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Fag Free for 2005....Join us.....We need Help!

425 replies

charliecat · 13/04/2005 10:41

I cried when I read how many failures theres been and applauded hub2dees approach as sometimes theres no point pussyfooting....come on guys! Its got to be done.
I am so so so gutted that theres been vile puffing going on...did you REALLY enjoy any of them. Truely satisfying were they? No No No! Tell you what though...waking up knowing that bastard nicotine monster has got no grip on me whatsoever is liberating. I could touch the sky with the high that im free. No chain round my neck.
Remember that just one is never just one and even if it was, why would you want JUST ONE? Your aim is to STOP FOREVER.

OP posts:
almost40 · 09/05/2005 16:49

Congrats fionagib!! And everyone else here. Still fat and fag-free here.

dropinthe · 09/05/2005 18:20

Sorry,posted for pregnant and smoking woman on different thread!

fionagib · 09/05/2005 21:39

aren't we doing well!!!!!

dropinthe · 10/05/2005 20:30

Where have all the deep and meaningful possy gone then? Whymummy-are you around,hon? Prettyfly1-hows that babs of yours and how are you coping? Probably no time to be on mnet but am thinking about you and very of that beautiful time with you and your firstborn!!!

charliecat · 10/05/2005 20:58

Heres something to keep us going, sad that those folks have passed before us for us to learn however.
Heres something I think of and it makes me laugh at the trueness of it! The chronic bit!
Like the piccy at the top here

Thats all for now and YES we are all doing bloody fantastic. The positive vibe is great!!!!

OP posts:
charliecat · 10/05/2005 21:00

One of the things we face as quitters is the transition from being smokers to ex-smokers. Early in your quit, you're a smoker in withdrawal. Eventually, you're a smoker who's not using. At some point, you do actually become an EX-smoker.

It's a scary transition for anyone to undergo mentally. Years upon years of memories are associated with smoking. A mountain of stressful situations that we dulled (and in doing so, partially avoided dealing with) by administering nicotine. The belief that we NEED that drug to get through these situations in the future.

In a sense, we're newborns, facing a new world, and not sure what to expect. We're children, and children are often frightened by the unknown. As our conscious decision to reach out to this new world and embrace it becomes more and more real and tangible, the fear within us makes us want to run back, grab the security blanket, and hide under the covers. It's like the monster under the bed.

And, like the monster under the bed when we're small, the best way to deal with the unknown is to face it, to understand it. As long as we hide under the blankets, the monster under the bed grows bigger, scarier, more menacing. Once we finally get the courage to lean over the matress, and stare under the boxspring... only then do we understand there's nothing to be frightened of. If we avoid looking under the bed, seeing the "monster" for what it is, we risk letting that "monster" dominate our conscience, and drive our actions.

Right now, you're dealing with your monster. There's the fear of failure (you've been down this road before). There's the fear of success (oh my God, what am I going to do now that I won't have cigarettes to help me?). And there is the voice in your ear telling you things: You want a cigarette, you can handle JUST one, you NEED just this one, this crave is going to last forever, this crave is unbearable, quitting is just TOO DAMN HARD, I wasn't meant to quit, I'm not strong enough.

It's time to look the monster in the eye. It's time to confront the voice. There are non-scary answers to the things it's telling you.

Fear of failure: Yes, I've been down this road before, but I didn't understand that I'm an addict, and that for the addict, one puff is the same as a million. I will never be able to take another puff without recommitting to a life of dependancy. I've learned this the hard way in the past, even though I might not have understood the lesson at the time. Now that I know, I know that I won't take that puff.

Fear of success: Millions of people have moved from smoking to a life without smoking. Some have had more difficult situations to deal with than I have. All have discovered that the nicotine fix doesn't really help; it just masks. I belong to a group of hundreds of people who have travelled this road, and the fact that they're making it through family tragedy, poor health, good health, work stress, celebrations, raising kids, divorces, day-to-day life of all sorts, good times and bad times, without nicotine tells me that I can too. I'm an individual, and as such, I'm not 100% like anybody else, but I share little bits in common with many of these people, and from these similarities comes my understanding that I too can live my life in the absence of nicotine.

