Having trouble stop smoking

I really want to stop smoking, but I'm having a shitload of trouble doing so. The funny thing is, is that smoking doesn't even really make me feel good, but it's something I can't do without anymore. What's making it so hard is that everything I read, and from everyone I've always talked to that's tried to stop says that there is a 2 - 4 week period of feeling absolutely fucking awful when you stop, and I've seen people when they've just stopped, or have already been off the smoking for over a week, and they are so irritable and miserable biting everyone's heads off for so much as breathing the wrong way. I just can't seem to go through with that, I'm already irritable enough, and now I'm going to have a month where I'm going to blow up at everyone who will so much as talk to me?

Voting Results
78% Normal
Based on 9 votes (7 yes)
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Comments ( 11 )
  • e51pegasi

    I stopped smoking just over a year ago, a 20-30 a day smoker for 25 years. I had stopped once before years ago. Both times I used the patches, both times for 12 weeks stepping down the size every 4 weeks. This time I bought 4 packs of the nicotine gum for a little more support & I did use some of it.

    For me the patches took away most of the withdrawal symptoms, the volcanic temper & the mood swings being the worst. The downside from the patches were the dreams, oh the dreams. Very real, extremely vivid & either ultra bizarre or of a very strong sexual nature.

    As Boojum says the initial problem was breaking the habit. Smoking first thing in a morning & early evening after eating were the worst for me but that faded after a month. I bought one of those squidgy stress balls & carried pens about with me to try to keep my hands busy.

    I know people who have just stopped using the glass of water technique, we had a month of fun at work when a colleague of mine did. The first two weeks were murder. To his credit the outcome was worth the frayed tempers, the hissy fits & the odd expletive laden remark.

    Stopping smoking was one of the hardest things I've ever done, it is also the best thing I have ever done for myself. More money, no more stinking clothes & it has hopefully prolonged my life. If you want it badly enough you can stop, finding the motivation is the key.

    Good luck.

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  • Nickvey

    all smokers stop smoking becasue they die

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  • RoseIsabella

    Is it normal that I quit smoking really easily? I think I just did it, cause I thought it looked cool. I was a light smoker for over twenty years.

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  • Dustyair

    Just think about the CEOs getting rich off of you slowing killing your body for their profits.

    It took me 3 times to quit, but I'm happily smoke free now. I didn't want to die by slow suffocation from lung cancer.

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    • Now what you just said may well make it easier for me to quit than anything else. The fear of death by suffocation and not being able to breathe well. That would be the most uncomfortable feeling imaginable. Or even the horrible non stop coughing from emphazima. You may have succeeded in getting me to quit smoking, I hope.

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  • Boojum

    I smoked up to 60 cigarettes a day for about 20 years and I repeatedly tried to stop and – until the last time – always went back to smoking within a few weeks.

    For me (and I think for most people) what makes stopping smoking so difficult is primarily addiction to nicotine and, to some extent, the habit of physically handing and fiddling around with cigarettes.

    I tried the "cold turkey" approach several times, and it never worked. However, my wife at the time smoked nearly as much as me, and she just decided to stop one day, and that was that. I suppose it is a matter of will-power to some extent, but I suspect that there must be some variation in how the neurochemistry of different people responds to nicotine. If a one person gets a much bigger buzz from nicotine than someone else, then it would make sense that the first person would find quitting much more difficult. Some might suggest psychological factors made it difficult for me to stop, but I don’t have any of the other characteristics of someone with an addictive personality.

    What worked amazingly well for me was nicotine replacement therapy. Nicotine gum has been around for a long time, and I had tried that, but I thought the stuff tasted awful. There were also dermal patches, but those did nothing for me. At the time that I stopped, you could get little plastic gizmos that looked vaguely like a cigarette and which contained cardboard tubes impregnated with nicotine. When you felt the urge for a cigarette, you sucked on the thing as you would a cigarette (which dealt with the need to fiddle with something) and received a hit of nicotine.

    I decided to stop one day in 1999, bought the little inhaler thing, and that was the last day I ever smoked. It felt a little like I was cheating, because it was completely painless – I suffered none of the usual withdrawal symptoms

    These days, you can get nicotine spray, and of course there’s vaping.

    Nicotine in itself is highly addictive and toxic in large doses, but the dose you get by vaping or replacement therapy is not harmful. What’s really harmful about tobacco use is all the other crap in the smoke.

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    • I have tried cold turkey, but I couldn't do it either. I think it would be easier to quit if I didn't have to put up with so much bullshit from people, since irritation is the top side effect from quitting, but expecting no guff from people is an unrealistic expectation also. I have tried the nicotine gum, but that did absolutely NOTHING for me, I didn't feel any different whatsoever. If I am to chew gum without relieving my nicotine withdrawal, I might as well chew some regular gum that has a decent flavor to it, which nicotine gum does not. I'll try quitting again, if I could just get a clearer timeline on how long the horrible agitation phase will last, that will make it easier for me, and then I'll have something to look forward to when I know it's gonna be over.

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      • Boojum

        In Britain (don't know what it's like where you are), you can get nicotine spray. You spritz it in your mouth, and there's an immediate nicotine hit.

        The result is similar to the inhalers I mentioned in my first.

        I think gum and patches did nothing for me because they supply a constant, low-level dose of nicotine, but I needed the hit.

        Impossible to say how long the physical symptoms of nicotine withdrawal will last for you. Everybody's different. For literally months after quitting, I'd get a whiff of smoke and feel the craving, so I carried the inhaler tubes for a long time. These days tobacco smoke doesn't bother me, but I definitely know when a smoker passes me on the street.

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  • armenianHotdogBunLeague

    I quit. It was really easy.

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    • Could you elaborate on why and how quitting was easy for you. I think you just blurting it out that it was easy without any elaboration may be the reason why you got a couple negative points and not just because you said it was easy (I did not give you a negative point). Could you just elaborate how it was easy for you? People like me struggling like crazy to quit would love to know.

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    • You’re in a lot of leagues and societies huh?

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