Digest Number 1376

Steve wrote :
Its almost 5 years since I became cognitively quit, and I’m forever
grateful to have found both Steve and cognitivequitting.com. This is
something I wrote when I was around 2.5yrs quit - on rereading it I
recalled the excitement of finding a quitsmoking method that worked,
and enjoyed keeping a quitsmoking diary. I’m re-posting it here - I
hope you can sense my ‘quitting state of mind’ all those years ago.
To the new quitters, thankyou for sharing your experiences - its hard
for we ‘old timers’ to sometimes remember the excitement and joy of
becoming comfortably quit.
**************************
I first started experimenting with smoking when I was about 15 or 16
years old. Lots of girls at my school were trying it out, and it
seemed like a pretty cool thing to do. I remember that I didn’t even
like smoking - they tasted pretty unpleasant and made me feel sick.

But I wanted to be one of the crowd, and so I persevered! I remember
getting caught smoking at school - oh the shame of it. The
headteacher phoned my parents, and my dad wouldn’t speak to me for
days - and that upset me far more than a telling off - I was
mortified. Mum intervened and got the peace back, and it wasn’t
mentioned ever again. By the time I got to 18 I was buying cigs
regularly, and was ‘hooked’. I had no idea at that time just how
terribly addictive nicotine is - and had no clue whatsoever that it
would be years in the future before I learned about the behavioural
aspects of my smoking habit, and many practice quits before I
succeeded. Today, 2.5 years since I quit, I am certain that I will
never start smoking again.
Oh how I tried to quit smoking over the next 25+ years. However,
quitting was always something everyone else seemed to be able to do,
never me. Sure, I used to try - using gum or patches mainly, but even
had a go with acupuncture and hypnosis. I really used to think that if
I got enough `tools’ together I’d sail through it. I really did used
to think quitting was just about weaning myself off nicotine and
nothing else. I recognised there was a `habit’ element to it all,
having a cig at certain times eg after a meal, but never for one
minute did I realise that each cig was inextricably intertwined with
every moment of my day, every feeling I experienced and every emotion
I was going through.
The 10 or 15 cigarettes I smoked a day for so long had very gradually
stepped up to 20-25 a day, and sometimes even more than that. During
the last 5 years I’d experienced being made redundant from my job, the
death of my mum, plus some health worries. There was always an excuse
to keep on smoking `because I was stressed’, or `under pressure’, or
`depressed’. I honestly believed that cigarettes were helping me to
calm down, cheer me up, see things more clearly, relax, get me moving
- you name it and there was a valid reason (in my mind) to keep on
smoking.
I didn’t like being a smoker though. I didn’t like the fact that I was
the odd one out in my circle of friends, and I knew it wasn’t doing my
health any good either. I had smoked most of my adult life and had
somehow avoided getting a cough. However, I realised some months ago
that my chest was feeling congested and tight sometimes, that I didn’t
have much energy. And one day I stopped and worked out - honestly-
just how much I was spending a month on my nicotine addiction.
Around Christmas time in 2000, I started to look into other ways of
quitting. I wasn’t even sure what was out there, but I did know that
tackling the nicotine addiction alone wasn’t going to get me very far.
I knew there was more to it than that, more to it than just `kicking
the habit’ - but couldn’t find any answers. I found one or two `Stop
smoking’ sites on the Internet at About.Com, and started to visit them
and did a lot of reading up. It was all very helpful and interesting,
but still I couldn’t find the answers I was looking for. One day I
ventured into a smoking cessation chatroom at About.com (my first ever
time in a chatroom - and I was nervous!), and the first person I met
in there was ddsteve (who went on to become my ‘quitcoach’ ). In
chatting to him I started to learn about cognitive quitting and about
a very different way of tackling my smoking habit/behaviour. I set a
date to quit, and worked towards it, feeling very excited about
regaining control over my life. I smoked my last cigarette on February
24th 2001, and enjoyed stubbing out that last one. I have a great
memory of that cigarette - maybe because I was so keen to start my
quit I had found I wasn’t enjoying smoking any more, and that last one
actually tasted rough and made me cough.Through Steve`s knowledge,
skills and support over the ensuing months I became comfortably -and I
believe permanently- quit. Learning about my smoking behaviour and how
to change my responses to smoking urge situations was the key.
Learning how to understand what my body needed and addressing it,
rather than making an automatic association with a cigarette was
another. This time I was developing skills to take an active part in
managing my quit instead of `hanging in there’ and hoping for the best.
I’ve had some amazing support throughout my quit, which is still there
just as strongly, and this has made all the difference to me reaching
this point. In previous quits I had never been able to last for longer
than a few days, but this time I am not only determined to stay smoke
free, but believe I now have a blueprint for staying quit - knowledge
and skills to keep me on track. Best of all are the quitbuddies I`ve
made along the way, some of whom have become good friends, and who`ve
kept me going in some tough times. I now help other people online to
quit smoking, through email and chat, and find it really rewarding.
I said at the outset that I used to think quitting was just about
weaning myself off nicotine, and didn’t appreciate that it was much
more than that. I came to learn that smoking was bound up in most
aspects of my daily life, that I’d spent my life hiding behind
cigarettes, letting them mask my true feelings. Cigarettes started,
punctuated and finished most things I did throughout my days. I used
cigarettes as a response to everything I felt - joy, pain, sadness,
excitement, fear, stress, apprehension. Once I quit I realised I was
finding out so much about myself - who I am, how I really feel about
things, how I deal with things. I find out more about myself each day,
and now I don’t need to hide behind a cigarette to face a difficult
situation. The stress/upset/anger etc haven’t miraculously disappeared
from my life - but how I respond to and deal with them now has changed
beyond recognition…….

