Quiting smoking

My husband quit in January after receiving a diagnoses of COPD. He had smoked for 23 years, about a pack and a half a day.

He just quit. He was a MISERABLE S.O.B. for a couple weeks, but he let all his co-workers and the family knew, so we just supported him.

I also quit smoking in January with him. I had smoked for 22 years, but far less than him.

Cutting down didn't work, the Welbutrin and Chantix didn't work, nothing worked for him.

He said what got him through was the thought of seeing his kids grow up. A diagnoses of COPD at the age of 37 is what helped him stop.

I wish you all the best. It's a tough road, but you'll feel so much better when you've actually kicked the habit.

Blessings-
Em
 
Well. this might sound a bit extreme, but here's what I did when I quit almost 8 years ago and it worked for me. I literally pretended that I was an ADDICT, like a SERIOUS DRUG ADDICT (technically that is of course true, but we tend to trivialize smoking in our own minds). Like I was doing heroine or something (I've never done drugs but I was trying to take it THAT seriously). So every time I wanted a cigarette, I would think to myself, "Well, a heroine addict can't just shoot up every now and then, so I can't smoke every now and then". I know it might sound silly or trivial, but putting it in THAT serious of a frame of mind really did help. Had I not thought of it that seriously, I know I would have been sneaking one here and there, and keeping the addiction going.

Also, I was very honest with my feelings about it. If someone said, "Hey, how's the quitting going?" I would say "It sucks!! BUT I haven't had a cigarette". I just embraced and accepted that quitting sucks.

They also say it's good to replace a bad habit with a good one. So I went simple, and chose water. When I had a craving, I would go drink a glass of water, and visualize it being a healthy choice I was making instead of an unhealthy choice, and would give myself a little pat on the back. I think all the water had the added benefit of cleansing my system faster too.

The biggest thing that made me actually quit smoking versus just saying it was this: I had heard my mother always talk about quitting, and she was always waiting until "the right time". One day it occurred to me how stupid that sounded. There will never be a right time! You're never going to wake up any morning and think "Boy, I'd love to quit today, this is going to be great!" It just doesn't happen. So once I accepted that by "waiting for the right time" I was really only keeping myself in denial, that helped a lot. The very night I came to that awareness, I actually threw my pack of cigarettes away half full, realizing, the only right time is right now! (Not suggesting you don't stick to your quit date of the 9th, but just keep in mind, whenever you do it, it WILL suck.) And that's okay. We all go through things that suck, and we always get through them.

And yes, it did get easier in time. The first few weeks were very hard, first few months a struggle, but as months wore on, I craved them less and less. To the point where now I can't stand smoking and smelling it actually makes me blue in the face and sick!

Hope some of my random memories of how I looked at it helps! It's not always a patch, or prescription, sometimes it really takes the right frame of mind. Good luck and remember: You'll NEVER regret quitting. You'll only regret it if you don't.
 
Last edited:
It gets easier. The cravings gradually diminished.
I quit about 7-8 years ago. I too was a chain smoker, with the hack etc.
Don't give up. Get help.

5.gif


Imp- no longer have any desire to smoke.
 
Quote:
Yep, that was a big one for me also. So after dinner I would get up, do anything, do the dishes, go for a walk, whatever. I'd also brush my teeth right after dinner to break that "smoke after food" impulse.
 
Quote:
Yep, that was a big one for me also. So after dinner I would get up, do anything, do the dishes, go for a walk, whatever. I'd also brush my teeth right after dinner to break that "smoke after food" impulse.

yep- me too! so i go out and mess with the chickens if at all possible- the cravings are pretty much gone, just the 'what do i do now?' problem- also, it is as serious an addiction as other substances- its just easier to come by-
 
Nicotine addiction, and yes, it is an addiction can be beat. My son in law managed to quit dip through the help of an on lline support group. There must be such a group for smoking cessation. It will not be easy. I stopped drinking 18+ years ago. I stopped chewing leaf tobacco about 2 and a half years ago. Stopping the chewing tobacco was far harder than stopping the drinking. Do it ! Others will support you and the grouchiness will eventually pass. Good luck, and wishes for success in this endeavor. Sourland George
 
I didn't smoke that much, maybe a pack a day. But here's how I quit: First, I was forced to watch my DH on oxygen. He is off it now, but, believe me, that was a big influencer. I started gradually cutting back. First, I would allow myself a cigarette every fifteen minutes (if I wanted one that often) for the first week. The next week, I cut it back to every half hour. The following week, every forty five minutes. And so forth. If I got cravings in between I would chew sugarless gum, or have a drink with me in the car, which is mostly when I smoked. I'd drink water or pop, or something sugar free, you know? AND..most importantly... I started strenuous exercise. Cardio kickboxing, in my case. Eventually...I started craving the exercise in place of a cigarette. I knew I had to be around for my kids. That was 2004, and I quit for good. Took me about six weeks. I can count on one hand the number of cravings I've had since then. And, I smoked for about twenty some years. Since I quit, I am no longer on asthma medicine. I feel great most of the time. And, by the way, I still do the strenuous exercise. My DH quit also, though he had a little harder time than I did. Good luck I know it's hard, but you can do it.
 
Quote:
Well, I respectfully disagree. I think a lot of people don't want to quit, but know they need to. If most of us waited until we "wanted" to quit, I'll bet we'd still be smoking! I didn't want to quit, but I knew I had to. I liked smoking! But I came to the realization that I had to quit, and so I did. That's what I was saying in my earlier post, that my mother kept waiting for "the right time", for when she "wanted" to quit. Well, 40 years later she is still smoking. You wouldn't tell a crack-head to wait until they want to quit, right? It's a matter of need, not want.

Just my opinion!
smile.png
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom