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NOPE, not one puff ever!

Dr_Hays
Mayo Clinic
6 10 1,394

Quitting smoking takes everything you have — all your focus, energy, and resolve. But once you’re “over the hump” and not fighting daily to stay tobacco free, you might let your guard down.

 

Maybe you’ll be hanging out with friend who smoke and think: I’m not addicted anymore. I can handle a puff.

 

Maybe after a stressful workday you’ll rationalize: What’s the harm? I’ve got 2 years tobacco free.

 

Maybe you’ll reward yourself for quitting by having “just one cigarette.”

 

Beware! Just when you think you’re no longer vulnerable to relapse — well, that’s when you are most vulnerable, especially if you’re drinking alcohol or dealing with stress or illness.

 

I’ve known former smokers who relapsed a decade or more after quitting. One woman, who’d quit smoking at age 28 relapsed at age 48! In the interim, she’d become a diehard non-smoker repulsed by the odor of cigarettes. Then one day, while at a bar on vacation, she impulsively bummed a smoke in a bar, figuring: I’m in control. This isn’t a problem.

 

Soon she was smoking a pack a day and trying to hide her addiction from her family. It was another five years before she quit for good.

 

As an ex-smoker, you must live by the NOPE rule: Not one puff ever.

 

Here are 5 ways to stop yourself from taking that fateful first puff.

 

  • Notice the moment risky thoughts surface, so you can act before your judgment gets too clouded. Tell yourself: I can feel myself heading down the wrong path!

 

  • Text or call a friend to talk you out of it.

 

  • Wear a rubber band or other reminder around your wrist. When temptation bubbles up, tug on the band to snap yourself back to reality.

 

  • Keep a counter-argument in your wallet or on your phone. For example: “Quitting has saved me $4,000 a year” or “I can keep up with my grandson!”

 

  • Visualize yourself as a smoker again: You’re worried about flight delays, how your clothes smell, whether you have enough cigarettes. Now imagine starting the quitting process over again.

 

           

Have you relapsed after taking “just one puff”? Tell us your story!

10 Comments
bacardigirl
Member

Every past attempt to quit smoking was broken by 'just one puff'. I was quit for 2 year and 'just one puff' had me buying a pack by the end of the week. Sometimes alcohol was involved, sometimes it was stress or just plain weakness on my part.

What I didn't have in the past was the resources to learn about the addiction. EX Community offers those tools and for that, I believe I am 270 days into my forever quit. I am so very thankful.

NOPE is no joke, it shouldn't be tested or challenged. NOPE is my new way of thinking. It's the only way I can afford to think:)

elvan
Member

NOPE was my mantra at the beginning and still is over three years later.  One puff is never going to do it.  "One is too many, a thousand is never enough."

Thomas3.20.2010

Not happening ever! N.O.P.E. has kept me smoke FREE for 7+ Years and will continue to do so for the long haul!

JonesCarpeDiem

I accepted my quit each day during my month of preparation by getting off autopilot and proving I didn't need to smoke just because I thought of smoking.

freeneasy
Member

I quit smoking for nearly 4 years in my twenties, started again while drinking in bar and kept smoking for 33 years. During the time I had stopped, I never thought I would smoke again and didn't miss it.  Now I immediately banish any smoking thought. N.O.P.E. is the way to be free.

CommunityAdmin
Community Manager
Community Manager

Thanks for all the comments bacardigirlelvanThomas3.20.2010JonesCarpeDiemfreeneasy‌ ! One puff could ruin a quit (OPCRaQ)

Mark
EX Community Manager

elvan
Member

They travel in packs.  

h8v8pe13
Member

I was 5 months into my longest quit attempt after being addicted for 4 years when my best friend had to have emergency lung surgery. i was so proud i wasn’t smoking anymore - but i was physiologically stressed about my friend. i went to a concert two weeks later and hit my friend’s elf bar “just once” & ended up smoking for 5 more months before clawing myself out of addiction again. never again. nope. 

CommunityAdmin
Community Manager
Community Manager

Good for you for not quitting! It is not easy quitting especially during times of stress. 

Here is a article on managing stress that may be useful as you are on your journey quitting for good.  https://www.becomeanex.org/ex-resources/about-quitting/manage-stress/

-Quiana, EX Team

 

Barbscloud
Member

@h8v8pe13 Welcome to the Ex.  Is that correct - you have 16 days quit.  That's fabulous.

It's to not too late educate yourself about nicotine and create a quit plan. Along with the support of fellow quitters these two steps has meant success for many smokers. 

This link is a great lace to start. Learn how to identify your triggers, the tools you'll use, creating new associations instead of smoking, etc. 

https://www.becomeanex.org/guides/?cid=footer_community_linktobex 

We're here to support you on your journey.  So reach out anytime you need help, want to share your experience or to support fellow quitters. We're all in this together.

Join many of us on the Daily Pledge to stay on track one day at a time.

Glad you found us!

Barb

About the Author
An expert in tobacco use and dependence, Dr. Hays has authored and co-authored over 70 peer-reviewed scholarly articles and book chapters on various aspects tobacco dependence and its treatment. Since joining the Nicotine Dependence Center in 1992, he and its staff have treated more than 50,000 patients for tobacco dependence.