One Response to “Digest Number 1376”

  1. Ruby Thomas Says:

    Hi, Sheila ~
    This may sound strange to you, but your post was an incredible incentive
    for me. From getting sober in AA seven years ago and hearing LOTS of
    stories - folks don’t ‘keep coming back’ if they don’t sense/see that
    the Program works. They just keep coming back and hoping that one day
    ’something sticks’ for them. Some folks come in and out for 20 years -
    and then, one day, ‘get it’. The hope, desire, willingness..to try life
    upside down. ;) For me, they are the most powerful stories. Was at a
    meeting one day and an older gent said that it took him seven trips
    through the doors..the other youngin’ asked, “If you don’t mind my
    asking, how long do you have this trip?” The soft reply, “Thirty-two
    years.”
    Feed Hope. Don’t let the brat in your head hide hope under his bs. I
    quit for 3 weeks when I was 28 (only four years after starting, I was
    trying to stop). Since that time, I really haven’t gotten serious until

    day before yesterday. Only made it 24 hours - and went in search of
    moral support - stories of others who quit. Found some on About.com and
    one of them had the link to CogQuit as part of their story. Stories
    feed hope. And the link gave me a way in my head that made sense.
    (Regardless of how hard I’m trying to complicate it. <g
    You wouldn’t hang around these parts if you hadn’t seen other’s succeed
    in the CogQuit, eh? And that feeds my hope.
    I copied snippets from quit-smoke stories that sounded like part of my
    story. The one below feels like it plugs into so many places within
    me.I find myself reading and re-reading - not quite sure I’m ready to
    start plugging but finding it so beautifully simple somehow. It was
    said in response to what someone wrote - but only this response jumped
    out, grabbed onto a thought and said, “Take me home. You won’t be
    sorry.” He’s a keeper. I just know it. :-) “It might be that you feel like you don’t have anything to
    rely on to make you feel better.”
    The writing on the wall points to feeling bad - often. Impatient,
    anxious, withdrawn, bored, procrastination that causes other bad things
    to happen, angry, irritated, indecisive, inflexible, self-defeating
    behaviors, exhausted, insomnia, feeling lost in a lost world. Only
    cigarettes understand and make me feel better or just ‘tune out’ - in
    the deep, instant gratification kind of way. Which makes me minimally
    dependent on others; the critical need to be self-sufficient,
    self-reliant. This is getting funny - how bizarre the brain works.
    Instead of people, I hand my life over to cigarettes. Like feeeeeeeling
    that I’m going to do something wrong - and talking my way into prison to
    protect myself. No, that’s not it.
    I have a power problem. The switch is broken and I can’t turn off
    without a cigarette. All of life simply ‘gets in’ whenever it wants. I
    block some by not being available. Others have to be blocked chemically
    (cigs). I don’t have the Teflon coating. Everything sticks and wants
    me to think about it, react to it, fix it, or make it go away.
    It just occurred to me that *my* insomnia (when not causing myself to
    work 12-14 hrs a day) may be caused by cigarettes - The refusal to feel
    and think things through means that they’re ‘backed up’ in my brain.
    When I’m waiting for sleep - they all come tumbling out. I get up and
    smoke, and try again. I have a fear of that mental cluster-f each
    night. Not a fear of going to sleep - but of not being able to go to
    sleep.
    For me, quitting has *primarily* nothing to do with health, not smelling
    like a stale smoke factory, the thick yellow-brown gunk when cleaning
    the TV screen, the computer screen, the walls.. For me, it’s all about
    finding the way to replacing fake happiness/existing - with Real Stuff.
    Smoking keeps me ‘comfortably numb’. I want to wake up more. Smoking
    is in the way now where before it didn’t seem to impede.
    Steve, through CogQuit and through the job of hands-on trainer, was
    amazingly helpful to me. I don’t know how long the chat lasted
    yesterday but on re-reading, I noticed something. While I was
    attempting to explain how high the walls were and what they were made
    of, he kept bringing me back to ground. That the object wasn’t to find
    ways to stay imprisoned - but to start walking toward the exit. CogQuit
    gave me an onramp but I wanted to be on the other road without using the
    on-ramp.
    The timer just went off. I spent over an hour on the net looking for
    the ‘perfect’ timer. Perfection-istic ways - the common sign of many of
    the addicted. The ‘alarm’ is such an upbeat, lively squash of melody
    that I’m instantly smiling when it pops up. It has only gone off three
    times, but I found myself on the third ‘almost’ time looking to see if
    something had gone wrong because ‘it had been awhile’. Still had 8
    minutes to go. Not sure what that means except that I may be replacing
    the comfort of a cig with the comfort of that tune. Is this timer thing
    addictive, Steve? <g
    12/20- 0910
    Life Situation: Arising to the jigged beat of the computer alarm. How
    will I ever remember the tensions when they just melt at the tune? I
    find myself looking forward to the day and being here with everyone
    sharing the same journey.
    Body Cues:
    Muscles/Abdomen: Okay.
    Breathing: Normal
    Concentration: Focused - although the focus keeps collecting others
    things I want to focus on.
    Emotional Shifts/Mood: Upbeat.
    Rational Response: Finish the email that I started last night and was
    afraid to send. Afraid of ‘exposure’. I need a safe place to write.
    It helps me to write and then re-read when it comes back through. Gives
    me objectivity - as if it was written by someone else and I’m looking
    for clues from ‘them’. “What I say is what *I* most need to hear.”
    2. Looked over the timer format. I saw different things today than
    the first couple of times. Strings uniting. Along the way, I saw “If
    you are leaving ‘back doors’ though which you can justify a cigarette,
    you WILL go through one of those doors.” I already have. Which one?
    Fear of exposing what I have fought all of my life to keep others from
    seeing - as well as myself. The need to be in control and ‘together’.
    3. So, what’s the answer for exposure to close that door?
    Somewhere, someone has made it through the other side of the smoking
    addiction with the same fear. I just have to trust that - I am not
    unique. While some may be more physically addicted than
    psychologically, I can see where my addiction is first and foremost,
    psychological. I medicate feelings - good ones, bad, or indifferent.
    All unwanted and unwelcome. Just around the corner from the ‘high’ is
    the pin to pop it in unsuspecting ways. The lows speak for themselves -
    paralysis if not ‘checked’. This is all my idea of achieving ‘balance’
    in my life.
    4. The next one came from a group I belonged to before finding this
    one. Those in an early quit talking about the ‘fog’ and trying to study
    for an exam. That’s where I crashed 20 years ago after 3 weeks. The
    term paper. I simply had to be able to think straight in order to do
    that. I smoked. Never finished the term paper and got and F for the
    course - in a subject that I loved with a wonderful teacher. What would
    have happened if I’d used research to work past those cravings? Losing
    that quit affected more than I could see at the time. I gave up across
    the board.
    5. I’m looking to start a new job. The first couple of weeks of a
    new job have always drained me. The perfectionist in me wants to learn
    fast, be up and running in record time. I’m exhausted from trying to
    assimilate so much new material. I need to ‘unwind’ with cigarettes.
    Down under, I doubt that I will be able to catch on, catch up, get
    proficient ‘in time’. I over-compensate the doubt with over-achieving.
    I was aware of myself doing this in the last job I had. Going in at 4
    a.m. day after day. I also noticed for the first time how my
    over-zealousness affects others. They feel threatened, less competent,
    less dedicated.. I was given the order to come in at 8:30. I tried it
    but felt ‘behind’ all day. I went back to going in at 4 a.m. and just
    didn’t do anything that would tip them off like completely rearrange the
    display floor. What they don’t understand is that it isn’t about them.
    I only compete against the brat inside - the need to prove it wrong that
    I’m ‘less than’, ‘incompetent’, ’slow to learn’.
    I don’t see a way to close that door. When I don’t smoke - I have tons
    more restless energy to add to the already ‘driven’ cache. I won’t get
    much work done with my hands stretching in the air every 10 seconds. <g
    6. ‘Warren’ (loved the alliteration - just for fun, I might try
    reading it out loud. <s
    to the sites that Steve gave me in chat. (howtostretch.com and
    deepsloweasy.com) I don’t know why I fight using breathing as a
    technique. I failed meditation. But I’m willing to try it and see what
    surfaces emotionally.
    Feels like I’ve covered the gaping open doors. If anyone has had
    similar ones, I’m open to trying what worked for you. It’s hard to
    believe that stretching and breathing would be the things to help - but
    if that is your experience, then I’ll be willing to make it mine as
    well.
    I want to give it another go. But I know I’m not ready because the
    thought came to keep the rest of the pack in the drawer ‘for an
    emergency’. Looking at that open door, I see that emergencies are
    unplanned for events. I need to get some tools in the tool box - and
    smokes can’t be one of the tools if it’s the very one I want to stop
    torturing myself with.
    I also know that being prepared without fire drills doesn’t work so well
    when the event happens. I’ll get the tools and learn how to use them in
    a safe environment. Then put myself in an environment that normally
    causes discomfort (in my case, that ain’t hard), and then practice.
    Sorry this is so long for those who read. Part of me says I’m making a
    mountain out of a molehill. The other part says that mountain is bigger
    around and taller than any on earth. Start at the top and start
    weighing those widgets - and wending them down new cog chutes instead of
    adding them under foot.
    A Wannabe Wendy,
    Pamela
    P.S. Warren says he has no interest in reading this coming back through
    - ugh. Whatta wimp. <bg
    _____

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.