You want a cigarette: Do I? What do I want? Specifically? What about the cigarette do I crave? Okay, fine. Maybe I want the "ahhh" feeling. But, wait, I'm through withdrawal. The first cigarette won't even give me the "ahhh" feeling anymore, because the "ahhh" feeling came from nicotine's ability to stave off the early withdrawal I felt after not smoking for 30 minutes or an hour. Now that I'm no longer in withdrawal, I'll only get dizzy and sickly from the first one, and that first one will be followed by the next one and the next one as I search for the "ahhh" feeling, and long before I ever get the "ahh" feeling, I'll realize I'm hooked again. Heck, I'll realize it after the first one.

You can handle just one: Can I? Why is it that in the past when I said that to myself, it didn't work out like I planned? If I could get by on just one, why didn't I smoke just one every now and again when I smoked, instead of smoking all of those other ones I didn't want? No. There is no such thing as just one for me, or the other greater than 90% of the smokers out there who smoke whenever their addiction demands that they smoke.

You NEED just this one: Do I really believe that I NEED to inhale hundreds of toxic chemicals into my lungs to get through this given situation? Do I really believe that I need to recommit to my addiction so that I can dull the feelings associated with this situation.

This crave is going to last forever, this crave is unbearable, quitting is just TOO DAMN HARD: Okay, what does this crave really feel like? How long is it lasting? Is it really lasting all day long? Or, is my fear of the crave, and my fear of failure, or my fear of success, making me THINK about it all day long? For how many seconds have I actually WANTED to put a cigarette in my mouth, light it and inhale, as opposed to just being anxious about my lifestyle change, and all of the things associated with it. Am I feeling anxiety? Or am I really wanting a cigarette? Will smoking a cigarette make me feel better or worse than I do? Furthermore, I KNOW from talking to all the former smokers around me that this isn't what being an ex-smoker feels like! I'm in the latter stages of withdrawal, and the early stages of reconditioning my life to NOT revolve around my addiction. Soon, I will be feeling a lot better, and I'll have a hard time remembering how hard this has been. It's only hard for a while.

You weren't meant to quit, You're not strong enough: I wasn't meant to SMOKE. Smoking is not a natural thing. Ingesting deadly chemicals to satisfy a never-ending cycle of withdrawal and replenishing of nicotine supplies is NOT the way I was meant to live. I was MEANT to breathe freely. I was meant to taste my food. I was meant to have good breath. I was meant to be free. And I'm strong enough to realize that nicotine is stronger than me; that if I try just one, nicotine will win, and I'll be trapped. I'm strong enough to make it through this temporary difficulty, in order to live the life I was meant to live on the other side.

Confront the fear, and confront the voice. Our junky side doesn't fight fair, and uses confusing logic. It plays upon the parts of us that feel most vulnerable. The parts of us that want to hide and wish things away. You can eliminate the fear, and silence the voice by always looking it in the eye, seeing it for what it is, and never letting it get away without shedding the light of truth upon it.

Keep taking it one day at a time. One minute at a time if you need.... You'll get there. This is eminantly doable.

OP posts:
almost40 · 10/05/2005 21:06

I say Amen to that. Hope you're not offended

whymummy · 10/05/2005 21:16

hi,yes i'm here,not ready yet though,i'm trying to get in that right frame of mind.
keep up the good work

hub2dee · 10/05/2005 21:27

I'm lurking.

Hope mml is gearing up her fag rationing for her bday.

hub2dee · 10/05/2005 21:28

mll

charliecat · 10/05/2005 21:36

This is my reason for staying stopped

OP posts:
hub2dee · 10/05/2005 21:54

Aww.... did the younger look pretty much like the older as she grew up,cc ? Resemblance is so strong. Cuties.

fionagib · 10/05/2005 23:13

Your girls are really gorgeous cc. I know what you mean about looking at them and wanting to stay stopped, if that makes sense.

