H E L P !!!!!!!!

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

Help Support AutomaticWasher.org:

How I quit

I chain smoked Pall Mall, Lucky Strike and Camel filterless cigarettes for about 10 years. There was nothing on this Earth I enjoyed more than smoking. Each time I took a drag, I did it twice as long and hard as the average person, and I inhaled every last bit of that smoke. Several times per day I'd get one too hot, and it wouldn't taste right, so I'd have to discard it and light another. People detested me because I smelled so bad. With just one drag, I could make more smoke than other people did with an entire cigarette. Toward the end, I couldn't climb one flight of stairs without being winded for 10 minutes. If someone made me laugh, it precipitated a coughing fit for 5 minutes or so. I had extreme difficulty falling asleep at night because, even at rest, I was short of breath and laboring to breathe, so my body never switched into automatic/unconscious breathing mode. I was mega hooked. And if I could quit, anybody can.

Several times I failed at quitting before I finally succeeded. I succeeded by learning lessons from my failures. Maybe at least some of these will help you. Here they are:

1. After a couple days or a week, somewhere along the line the cravings intensified, leading to bargaining about having "just one last cigarette, this one last time to calm this craving, and then I'll return right back to quitting mode." Wrong. After that one cigarette, I wanted a second one even more than I wanted the one before. And a third... The point: once I realized that giving in to the cravings would only make them worse, it became much easier to resist.

2. Did you notice the drama in the quote above? Just one last cigarette...the very last one for the rest of my life... If you let your mind shift into drama mode, it's all but certain you'll give in. When I saw your subject line with HELP! in big letters with exclamation points, I knew before the thread was out that you'd have given in. Asking people for help is another form of your mind playing drama games on you. So....instead, control your mind. Don't let it drift into drama mode. How? See #3.

3. Focus on attaining small goals. When the cravings begin, calm down. Remind yourself you're only going to worry about just getting through this hour, and later on, just another hour, and eventually, just this day. That's much easier than never smoking again.

4. Distract yourself with something else to get your mind off a craving fit. Change the radio station. Get engrossed in a movie or a novel. Drive somewhere. Take a walk. Work even harder at work. Call someone. But DO NOT talk, or even think, about the fact that you're quitting. Talk about anything but. After awhile, you'll realize an hour or two passed in the wink of an eye. Distraction, not drama, is the key.

5. Eat or drink things that are not compatible with the taste of cigarettes. For example, eat peppermints, drink a glass of milk. Or brush your teeth or gargle with mouthwash. I'm sure your cigarettes were never particularly satisfying after any of the above.

6. Avoid or cut back on things that go well with cigarettes. Like coffee. Just drink your morning cup or two of coffee early in the day while you're strong, and then immediately switch to something else.

Most importantly, though, I succeeded at resisting the cravings once I figured out that giving in to them actually intensified them instead of quieting them down. That's why quitting cold turkey is the only way to do it. When you want to quiet down loud cravings, just distract yourself.

By the way, after you quit for a few days, your lungs will start secreting copious amounts of phlem, so much that it will make you cough excessively and feel short of breath. It's as if they have an uncanny way of knowing that it might just be worth the effort to try cleaning themselves out. Be patient. That phase will pass. For 6 months, I was sleepy and lethargic, and I felt like I was drunk. That too, passed.
And most importantly, the cravings passed too. Over time they became less and less frequent. After the first week, each succeeding week passes by faster. The first month is a good milestone after which the cravings significantly diminish. Eventually I only craved when I was standing in the check-out line at the grocery. Back then, they had cigarettes displayed in reach just like candy bars are today. I resisted by remembering how hard it was to quit and focusing my thoughts on how I'd never want to go through all that all over again. After about five years the check-out lane cravings stopped too.

Good luck! You'll be so glad you did it.
 
helicaldrive

thank you for the tips!!! you are absolutely 100% correct in what you wrote! thank you very much.

michael
 
keep up the good work...you've re-inspired me to quit

Gotta give you a high-five and a brother's hug on your progress, badata...

I don't have a cigarette problem--I have a cigar problem...

A little backstory here...I began smoking cigars at 21. Started with the cheap stuff, then by my early 30s, I began buying more expensive cigars at such places as the Tinder Box and specific cigar stores. I have quit off-and-on through the years (in fact, until around Christmas, I had been smoke-free for about 16 months, in no small part because a (former) cigar-smoking buddy quit after two serious heart attacks.

Right now, I've averaged about two to four cigars a week, but they're large, maduro (that is, black-wrapper) cigars; they're excellent cigars, but I don't need them. Both of my parents died of smoking-related diseases, and one of my brothers has emphysema from smoking over 50 years. I know I don't need them...and I know what I have to do...and bro', reading the responses from our AW buddies is giving me the stones to quit again...

Keep up the good work, badata!

Charlie
bongobro
 
I like to call it, breaking up with the Maroboro Man

Yes I have also done it myself, in 1994.Two years later, I was in the hospital with Pneumonia coughing and coughing.It made me think of what made me quit smoking. It was awful not being able to breathe, believe me. What you are doing is an investment in you, for your future, not to mention all of the money you are currently saving not smoking. I would put a dollar value on it, When I smoked, I spent about 20 a week on a carton, oh how times have changed my friend since that long gone by.I am sure it is like 45 or more a week for a carton. Lets use 45.45 times 4 is 180 dollars. 180 times 12 is 2160.Wow! That is a good chunk of change when you add the numbers up. That is enough to have a very fun little get away, or new clothes, or 46 boxes of Persil Mega pearls or two front load Frididaire sets new. That is alot of washing for anyone. I want you to be successful with your endevor, and you will be. just know that this is the worst part of it. I told myself when I quit, from this day forward, I am a non smoker and this is the way that the world knows me. I also chewed alot of Big Red when I wanted a cigarette. I have not had one in all of this time. I was ditermined to kick it. You can do it!!!
 
Back
Top