Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 96 total)
  • Stopping Smoking
  • bwfc4eva868
    Free Member

    Well i think the time is coming to stop smoking as i keep finding myself skint two weeks before next pay day. Spending £40 a weekon ciggies.

    Now I have quit before and lasted two months, this was when i had my Hernia op and didn’ want to cough as it hurt like frig.

    Now I’m ok at Home and can go hours or days without wanting a fag at Home. Its just at work i find it extremly difficult, i work nights and we have a social sort of gathering at fag time, and see it as relieving boredom.

    I know i want to quit as i will be £160 a month better off.

    samuri
    Free Member

    I know it seems like you’ll never be able to do it. You could never imagine ever not wanting a cigarette and it does take a long time.

    I gave up about 5 years ago and before I did it felt like I would never be able to go a day without a fag. But really, it starts hard and gets easier every day and by god it’s the most amazing feeling. I used bikes to get me through it, my capacity on a bike increased every single day. I rode and rode and rode.

    Good luck.

    samuri
    Free Member

    Oh, and avoid those times where you use it to socialise and habitise. I would always have a fag when I first got up and when I first got home from work, hardest bits to give up them.

    Coffee was a huge trigger for me.

    Six months later I detested smoking. I hated the smell, it made me gag.
    I used to think girls who smoked looked cool. Now they make me barf.

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    roll ups = 160 to 40 quid a month.

    bwfc4eva868
    Free Member

    Thing is tho, i found the first week or two really easy, it was as i got further on i found it difficult. For example, do a tough climb on the bike, reward myself with a fag, wash the motorbike, sit down and admie it with a fag etc.

    couldashouldawoulda
    Free Member

    Start with one day. Just today. That worked for me.

    I cant believe the price of fags now! I think on your sums that you are spunking £2000 a year!

    Just start with today. And NRT stuff helps 90% with the physical / cravings side. The rest is in your head / your choice.

    Hope that’s balanced. You can do it!

    therag
    Free Member

    Good luck. I only lasted 6 weeks. Been smoking again now for about 3 weeks.
    Time to try again soon!

    donsimon
    Free Member

    Allen Carr, this one not this one.

    bwfc4eva868
    Free Member

    I know i want to do it, as i was very anti ciggies before i started 4 years ago. Due to step dad losing his life due to lung cancer. Also I’m a high stroke risk due to High blood pressure, even with medication.

    I know its doing me no good as it makes me gag and i have been known to vomit sometimes when i smoke.

    samuri
    Free Member

    eward myself with a fag, wash the motorbike, sit down and admie it with a fag etc.

    It’s those habits you have to break. I changed from coffee to tea and that really helped, you may find other things do.

    couldashouldawoulda
    Free Member

    Just to add – it took me a good few “just one day” starts before that turned into 15 years of “just one day”. After the first 4 or 6 months and to this day I dont ever think of it now – apart from the occasional whiff of a pipe or cigar which makes me nostalgic – but I always feel sad for the smoker these days.

    You can do it!

    samuri
    Free Member

    Allen Carr, this one

    Holy crap. He stopped smoking when he was 48 but got lung cancer when he was 71!!!

    fluided
    Free Member

    You can do it .this is my 2nd week of not smoking never thought I could do it until the wife told me my 3yr old boy had a straw and was pretending to smoke now that was a wake up call.

    I feel so much better and thats just 2 weeks.

    donsimon
    Free Member

    He stopped smoking when he was 48 but got lung cancer when he was 71!!!

    It had something to do with spending all his time in smoke filled rooms, helping others quit. 🙁
    I owe my life to him.
    Thanks Allen.

    dirk_pumpa
    Free Member

    i hate ciggarettes but rollies go down okay and little joints are just flipping lovely..

    doin really good since new year though.

    Dancing on the pedals lad 🙂

    dan77
    Free Member

    Allen Carr worked for me, I stopped four weeks ago, went from 20 a day for 10 years to nothing just by listening to a £7ish pound audio book, I’ve been surprised how easy i have found it, I would almost say I have enjoyed quitting, there’s a good bit in the book where he says if he could put you in your body three weeks after quitting thats all he would need to do, i feel like my lungs have grown, i have more energy, more money, and her indoors say the bedroom antics have improved, my only regret is not doing it sooner. good luck with it, it a great feeling when someone offers you a ciggie and you can say “no thanks i quit”

    Squidlord
    Free Member

    I’m something of a serial quitter – I’m on my 9th day of cold turkey today. Each time it seems a bit easier, and I last a bit longer. Suppose I know now what to expect. Some nice stories here – helped keep me going in the first few days.

    jon1973
    Free Member

    Allen Carr, this one not this one.

