Advice and Support from Thousands of Users Just Like You

Health & Wellness Whether you're just trying to shape up or dealing with a serious illness, share your story and get support on this forum.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
eharmonyadvice's Avatar

Moderator

Join Date: Oct 2007

Posts: 852

See profile



If you're trying to kick the habit, give and get support here.
- January 13th, 2009, 03:12 am
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Share on Facebook

#1   Reply With Quote
m8se69's Avatar

Power Poster

Join Date: Sep 2008

Posts: 7,029

See profile



13 days smoke free. Not nicotene free, though. I couldn't do it without the patch. But I am "smoke-free", and my lungs can tell the difference.


But, God...I still want a cigarette!!!


Ok, it passed.
- January 13th, 2009, 03:12 pm
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Share on Facebook

#2   Reply With Quote
bodhi23's Avatar

bodhi23 tired of sitting in front of a computer.

Quick Study

Join Date: Jan 2009

Posts: 97

See profile



The best thing I used was the "Nicotrol Inhaler". It's a prescription. It can be used in combination with the quit smoking pills i.e. Zyban, Chantix. But I had nouse for them.


TheNicotol Inhaleris a little white plastic tube that is almost the same size as a cigarette. There are nicotine cartriges that you place inside the tube. You "puff" on them, inhaling a dose of nicotine. You can use up to 16 a day,for 20 minutes each, and for a maximum of 6 months. They are best for those with a "hand-to-mouth" fixation.


I smoked 1-2 packs of cigarettes a day for14 years. I never had a need for more than 10 cartriges a day. I knowit's natural tothink you would just become addicted to them, transferring one addiction to another. But it is the habit that begins to fade after using these for a while. They simply begin to not be so much "fun". You simply get bored with them. Then you start forgetting to put new cartriges in and you are "puffing" on an empty tube. I only used them for 6 weeks before I just stopped using them completely. I have been nicotine free for 8 months.


I have had asthma since I was 9 years old. I no longer have a need for my Combivent (asthma)Inhaler. I have more energy than ever. I don't have to take "smoke breaks" or any breaks for that matter. My sense of smell and taste is extraordinary. The benefits are countless. Not to mentionno more cigarettesmell...yuk! Guy's, I find in general, don't like women who smoke, even if they themselves smoke. Hypocritical, I know, but it's a fact. Now I don't have to worry about that.


Also, I don't mind being around other smokers. It doesn't make me crave them in the least. I sometimes enjoy the smell of a freshly lit cigarette (kinda gross I know, but I suppose it's the smell of thetobacco like in pipes and cigars which have always smelled sort of good to me). But the smell that stays on their clothes and hands and in their homes from ash trays and such is actually pretty disgsting, gut wrnchingly awful, to me now.


But still, I don't have an inkling of a craving for a smoke. Once in a while the thought enters my mind. But Iam able to overcome it by thinking about how awful it was to smoke, all the benefits I will lose and that there is nothing to be gained by smoking another cigarette. If you ever really think about it, there is nothing good or fun or enjoyable at all about smoking a cigarette. They taste and smell disgusting. But I am confident that with time, even the thought will no longer enter my mind.


Oh, and my skin is even softer.My right hand is the one I used to smoke with. The wrinkles were always more prominent on the right hand because of smoke. Now they are soft and smooth. Also the skin on my face is smoother and softer. It is verynoticeable.


P.S. a doctor told me that if I continued to smoke that I would die. But before I die I would have to carry an oxygen tank around with me wherver I went; that is if I ever had the enegy to go anywhere. He said that I was in the first stages of getting emphysema. I couldn't breathe and I thought it was just my asthma. But now, like I said, I can hardly tell I have asthma. That doctor saved my life by telling me that. I am only 30 years old.


PLEASE, ANYONE OUT THERE STILL SMOKING, DO YOURSELF A FAVOR, SAVE YOUR LIFE,YOU WILL DIEIF YOU DON'T QUIT SMOKING!!!
- January 22nd, 2009, 10:52 am
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Share on Facebook

#3   Reply With Quote
m8se69's Avatar

Power Poster

Join Date: Sep 2008

Posts: 7,029

See profile



60 days...
- March 2nd, 2009, 09:22 pm
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Share on Facebook

#4   Reply With Quote
Barnyard's Avatar

Unregistered

Join Date: Feb 2009

Posts: 59

See profile



Four posts since January? C'mon people get with the program. I stopped smoking at Lent forty two years ago. My lungs, heart & other vital organs thank me everyday. I have survived cancer & heart bypass surgery mainly because my lungs heart were strong due to no nicotene in the system.


To all those smokers out there who want to give it up, i can assure you that it is possible.I went cold turkey after makinga public announcement. That worked for me, whatever works for you do it. It may take several or many attempts to break this dirty unhealthy habit. I love it when i see kids smoking & hear them say they can give it up anytime they want just as they take another drag / puff or their cigarettes. There are a lot of reasons to give up smoking or better yet don't start. Besides the health issues, there are the social in which i would never date or kiss a woman who had ash tray breath. Awwwwrrrghh.