Still lozzied up here but not missing fags. Feeling good. dh has patch on - yey!!

charliecat · 11/05/2005 07:27

Yes hub2dee and no in a way they look similar but their personalitys are so far apart its hard to compare. The oldest one is a witch and the younger one has a heart of gold and adores her witch of a sister

OP posts:
hub2dee · 11/05/2005 07:34

LOL !

mummylonglegs · 11/05/2005 11:11

Beautiful girls, cc!

I'm still here and lurk too but don't like posting about my non-success when you're all doing so well!

Birthday's on Sunday. I haven't smoked more than 2-3 a day for a week or so. Some mornings my resolve is wonderful and I feel I can do it, others I feel crappy and can't think how to get through the day without a smoke.

mummylonglegs · 11/05/2005 11:12

Oh, one thing I keep finding myself doing which I don't know if it's good or bad, is lighting up and after a drag putting it out disgusted with myself.

evansmummy · 11/05/2005 11:20

Been away for a while cos I feel daft. Bought the Allen Carr book, partially as an excuse for smoking a bit more. I've read only 2/3, but really can't see how it's gonna work. I feel hopelessly stupid

hub2dee · 11/05/2005 11:22

Sounds like you're becoming ever more concious of it, which can only be good.

Just out if interest, when you have that one puff, did you reach for it on a kind of automatic 'grab a fag' level, or was it I'm going to have just one drag ?

I really hope you can build up strength (and decrease addiction) to give yourself and your family the birthday present of a lifetime.

hub2dee · 11/05/2005 11:23

At the end of day, em, it's you not the book that's gonna have to do it. It can only be used as a tool.

I'd finish the book, have a few days, and then begin it again to let the ideas have a second go.

hub2dee · 11/05/2005 11:24

It has helped a lot of people, but perhaps it's not for you.

charliecat · 11/05/2005 11:35

MML and evansmummy, cant say anything more true than been there, done that.
Keep reading AC it does help. As does whyquit.com

Something I read last night which has stuck in my mind is The cravings go away but The cancer doesnt.

And when the shit hits the fan, the truth is none of us seriously want to be sitting in a hospital bed ill with some nasty cancerous/breathing problem/ whatever knowing fine well we have brought it on ourselfs because we "couldnt" stop.

We can. You can. I have the priviledge of sitting here nearly 6 months after my last fag and you CAN do it.

I was so addicted/stupid/mad/sad/desperate...whatever that I got out of bed at 3am one morning and tracked a torch down and opened my back door and went hunting in the grass for a half smoked dogend

Its that sort of thing that makes you realise you MUST get out the the trap. And you can.

MML the taking one drag and being disgusted with yourself....this is all building up to the quit ....6 months ago...2 years ago...or however long ago, before you started to think about stopping you smoked without even realising you were doing it....hundereds and millions of fags smoked without a second thought. Now the intelligent part of your brain is rejecting the act...but the one puff your having is neccesary to keep the level of nicotine in your system steady...or you would rattle. Bet you couldnt put the fag in your mouth without lighting it and rejecting it....

Its evil this nicotine addiction. You do need to get yourself off them. All of you, lurkers and all!!!!
See it for what it really is.

OP posts:
hub2dee · 11/05/2005 11:38

I think cc and I compliment each other rather nicely.

charliecat · 11/05/2005 11:39

LOL!

OP posts:
mummylonglegs · 11/05/2005 11:41

I reach for the fag initially because I get a little itchy craving. Actually cc sometimes I do put it straight down again without lighting it! But mostly not ... I am refusing myself fags all the time which is how I've cut it down from about 10 to 2-3 this week.

Part of my reason for cutting down is to try to quell one of my biggest fears about stopping because from past experience I've found the craving side of things very very hard and miserable. So every time I've stopped it's only worked if I've at least halved my nicotine intake beforehand. I've never succeeded with immediate cold-turkey.

I really truly am intending on stopping after my birthday. You can call me all the names under the sun if I don't. In fact, give me a really hard time. Nag me, cut and paste at me, anything. I HAVE to stop and most importantly stay stopped.