The first time, I quit for 4 months during and after Lent.
The second time, I quit for 5 months during and after Lent.
The third time, I quit for 6 months after I lost a bet to my mom on the 2004 Presidential election.
I still owe Mom half a year, which I intend to finish, starting tomorrow at wake up.
Lord help me. Jesus help me. Let me find strength. Let me find peace. Let me find the best I can be. Walk with me. Stay with me. Hold me. Please. I am nothing without you.
May I wisdom?
May I strength?
May I understanding?
May I patience?
May I love?
I love you, You are the Kingdom, the The Power and the Glory.
posted
You know it takes the average smoker about 5 tries before successfully quitting?
But that doesn't mean you need to be doing this alone. All of the hospitals I work at have a support group for people like you. While your profile does not reveal your location, I am sure a local hospital near you has a similar program.
I'm cheering for you, Thor!
Posts: 2064 | Registered: Dec 2003
| IP: Logged |
posted
Good job! NEVER smoke that last one. Always throw it out. That makes quitting a more conscious choice -- you didn't smoke until you ran out, you quit while you still had some around.
If you did smoke the last one, you should go out, buy a pack of cigarettes and throw it away.
And now, just remember that it is possible to quit and never go back. Eventually, the smell will start to bother you and if you ever were to take a puff, you'd become violently ill. It takes awhile, but of all the bad habits to get rid of this is one that is better to shed as early in life as you possibly can.
posted
It's hard on the SO when their lover stops smoking, but I hope she finds some understanding for you soon. My bf tried to stop smoking by going on a camping trip with no smokes and no access to any for a week. Needless to say, I did NOT enjoy myself very much on that trip. But, the end result is worth putting up with some grouchy pissiness. Good luck. Do you want some lollipops? They helped my friend stop smoking.
Posts: 499 | Registered: Mar 2004
| IP: Logged |
posted
Nah, foundling that sounds like a bad idea. He said he doesn't want to gain weight and 20 lollipops a day would do that. (Not that he'd eat twenty, just saying)
Posts: 4816 | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged |
posted
Good point, Ryuko. And the sugerless ones will rot your liver worse than alcohol. Hmm... Beef jerky is good. There is no real way you can eat too much of it because it takes so long to get through one piece. If you get the real stuff. I dont know. Having something to constantly distract her was what she was really looking for. I personally recommend doodling. On napkins.
Posts: 499 | Registered: Mar 2004
| IP: Logged |
posted
Phillipians 4 got my husband through quitting. "I can do all things through him who strengthens me."
He hasn't smoked in 7 years after being a pack a day'r for 20+. I think it was his 3rd or 4th attempt. He's addicted to dental floss and toothpicks now. That's what he replaced the cigarettes with.
posted
Keep it up, Silverblue Sun! Take back control of your body!
When I gave up alcohol, the saying was: "It's not the stopping that's hard. It's the staying stopped."
I don't know what drove you back to cigarettes the last three times you quit for 3, 4 or 6 months, but I hope you are prepared to know those things may come up again, and this time you will be able to just say no and not pick it back up.
Cheers to you! Farmgirl
Posts: 9538 | Registered: Aug 2003
| IP: Logged |
posted
When I was about 30 (1985), I had to run for a train, and my heartbeat didn't slow down till the train reached its destination about 45 minutes later. That was the first time I quit.
Each time I quit, it was with a stronger and stronger sense that each butt was literally killing me, until the filth and expense and FEAR completely overcame the rapidly diminishing reward (assuaging the demon of habit, oral gratification, 'coolness,' calming anxiety).
I finally quit for good in March 2001 after being an on-and-off smoker for 23 years (one pack a day for almost half of those years).
God, I never wrote that out like that. Even now it shocks me.
All the tricks in the world (gum, candy, exercise, not hanging around smokers, quitting alcohol, taking up hobbies that can't include smoking, etc.) wouldn't have done it for me. That inner switch had to flick permanently. Today I LIVE the conviction that smoking cannot be any part of my experience; it repulses me.
I wish you well. Each demon we battle is a step toward ... something (mastery, enlightenment, righteousness -- whatever floats your boat :-).