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Sazerac

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Everything posted by Sazerac

  1. You Quit Smoking ! Quell any doubt. Why ruin a beautiful opportunity to visit an extraordinarily beautiful place AND ruin the opportunity to enhance your life ? Good luck on your exams.
  2. I notice garrulousness
  3. Neophytes and charlatans handled obliquely crony
  4. Sazerac

    chicks or sticks

    Big O
  5. Potentially, every newbie is successful. Quits
  6. Hey Jack ! Congratulations on your Two and a Half YEARS of Freedom ! Remember counting the minutes and hours ? I do (shudder).
  7. I'm vehemently existentialistic
  8. Sazerac

    chicks or sticks

    big O
  9. NOPE NOPE NOPE NOPE NOPE
  10. Never again slinking towards you. Sleep
  11. Another treacherous enterprise
  12. Still, kinda puny . Texas has it's own coastline, that puddle called the Gulf of Mexico.
  13. That's the lie about addiction, that you are powerless. The fact is, you are NOT powerless. You always have the power to quit the vape or the smoke or, any other addiction for that matter. It is just a matter of choice. When we use our power and make the choice to quit and stay quit, we are no longer pathetic or powerless. Far from it. We are our own heroes and life savers. In full control, with a profound firsthand knowledge of addiction our self-esteem, trust in ourselves and true self-confidence flourish.
  14. Sazerac

    chicks or sticks

    Big o
  15. Desolate readers are needing re-assurance. Blunt
  16. Illogical looser legislators
  17. c r a S h, @forestgreen, lol
  18. Discourse amid yells
  19. lol, granted Straya is BIG, it's a blooming continent ! and much, much bigger but, in that map, half of Texas is sticking out into The Coral/Tasmin Sea, pardner.
  20. Congratulations, Catlover, on your Two Years of Freedom ! Please celebrate wildly and continue to reward yourself ! I am so happy for you, so glad you have shared your quit with us and continue to give your great support to all of us.
  21. Sazerac

    chicks or sticks

    2
  22. Here is something addressing anxiety 'I'll Be A Nervous Wreck Forever If I Quit Smoking' and, if you are on medications for anxiety (or anything else for that matter) Medication Adjustments That May Be Necessary After Quitting Smoking
  23. Glad you read Joel's piece. He has a treasure of resources, Joel Spitzer's Quit Smoking Library lollys are good. Deep breaths are free and always available. Here is a link to pages of things that got us through the early days First Week, Nicotine Free
  24. @Vivianne @Vivianne @Vivianne ! Where are YOU ? Haven't seen you since XMas, thinking about you and hoping everything is OK. Love, Saz
  25. The anxiety is certainly exacerbated by continuing to smoke. You will find you have much less anxiety in general when you settle into your new life. Here is a link and some text from our friend, Joel Spitzer, I'm Just Too Weak To Quit Smoking I'm just too weak to quit smoking!" "I can't believe it, I'm just too weak to quit smoking." This statement came to me on the fourth day of a clinic by a participant who could not stop smoking for even one day. When I asked him where he kept getting the cigarettes from, he replied, "They are mine, I never threw them out." When I asked him why he never got rid of them he said that it was because he knew the only way for him to handle not smoking would be by keeping cigarettes around in case he needed one. This man was not capable of succeeding in his attempt to quit smoking. Not because the addiction to nicotine was too powerful. It was his fear of throwing out his cigarettes which rendered his attempt a failure. He figured if he needed them, he would have them. Sure enough, every day he needed one. So he would smoke one. Then another and still another. Five or six a day, never reaching his optimal level and never breaking the withdrawal cycle. He was discouraged, depressed, embarrassed, mad, and, worst of all, smoking. Quitting smoking needs to be done in steps. First, the smoker should strengthen his resolve as to why he wishes to quit. He should consider the health consequences, the social implications, the fact that he is totally controlled by his cigarettes, the expense and any other personal problems cigarettes have caused him. It is helpful to write down all of these negative aspects of smoking. In the future when he does get the thought for a cigarette, his own reasons for quitting become powerful ammunition for not returning to smoking. When the decision is made to quit, the smoker should implement a program that has the greatest potential of success. The first and most important step is to quit cold turkey. To accomplish this goal he should dispose of all smoking material. Cigarettes, cigars, pipes, butts, ashtrays, lighters–anything that was considered smoking paraphernalia. If cigarettes are not there, they cannot be smoked. Then the person only needs to live through the first few days, one day at a time. Physical withdrawal may be rough or very mild. The symptoms will be overcome by making it through the first few days without taking a puff. Within three days the physical withdrawal will peak and by two weeks will cease altogether. But the real obstacle is the psychological dependence to cigarettes. Most smokers are convinced smoking is essential in performing many normal daily activities. Dealing with stress, working, driving, eating, sleeping, waking up, relaxing – just about everything requires smoking. The only way to overcome this perceived dependence is by proving to oneself that all activities done with cigarettes can be done equally well without cigarettes. Just living through the first few days and functioning in normal required roles will prove that the smoker can survive without cigarettes. It may be difficult, but it is possible. Once the initial quitting process is overcome, the rest is simple. Sure there will still be times when the ex-smoker wants a cigarette. But the ex-smoker must realize that he does not have the option of only one. Because he is a nicotine addict, smoking is now, and always has been an all or nothing proposition. The thought of relapsing back to his old level of smoking with all the associated consequences is all the ammunition needed to – NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF! Joel © Joel Spitzer 1984

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QuitTrain®, a quit smoking support community, was created by former smokers who have a deep desire to help people quit smoking and to help keep those quits intact.  This place should be a safe haven to escape the daily grind and focus on protecting our quits.  We don't believe that there is a "one size fits all" approach when it comes to quitting smoking.  Each of us has our own unique set of circumstances which contributes to how we go about quitting and more importantly, how we keep our quits.

 

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