cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Share your quitting journey

THE JOURNEY THUS FAR, AS MY FIRST 2 WEEKS COME TO AN END.

bean5
Member
1 4 19

Hello Everybody--Newbies, No-Man-Landers, Elders, and those thinking about quitting smoking

My blog tonight is mostly for you newbies out there--I have a report of what you may possibly expect as you exit week 2 of your quit (14 days--that is all it takes).

I am officially entering the third week into my quit.  WOW--I can't believe I can actually say that!!! I have NOT even had a single puff.  Do you realize that I have NEVER been able to say that--NOT one puff (I always cheated in the past quits).  Which is why, I cannot even begin to stress the importance of "N.O.P.E" (Not One Puff Ever).  It is a mantra that I have learned to love, and IT WORKS. How do you expect to "quit" if you are in fact "not quit"? 

Confidence in yourself is very important--you must believe in yourself.  Understand, I am certainly not claiming that I am no longer an addict.  I know my journey is far from over.  I know that I will ALWAYS have to be careful with this addiction.   I know that I can NEVER even have one puff--NOT EVER!!! However, I am totally okay with that.  I have made my peace with never smoking again, and it feels so incredibly liberating.  

Since my journey began, it has been interesting for me to notice a relatively rapid change in my mindset.  Before I quit, as a smoker, I went from loving smoking--to hating it.  I loved my cigarettes, but I  hated feeling that I HAD to feed the addiction.  I loved smoking, but I hated how I felt when I couldn't smoke--long plane flights, UGH that feeling just sucks.  As a smoker, I loved my "time-outs" with my cigarettes, but I hated knowing that with every puff, I was killing myself.  

Since I quit, I went from loving being around and smoking with my fellow victims--to now realizing that we had nothing in common but smoking.  I went from fantasizing and daydreaming about smoking--to having nightmares that I had "blown" my quit. I went from not being able to be around someone who was smoking for fear of bumming a butt--to being able to sit near a smoker without so much as considering a drag.   I went from feeling like I was doomed to die an early death--to being able to envision a long and healthy life without smoking.  I went from "believing" that I could not LIVE for more than a few hours without a cigarette, to "knowing" that I can.  I went from being a slave, to finally busting the shackles off and   being liberated.  FREE, FREE AT LAST.

4 Comments