Nicotene is more addictive than cocaine so it is not real easy but hey, who is in control of your body? You wouldn't give your ATM & pin # over to a stranger, why would you put your health in the hands of a tobacco company????? I see where the Winston man just joined the Marlboro man the other day. Both are taking a dirt nap prematurely....Is this the kind of future you want to look forward to? Oh, they didn't just die quickly either. Years of surgeries, chemo, radiation treatments, gasping for oxygen while toting aroundcannister & wheelchair bound. Yeah, i can hear the kiddies & the drinkers.....I'm gonna give it up next month or i love a cig when i am drinking or after a meal. Better yet, how about after sex? Admit it, you are powerless & a slave to nicotene. It controls you & not the other way around.


Do something about it today. Join a smokenders in your area & make a decision that you will never regret & will never feel so empowered in your life again when you quit smoking. It can be done, it has been done, now it's your turn to do something positive with your life. It does get easier as time goes by. The urges to smoke are easily handled by your new found strength & determination. One day, you realize that you just don't miss them. I will say in the begining it was difficult for me as i had to avoid all the familiar places but today you can't smoke anywhere but in your home or car. What's stopping you people???





Barnyard
- March 4th, 2009, 07:02 am
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Share on Facebook

#5   Reply With Quote

ADVERTISEMENT

Barnyard's Avatar

Unregistered

Join Date: Feb 2009

Posts: 59

See profile



Oh, i forgot to mention on my previous post that if you need one reason, just one to quit, take a ride by any downtown building in the city on a cold winters day & watch the smokers puffing away while freezing their a.......s. off. What a pathetic sight not to mention they are littering the ground when they stomp out their butts or toss them from their cars without a care. Ladies & gentlemen, the first sign of decay in a society is the breakdown for others property & pollution. Hundreds of cigraette butts on the streets, washed down into the streams & in my case the Chesapeake bay does bad thing to the water& marine life. Please get control of your lives & stop this madness.
- March 4th, 2009, 07:15 am
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Share on Facebook

#6   Reply With Quote
ZenZoe's Avatar

Newbie

Join Date: Jul 2009

Posts: 6

See profile

From what I have seen tobacco/nicotine addiction may be the toughest addiction to recover from. So hurray for every day you can go without a light up.

1. I have known pulmenary patients who had to live with oxegen tanks & trechs, who still had to sneak cigaretts. (Risking blowing themself or their family up, smoking through a hole in their throat.)

2. I have known persons in recovery for all sorts of polyaddiction struggles, who can trace their education as addicts to the 'gateway drug' of tobacco. Most smokers start in their pre or early teens, and have to learn all sorts of covert behaviors to cultivate their tollerance. Slipping money from people or sorces that do not belong to them, telling lies, catching others in lies who pay them off with cigaretts. The list can go on for a while.

3. In many forms of mental illness the dopamine release of the first few puffs of a cigarette, help with concentration & relaxation.

All three of those factors make the effort to stop the use of tobacco/nicotine a courageous and admerable choice. So even when you have days you loose your will, that does not mean you have lost the fight.

As others on this thread have said, there are over time benifits to your own health. Research shows there may be benifits over time to people you are close to. And at the risk of sounding like a latter day Carrie Nation (temperance reformer & union organizer of the last century) despite the logic of anything that can be proven or debated, your choice may help other people you never know at all.

All the best with each new day.
- July 20th, 2009, 06:46 pm
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Share on Facebook

#7   Reply With Quote
shoopthedoop's Avatar

shoopthedoop is happy with the way things are going!

Enthusiast

Join Date: Jul 2009

Posts: 521

See profile

I've never been a 'true' smoker. Always a social smoker. I've gotten into those little cigars and decided today is the last of them. I'll keep you posted on my progress.
- October 4th, 2009, 08:09 pm
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Share on Facebook

#8   Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Latest on our Dating Advice Discussion Boards

“What?!? You think married people should be chaste too? I'll bet that goes over really well with the guys! I would think, in general, it would be more difficult for experienced people to be chaste. ... ” – Wonderwoman402

Join the “Gods will and sex vs abstinence for older folks” discussion

“If you start worrying all the time about everything you did or said it will start to make you feel insecure. It is tough to come back from that one. So, know that you are awesome, behave like you ... ” – indigirl1975

Join the “always so paranoid” discussion

“Lilycat, go back and read what was written. You wildly misinterpreted my opening post. And then created a new post about "over-sharing." I never suggested I share my family's history. What I did ... ” – Lilycat

Join the “Alcohol and dating...” discussion

“ooo I love that! oh and don't worry about going alone to a work party... I've done it many times and still managed to have a blast - oh how could that have happened?” – timeless2

Join the “A Date for the *Dreaded* Company Christmas Party” discussion

“seeing a job well done” – timeless2

Join the “Great pleasure.” discussion

“Did you trade emails on regular accounts? Maybe you can get her email from your computer via autocomplete? Type in the first letter or two of her email (if you remember) and you should get a list ... ” – arby8

Join the “FCW - Interesting Problem” discussion

“One of my cats just lost another fang! I don't know how he did it, but I'm grateful that he is happy and not in much pain.” – timeless2

Join the “Ten Days Of Gratitude - Days 5 and 6” discussion



All times are GMT -7. The time now is 07:07 am.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.3.0