.

How many per day? Be honest.

I found that I could only actually quit smoking once I had decided in my mind that I really was going to. Everything before that had been a half-hearted doomed to fail attempt. Once you actually just stop doing it, it only takes a few weeks to get it completely out of your system. I too soon swapped one addiction for another and took up running - but more than 10 years on I'm a lot better for having made that swap.

You are a hero. Congratulations on your quit.

Must show your post to my boyfriend, who is smoking for 3 years (he is 17), that's really helpful, thank's

Please do. The sooner he quits the sooner the damage is almost completely recoverable. After a certain point, it's too late.

Good luck!

Smoking what? cigarettes or cannabis? Fk the haters be honest and research the truth about cannabis


I was a cigarette smoker for almost 20 years, and now I vape. I don't consider myself as having quit yet, but at least I don't have the tar and everything else that comes with tobacco.

The fight continues ...

I am pretty sure it is much easier on your lungs and body to vape, but of course no one knows the long term health effects of vaping. What has your experience been with well-being?

It's been infinitely better the last two years with vaping, but I've gone cold turkey before for several months and felt better. Since you can secretly vape pretty much anywhere, I find I do it a lot and that's what's bothering me

Common feedback to vaping -- end up doing more of the drug!

@prufarchy I started when I was 14, smoked a pack a day until 28, then managed to quit for just about 2 years. Then a self-involved acquaintance put a drink and a cigarette in my hand at a party, and here I am after 3 more years of ruining my health from smoking.

On this past Friday (6 days ago), I made a decision to quit and finish it once and for all. It took just the right conditions to launch into a non-smoking mode successfully, and now I am cruising. Day 3 and 4 were particularly rough, and I came very close to smoking, but I survived.

That acquaintance is no longer part of my life.

Final thought. If you are in the first days of cessation, and you suddenly really want to smoke, try this weird trick: promise yourself that you can smoke whenever you want to, just that you must sit and wait for 30 minutes before you do so. Turn on a timer on your phone or oven. By the time the timer runs out, you will probably be over your craving and in control again. Good luck, quitters!

Yeah, it's definitely been a long two years with the vape. How long were you a smoker and when did you quit?

I quit with an E-cig for a couple weeks. Had to not give in and grab it, instead of a cigaret. I started being disgusted when I smelled or saw someone smoking. But one day, I gave in, now I am right back in the addiction. I made a promise to myself over a year ago that I wouldnt buy cigaretts anymore, and I havnt, but I bum, or ppl offer me enough that I never go without. I was blaming my group of friends for my addiction, saying I would need to never see or hang with them to quit, but that is me rationalizing. If I we are ready. We can say NO! It matters only how serious you are.

He downvoted me and I gave positive feedback?!!!Here's more


Watch and downvote!

Quitting smoking is a personal thing.. Your brain must be ready..otherwise you will always go back on this bad addiction

Currently trying E-cigarettes and a Vaporizer. The Vaporizer I love and did a review:

https://steemit.com/marijuana/@krassvs/review-my-first-week-with-my-own-vaporizer-storz-and-bickel-crafty

no worries - payout has passed :-)

is all in the mind, poeple actually quit the they decide to dobso

I love the way you've worded all of this! Im still strugling with the adiction. I've gone from ciggarettes to a vape which is at 4mg nic which is better tjen where i was. One day I'll get there.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

Ok, cool post,
i never looked at it as scary and i liked the two week perspective.
Especially in wintertime i start having a burning feeling in my throath and chest, but don't worry i don't have it now.
I've bought myself a nicotine-inhaler, but it only stimulates my tastebuds for a sigaret.
I like the idea that someone else is quitting too, might work, come two months or so!
Thanks

Congratulations... You are a strong and wise Human, I give you props!

I traded one addiction for another. I'm living proof of cannabis addiction.

I stopped smoking cigarettes over 5 years ago, I quit cold turkey, but did I really?

I started smoking more cannabis, and eventually switched to concentrated cannabis. Now I am starting to realize I traded one addiction for another.

  ·  8 years ago Reveal Comment

The writer is referring to tobacco, not cannabis.

I stand for correction...I read so many threads during the time I woke up major comment error:)
All I could see and read was cannabis and saw negative information about stopping on a #tag I thought was listed marijuana!

LOL! Lay off the weed, dude! (just kidding with you)

lmao!