    I think the second one is more likely to drive you to drink, which will make giving up the cigerettes a lot harder.

    hora
    Free Member

    Key to me was riding my body of nicotine asap. Previously I’d tried patches and gum but I found them frustrating as it kept me taking nicotine albeit in a similar experience to Silk Cut ultra light (I smoked Galoise and Lucky Strikes).

    I drank alot of fresh OJ as it was anecdotal for leeching out nicotine and thus getting over the withdrawal symptoms quicker.

    Once it was all out I wasn’t tempted nor did I fancy a smoke whilst drunk.

    I smoked from 15 to 28.

    In 10yrs you will have saved £20,000.

    one_bad_mofo
    Full Member

    I don’t know what the secret is but I just stopped last August. I spent eight days in the USA on a work trip smoking at least a packet of Malboro a day and when I got home I decided enough was enough. I just stopped, simple as that.
    I really have noticed the difference on the bike too, no more coughing a lung up after a hard climb. 🙂

    MulletusMaximus
    Free Member

    The key to stopping is that you really have to want to stop otherwise you won’t. You might stop for a while but you will always be looking for an excuse to have the odd ciggie. Good luck.

    Coyote
    Free Member

    The key to stopping is that you really have to want to stop otherwise you won’t.

    This is the truth. In fact, ignore everything above. You *need* to decide that it is something you will[/u] do.

    On the positive, if you do decide to stop it is an amazing feeling and will make you feel very good about yourself.

    MrWoppit
    Free Member

    You know that thing where you go into a shop and buy cigarettes, go outside and unwrap the cellophane from the box, open the box, take out the bit of folded paper, pull out a cigarette, feel the rush of anticipation, stick one end in your mouth, set light to the other end, suck in the smoke?

    Don’t do that.

    Hohum
    Free Member

    The really wanting to give up bit was very true for me as previous attempts had failed because I did not really want to give up.

    This time was different though.

    If you do succeed in stopping successfully (my GP said that the measure they use to judge a successful quitter is a year off the smokes) don’t become a self-righteous quitter, nobody likes one of them.

    Good luck with quitting!

    verses
    Full Member

    Cigarettes are just like hamsters.

    They’re both perfectly harmless until you stick them in your mouth and set fire to them.

    donsimon
    Free Member

    The key to stopping is that you really have to want to stop otherwise you won’t. You might stop for a while but you will always be looking for an excuse to have the odd ciggie. Good luck.

    Read Allen Carr and you’ll discover that this isn’t actually true.

    jwmlee
    Free Member

    I gave up over ten years ago. One of the best things I ever did. Not easy. Mood swings and like any addiction, all sorts of ‘you can just have one’ thoughts. Suggest keeping off the pop for a few weeks as it is very hard to resist when drinking. I used the patches which minimised some of the negative effects.

    Also wrote down all the things I thought were good about smoking, and had a good look at these to see if they were true. Then wrote down all the reasons for stopping.

    Would never go back. Hate the stuff. It smells bad and does NOTHING for you.

    Best of luck!

    loum
    Free Member

    You have stopped. Now just don’t start again.

    binners
    Full Member

    You know that thing where you go into a shop and buy cigarettes, go outside and unwrap the cellophane from the box, open the box, take out the bit of folded paper, pull out a cigarette, feel the rush of anticipation, stick one end in your mouth, set light to the other end, suck in the smoke?

    Don’t do that.

    Woppit – you are a truly evil man 😆

    Moomin
    Free Member

    Firstly its hard IMO. Its not the packin in that got to me as i did that everytime i put one out but the habit thats the killer.

    I found that it took upto 3 months to break the habits completely. First couple of weeks its all about the will power and getting the ‘pangs’ out of my system but would say it took upto 3 months before i wasnt concentrating hourly on having a cig.

    Also you have to get it right in your head, i still followed the routine of going to the smoke shed in work with the others but just didnt have one, so i wasnt breaking all routines at once. At first it was hard but in time my routine was the same but just didnt have a smoke.

    4 years on and i still think about it but as quickly as it enters my head its gone and its not accompanied by the pangs.

