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Naniinoneya
Member

Naniinoneya's Status Update on 05/07/2019

I guess you reach a point when you're curious if you will love her not want to smoke. Quitting is one thing ... Not thinking about it anymore is another
6 Replies
indingrl
Member

WELCOME and CONGRATS on love and quitting and NOT thinking about is YOUR NEW Mindset. CHOICE- it varies I believe with what life's hits YOU with SUDDENLY- like I was 3 months non smoking and got news - MY brother in love was killed by a drunk driver- I was asked to speak at his wake n funeral - It was MY first time traveling out of town and first driving that long 12 hours without MY drug NICOTINE- I came here for HELP- now 8 YEARS LATER - life SUDDENLY - MY daughter has stage 4 liver failure and I do NOT think of using MY drug of CHOICE NICOTINE - MY NEW Mind set is on MY God in MY Lord Jesus and MY Holy Spirit to HELP ME THINK more of MY daughter - more than MYSELF- MY experience - it is YOUR CHOICE what YOU THINK ON- please take what HELPS and let go of the rest to be HELPFUL is MY only aim- thank you. 
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elvan
Member

Welcome to EX, you will stop thinking about it but it takes time and effort.  I remember when I was fairly early in my quit and I really did not think I would ever stop thinking about smoking or about quitting.  It has been over five years now and I rarely think about smoking and if I DO, it certainly isn't because I WANT to smoke.  Read everything you can about nicotine addiction, stay close to this site and read blogs and comments and see what is working for others, and make a commitment to stay quit.  Commitment is very important...just don't smoke, no matter what.  Quitting is a journey and not an event and it does get better.  

​We all want you to succeed.
​Ellen
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elvan
Member

I am hoping that YoungAtHeart  will write her welcome to you and please read this blog by JonesCarpeDiem that I read over and over again when I quit....What To Expect In The First Four Months
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YoungAtHeart
Member

Welcome to our community!

​I promise you WILL get to the point where you don't think about smoking anymore, but you must be patient and allow the journey to unfold.  It can't be rushed - and there are no shortcuts - but you WILL get to that point  I promise

The important thing you can do right now is to educate yourself on what nicotine does to your body and mind. To that end, I highly recommend Allen Carr's “The Easy Way to Stop Smoking.” This is an easy and entertaining read. You can search for it online or at your local library. If you do nothing else to get ready for your quit, please do give this a read.


 You should also read the posts here and perhaps go to the pages of folks who you think might be helpful. You might visit whyquit.com, quitsmoking.com and livewell.com for the good information contained there. @https://excommunity.becomeanex.org/groups/best-of-ex has lots of blogs written by members of this site with their experiences and guidance. Here is a video to inform you further about nicotine addiction: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpWMgPHn0Lo&feature=youtu.be.


After you have completed the recommended reading, it will be time to make an informed choice of the quit aid, if any, you will use. If you go that route, I personally recommend the aids that don't let the addict control the dose such as the available prescription drugs or the patch. If used properly, gum, lozenges and inhalers are fine, but they need to be used only as a last resort after you have tried to delay and distract.   I have seen folks become addicted to them if they substitute them for every cigarette they used to smoke - just trading one addiction for another.  You need to start out with a plan to reduce use of them over time - which the patch does by decreasing the dose contained in them..  For the gum, you can start by cutting each piece in half, then in quarters, then sub regular gum of the same flavor in between, adding more and more regular gum.  For the lozenge, you need to start subbing a mint in between to begin, increasing the number of them over time.  I do not recommend the e-cigarette for four reasons: 1) the vapor has been compared to the polluted air in Bejing on a bad day, 2) they just provide another nicotine delivery system while continuing the hand to mouth smoking motion,  3) the batteries can spontaneously catch on fire and 4) you can become addicted to that and it has not yet been proven safe .
 


It will be informative if you do the tracking and separation exercises recommended here on the site. As you track each cigarette smoked, note its importance, and what you might do instead. Put each one off just a little to prove that you don't NEED a cigarette just because you think you do.
 

The idea is to change up your routines so the smoking associations are reduced.  Drink your coffee with your OTHER hand in a place different from when you smoked. Maybe switch to tea for a bit.  If you always had that first smoke with your coffee, try putting your tennies on right out of bed, going for a quick walk, then taking your shower and THEN your coffee! Rearrange the furniture in the areas you used to smoke so the view is different. Buy your gas at a different station. Take a different route to work. Take a quick walk at break time where the smokers AREN'T.
 
You need to distract yourself through any craves.  You can take a bite out of a lemon (yup - rind and all), put your head in the freezer and take a deep breath of cold air, do a few jumping jacks, go for a brisk walk or march in place, play a computer game.  Keep a cold bottle of water with you from which to sip. Don't let that smoking thought rattle around in your brain unchallenged. Sometimes you need to quit a minute or an hour at a time.  You will need to be disciplined in the early days to distract yourself when a crave hits.    Get busy!  Here is a link to a list of things to do instead of smoke if you need some fresh ideas:
 https://excommunity.becomeanex.org/blogs/Youngatheart.7.4.12-blog/2013/02/25/100-things-to-do-instea...
The conversation in your head in response to the "I want a cigarette" thought needs to be, "Well, since I have decided not to do that anymore, what shall I do instead for the three minutes this crave will last?"  Then DO it.  You will need to put some effort into this in the early days, but it gets easier and easier to do.

Stay close to us here and ask questions when you have them and for support when you need it. We will be with you every step of the way!


 Nancy


elvan
Member

Thank you YoungAtHeart
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Giulia
Member

I've been quit 13 years.  I still have urges now and then for cigarette.  I accept that, as just a fact and part of my quit life.  "if you will love her not want to smoke."  Not quite sure what you mean by that, assuming it was just a brain glitch (which I often have responding to multiple things at the same time)  "Not thinking about it"  - I don't think about smoking at all during my day.  Or shall I say I don't think about myself smoking.  Since I'm an active supporter on here on a daily basis, I obviously think about smoking every day, but not when it concerns MY smoking or need thereof.  I don't generally have a need to smoke any more.  But you're quite right in that quitting is one thing yet thinking about it is another.  That's why we say this is a journey and not an event.  The "journey" is the process of getting past the "thinking" of it all the time.  The needing of it all the time.  The missing it all the time.  The Freedom that we speak of is the absence of all of that.  And it's so glorious I cannot begin to tell you.  Does it mean I'm not going to get a slap in the head craving now and then?  No.  But I don't "think" about smoking all day long like we all do in the beginning of our quit journeys.  

​Trust us when we tell you, you WILL get past the stage of thinking about it all the time.  The trick is to hang in long enough until you do.  If you're willing to hang in as long as that may take, you'll have a long-term quit.  So that's part of your homework.  How long are you willing to hang in?  If you set a parameter, you are setting an excuse.  If you understand what I mean by that, you'll understand how to have a long-term quit.  
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