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Share your quitting journey

Have You Heard?

JonesCarpeDiem
2 3 12

3 Comments
Daniela2016
Member

Totally agree with you Dale!

However I would like the statement: "Quitting is not excuse to kill anyone" to be amended to add "or oneself".  

I will always remember day 88 of my journey, now fully spilled into 89.

Day 88 I cried my heart out, late into the night, day 89 my anger is showing its nasty head.  I need to stay away from mom, and keep my mouth closed.  Good thing it is a work from home day...

Just one thing here, I want to be clear,  I do not want to smoke!  

This is not a crave, just a general feeling bad thing, don't know what to do with myself, much like the hoplessness you were talking about the other day.

I drank tons of cold water, going about my business, waiting for the day to pass into another one...will it be a better one???

Daniela

elvan
Member

I sort of felt like killing a few people, but I DIDN'T!

JonesCarpeDiem

Yes Daniela,

It will pass. Some of these funks can last a number of days. I personally had a 3 day funk.

Hang in there.

About the Author
Hello, My name is Dale. I was quit 18 months before joining this site and had participated on another site during that time. I learned a lot there and brought it with me. I joined this site the first week of August 2008. I didn't pressure myself to quit. HOW I QUIT I didn't count, I didn't deny myself to get started. When I considered quitting (at a friends request to influence his brother to quit), I simply told myself to wait a little longer. No denial, nothing painful. After 4 weeks I was down to 5 cigarettes from a pack a day. The strength came from proving to myself, I didn't need to smoke because I normally would have smoked. Simple yes? I bought the patch. I forgot to put one on on the 4th day. I needed it the next day but the following week I forgot two days in a row I put one in my wallet with a promise to myself that I would slap it on and wait an hour rather than smoke. It rode in my wallet my first year.There's nothing keeping any of you from doing this. It doesn't cost a dime. This is about unlearning something you've done for a long time. The nicotine isn't the hard part. Disconnecting from the psychological pull, the memories and connected emotions is. :-) Time is the healer.