Digest Number 475

Hi Linda,
Which quit tools?
Steve

One Response to “Digest Number 475”

  1. carmelita_1300 Says:

    Hello! I have also been lurking around the perimeter since joining a couple
    of weeks ago–My name is Peggy and I discovered this group when someone in an
    about.com smoking cessation post casually mentioned how helpful people might
    find this method. I was sorely in need of more encouragement than the
    standard “you can do it” and “hang in there.” Especially between weeks 2-4
    when I started to tell myself that I was crazy to give up something as
    terrific as cigs! Then I saw the words “cognitive method” and recognized that
    this was a method once used by a licensed social worker on a friend who was
    experiencing severe stress/anxiety (this person was a nonsmoker). The
    therapist was attempting to teach the tools to basically put stress in its
    place and break it down to it’s simplest form. The improvement after 4
    sessions was incredible and the tools are forever useful. With that being
    said, I knew that being “cognitive” in the quit might be able to help me
    succeed where I have failed so many times before. After all, I was always
    very good at talking myself INTO smoking—why not work on “thinking” my way

    out of it? The urge to smoke used to positively overwhelm me to where I
    thought I was having an out of body experience as I drove myself to the store
    for cigs. I would resume smoking a pack a day with such relief–and at the
    same time I was completely horrified that I could be so foolish! Living
    this way was exhausting, debilitating and frustrating. Plus, I was a closet
    smoker—which only added to the insanity!
    I quit on November 12th after hearing of yet another relatively young
    friend’s cancer diagnosis. I was able to quit cold turkey because I had a
    lot of practice doing it —I once even “gave up smoking for Lent.”
    Unfortunately, that method entailed endless days and nights of
    white-knuckling, hanging on, trying to “get through” the day—it all seemed
    so pointless to live that way and I convinced myself that I actually
    preferred to die—-how incredibly ludicrous!! Around the 4th week or so of
    any given quit was when I would become depressed and convinced it would
    never, ever pass. I was sure that I was just one of the unlucky who had
    developed some sort of profound brain cell-nicotine problem and that any
    effort to quit was futile. The August 24th anniversary of my Dad’s death
    from COPD caused by years of smoking and the fact that I still miss him
    terribly every single day, somehow made an impact this year. I wrote a
    letter to myself from the viewpoint of a smoker—-just something to read in
    case I ever tried to quit and needed encouragement from “the other side.” I
    also listed all the things I still want to do with my husband and kids,
    places I want us all to visit together (London, Paris—just think how soon
    I’ll have the money for those trips now that I don’t have to buy cigs!!), and
    most importantly the fact that I want to be here for my children as long as
    possible. So my change in attitude from deprivation to gratefulness, and a
    new understanding of the goals that I have just for me (like run 2 miles
    without collapsing), I’m working on my freedom! The downside is that I think
    I jumped into this group without having done all of the necessary homework
    (can someone tell me where to find everything I need to read — so that I can
    be sure I didn’t miss a thing?—sorry I am new at this—some of the
    references are a little foreign to me)…With what I did know of cog
    quitting, weeks 2-4 were, for the first time ever, not miserable and often
    good! Another helpful hint: I spend a lot of time observing smokers when I’m
    out and about—that seems to help reinforce my resolve to NOT smoke—did I
    look that silly? Sure did.
    I know this story is all over the place—-but I have so much to say—-and
    I’m doing this on my own. Whew! Thanks to you all for sharing your
    struggles/triumphs….I am going to keep on working! It is 36 days
    today—and it feels awesome! Peggy

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