I feel for you! Four days of not smoking feels absolutely awful. However, the longer you go, the better you feel. You may feel like you want to rip people's eyeballs out with your teeth right now, but soon you might just reflexively reach for that pack of cigs and get annoyed that you don't smoke.
The correct way is whatever way you feel is right for you and helps you achieve your goal - to quit smoking. Some people feel that continuing with nicotine replacement (or a sneaky cig every now and then) prolongs the withdraw. Other people feel that cold turkey is just too likely to end in homicide and opt for a different approach. I've heard of all sorts - quitting on holiday because you're away from temptation, cutting down until you stop, timing your cigs until you ween yourself down to none, the patch, the pill, the gum, the inhaler, the lollipop...there are loads of ways to do it and none of them are easy. There are lot's of incentives too - saving the money to treat yourself etc...
The nervousness and stress should lessen considerably after about two weeks. After about three months, you have long periods in the day when cigarettes don't even enter thoughts at all. The best thing is - it gets better and easier the longer you stay away from them.
2006-11-29 08:21:34
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answer #1
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answered by uksmartypants 2
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I will not go into a dissertation that I cut and pasted from some website. I see someone already did that. AND pasted it twice!
I will tell you that I successfully quit for three years, only to share a cigarette at a party and within a week or two I had worked my way back into the habit.
Then quit for a year, and thought maybe a cigar on the golf course would be okay............then a cigar every day or two, then daily, then smoking them like cigarettes! Then back to the cigarettes (for 3 more years!) because they were cheaper!
Don't despair, I have now been off them (again!) for over a year, and I simply know that it takes very little to "reacquaint" your body to the habit!
The exercise is a great help, keep it up. But I think, at least in my experience, that if you keep burning a few butts periodically, it simply lengthens the time until you are truly free from the addiction.
How long is that? Ask most ex-smokers that question and your answer is almost always "I'll let you know when it happens". It may never go away, but I call it a success if I go two or three days without thinking about one. Luckily, it passes more quickly all the time.........
2006-11-29 06:56:03
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answer #2
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answered by jooker 4
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Natural Quit Smoking Magic
2016-05-17 14:40:26
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answer #3
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answered by Mary 4
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I am 46 years old and have been smoking for 36 of those years. I am very sick from it. I have emphysema and c.o.p.d. I have tried to quit several times without success. Once I actually quit for 3 wks. I felt like I could bite the head off a nail. I was so nervous, irritable, and just plain mean. People actually begged me to start smoking again. I pray that you succeed. You don't want to end up dieing like me. I don't have very many years left. I hope this is enough encouragement to help you, and keep you from starting back up. Do not even smoke 1 cig. That's how I started back up. Good luck! My prayers are with you. You can ask your doctor for help with the nervousness.Chew on straws, chew gum, eat hard candy, whatever it takes.
2006-11-29 06:49:33
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, even one cigarette matters when you're trying to quit.
There are several physical effects that you must overcome when quitting smoking. First, there's the nicotine addiction. Second, smoking has damped your metabolism by putting carbon monoxide in your blood.
Over time, the carbon monoxide leaves your blood...but it takes a while. Until it's gone, the damped metabolism might make you feel depressed and in need of some nicotine to give you a temporary lift. But if you smoke a cigarette to get the nicotine, the addiction and the carbon monoxide levels go back to where they were to begin with, before you started to quit.
So cold turkey. Half-measures do not lead to success.
2006-11-29 06:59:04
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I'm on day 107 of not smoking. My advice would be to not give in to that one cigarette a day. Get rid of any you have left in the house, too. It's too tempting to have them around. Chew gum, use a squishy squeeze stress ball, or take up a hobby that keeps your hands occupied. An urge typically lasts only thirty seconds, so when you get an urge to smoke, keep reminding yourself you only have to get through THIRTY SECONDS, and the urge will be gone.
2006-11-29 06:50:33
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answer #6
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answered by AzOasis8 6
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yeah that one cig probably really really matters in terms of cravings and withdrawal symptoms. you need to draw a sharp line.
i suspect that posture 'imbalance' can dramatically increase cravings. add a sensible yoga routine to your exercise. you might wanna take a vitamin.
your method sounds fine though, just make sure you get to zero cigarettes in a reasonable amount of time. you can do it in a few months, right?
i think a tradition like a Christmas smoke or a New Year's Day smoke would be awesome but I can't break my streak. it's been too many years since i've lit up.
2006-11-29 06:47:07
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Drink loads of water and the headache will go away. Smoking is killing you not the absence of smoking. My husband and I gave up smoking 20 years ago and I would still love a cigarette but have not given in. We found that gallons of water and vitamin pills helped us in the battle. Good luck and good health. If you put away the amount you would spend on cigarettes each day in a year you can have a good holiday.
2016-03-13 00:39:28
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, it does matter. The sooner you get your body clean of the nicotine then the sooner you will feel better. When i quit it was the third day with out a cig that i felt better, but i did not smoke any. Good luck, i know how hard it is. Stay strong
2006-11-29 06:49:58
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answer #9
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answered by micah z 4
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it's all mind of matter... working out is very good... give it about two weeks with out smoking at all and you should be alright... you have to want to quite in order to stay off... it's all in your head you have to be stronger then the cig, just stick with it and i'm sure you will be fine... plus you will smell, and breath a whole lot better once you stay off... good luck!!!
2006-11-29 06:43:48
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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