    Lastly, further down the road you can never just have one for old times sake. You will be back on them before you know it.

    scuzz
    Free Member

    I stopped smoking recently with help from the Stopping Smoking thread on here. When I first stopped, I kept going outside of pubs or clubs whenever my mates went out for a smoke as I didn’t want to modify my behavior too much, or miss out on the social side. After a couple of weeks I didn’t feel the need to do that anymore, it’s bizarre the excuses you give yourself to stop yourself from giving up.

    MulletusMaximus
    Free Member

    Read Allen Carr and you’ll discover that this isn’t actually true

    Allen Carr didn’t work for me as I wasn’t really ready to stop but wanting to stop worked. Stopped nearly 3 years ago.

    yunki
    Free Member

    I’ve tried and failed three or four times over the last few years..

    I’m over six months at the moment though.. (lost count)

    I’m another one from the school of needing the psychological boost that comes from eliminating all the nicotine from my bloodstream..

    I’ve found that the best way (and easiest to implement in cases of relapse) for me, is to use patches for 2 or 3 days to get the hang of not smoking.. I then stop the patches safe in the knowledge that any physical cravings will be over in just a few more days..

    Doing it this way I find that I don’t get any significant cravings at all and also I don’t get ripped off buying nicotine replacement products for months on end..

    I was more surprised than anyone that I’ve quit so easily.. I’ve been a very heavy smoker for over 25 years and haven’t known a non-smoking lifestyle since before puberty..!

    MulletusMaximus
    Free Member

    Similar to Yunki. Bought some NR lozenges and sucked on one when I felt I needed one. Used them for just two days and never looked back. Nicotine only stay’s in your system for a few days after you’ve stopped so once you get over that it’s all in the mind.

    brassneck
    Full Member

    I know it seems like you’ll never be able to do it. You could never imagine ever not wanting a cigarette and it does take a long time.

    I gave up about 5 years ago and before I did it felt like I would never be able to go a day without a fag. But really, it starts hard and gets easier every day and by god it’s the most amazing feeling. I used bikes to get me through it, my capacity on a bike increased every single day. I rode and rode and rode.

    Good luck.

    All that plus one.

    Fact is it’s pretty common to fall off the wagon a few times. Just keep stopp ing again, as soon as you can, and the relapses will get fewer and fewer. Use whatever aids help, gum patches etc. but remember at the end of the day it’s down to you.

    cheese@4p
    Full Member

    Do whatever you want. If you don’t want to be a smoker you will be able to stop. I stopped after 40 years of fags.

    donsimon
    Free Member

    Allen Carr didn’t work for me as I wasn’t really ready to stop but wanting to stop worked. Stopped nearly 3 years ago.

    You hadn’t read it enough to understand what was going on, obviously. It took me a couple or three good reads until I understood it. I gave up a good few years ago, exactly when I don’t know, but that’s not important, is it?
    That said everyone has their own way and the most important is giving up and not whether one method is better than another.

    SnS
    Free Member

    The Stopping Smoking thread previously mentioned, was the catalyst I needed to actually do it.- As others have mentioned, you have to want to give up. – I’d come around to the idea that I actually did want to stop and that me telling myself that I didn’t was only a method of me not wanting to put myself in the position of attempting to stop & failing – I can be rather pig headed, stubborn & stupid at times 🙂

    There’s lots of good advise & info on this forum alone !

    Everyone has their own method – Mine was an E-Cig – except I didn’t use it as the conventional direct replacement – When the craving was high, I had just a single drag – This proved to be enough.
    Within a couple of weeks & without any concious thought or effort, I found I’d stopped using it.

    All I can say is..

    GOOD LUCK !!!

    Chris

    pendlechris
    Free Member

    When i was stopping the nurse at the doctors said before you stop, when you are smoking think how many of the cigarettes you smoke in a day you really enjoy, and to be honest out of 20 there may have been 3. I did go back to smoking as I gave in to temptation on a stag do after 2 years and slowly started getting back into it, but now I have stopped for good, I think you have to decide yes I want to do it, and when you do if you are tempted think I have done so many days, weeks etc without a fag its only myself I am kidding, and the health issues also.
    Good luck you will do it!

    GreenK
    Free Member

    I have just past the one year mark. I’ve had failed attempts before and also chalk this down to whether you really want to stop or not.

    The year has shot by and I can hardly believe that I’ve gone this long. (Listen to me pat myself on the back!).

    I found that when I had a “weak” moment I’d say to myself that it’ll be back to day 1 again if you smoke now. This strategy really worked for me but will probably only work if you really want to stop.

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 96 total)

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