Quitting Smoking

Is anyone else going through the process of quitting smoking?

I have done this before but this time it seems so much worse
Im on Day 2 and I am having the worst withdrawal symptoms and the leg twitching is driving me insane and im soooo tired!!
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Replies

  • rach_00
    rach_00 Posts: 72
    Bump
  • DaniKenmir
    DaniKenmir Posts: 387 Member
    Have you tried green smoke? It's expensive at first but it's SO much cheaper than smoking and really takes the edge off =)
  • Fitty_Cent
    Fitty_Cent Posts: 41 Member
    I quit smoking 388 days ago. What helped me was using the Livestrong quit smoking app.

    Keep at it until you succeed!
  • tharrington82
    tharrington82 Posts: 32 Member
    I am on day 13. It's hard, it sucks, but I know it is for the best. We can do this. I have been using the quit now app!
  • sandhillsmom
    sandhillsmom Posts: 319 Member
    I'm on day 6 of smoke free. I've tried patches, cold turkey, weaning myself off and this time I know I'm going to make it. It does get easier as each day passes! Hang in there!!
  • Chipmunk222
    Chipmunk222 Posts: 240 Member
    ACV straight for tough cravings that wont go away (like a shot) and a tsp ACV mixed with water and sip throughout the day to keep you sane. I smoked since I was 12 and was able to quit, cold turkey with hardly no withdrawals, no nic patch or gum.

    ACV = raw apple cider vinegar ( i use braggs)
  • reneelee
    reneelee Posts: 877 Member
    someone wrote into curves magazine saying they quite buy drinking lots of water using a straw. The straw helps with the sucking and the water flushes the nicatin out of your body faster.
  • vanillasugar
    vanillasugar Posts: 246 Member
    I've been smoke-free for just over 2 months. I used (and still infrequently use) an electronic cigarette when the cravings get super intense. Using it less and less every day.
  • LemonBurns
    LemonBurns Posts: 538 Member
    www.whyquit.com = AWEsome!
  • Tan43
    Tan43 Posts: 87 Member
    Hi,

    I quit 18 months ago. It does get easier and I agree with using a straw for some inital relief as you are using the same motion of having a ciggie without the nasty stuff that you actually inhale. Please keep going as it is worth it. You are worth it!! Your lungs and whole body in general will reap the rewards. Today I ran 10 km (6.22 miles) without a problem due to my much improved lung capacity. Every urge take a deep breath and work your way through it.

    Good Luck!:happy:
  • quickchekgal
    quickchekgal Posts: 213 Member
    Me me! Feel free to add me. It is quite difficult. I have quit in the past and didn't have a problem...but right now it is super hard. I went for awhile where I wouldn't smoke at all during the week and would have a few on the weekends. Then of course I get stressed and smoke a bunch. That is my main problem. I am a stress smoker!
  • maroonmango211
    maroonmango211 Posts: 908 Member
    2 and a half weeks completely clear of smoking ( we caved in a couple weekends ago and stupidly got some off a friend while out) finally not feeling like I want one. Have one of those inhaler things but honestly cant be bothered to use it, its horrible and probably helped just for the fact that it felt that stupid sitting there sucking on plastic. Feel a ton better already. Keep it up, its worth it for your body and mind!
  • DataBased
    DataBased Posts: 513 Member
    I quit on QuitNet with a lot of support from others who were doing the same. I haven't logged in to that site in ages, so I logged in just to see my stats:

    Time Smoke-Free: 2408 days, 20 hours, 39 minutes and 45 seconds
    Cigarettes NOT smoked: 26497
    Lifetime Saved: 6 months, 22 days, 9 hours
    Money Saved: $7,287.22

    Totally worth it! I used the patch as it was intended to be used. I followed the instructions to the letter. I really appreciated the QuitNet site, which is actually a lot like MFP in some respects.

    You can do it. Never quit quitting! Protect your quit, even when it isn't an easy one.
  • hll2465
    hll2465 Posts: 31 Member
    I am about four days in myself. I was so tired and feeling like crap the first few days. It is getting easier though...Hang in there!
  • Marijuana is NOT good substitute. Boo. Why not cocaine, or meth?
    3 weeks no smoking TODAY! quit cold turkey. Used the gum for a few days, but ditched them because it didn't help.
    I still have mulitple cravings per day, but I counter it. As you know, weight gain is substantial in the first few weeks, so you will need to work twice as hard as everyone else to keep it down. TRUST ME, I KNOW.
    CARROTS AND SUNFLOWER SEEDS. LOTS AND LOTS OF SUNFLOWER SEEDS. Also, You know that after-meal smoke that you crave? finish your plate, and then eat something else that is not related to the dinner. It works, it subsides the want to smoke.

    What are your reasons for quitting? If you have ten reasons, and not ONE of them is for yourself, you will fail. I just want to make sure you are quitting for yourself. That is the only way to gain success.

    FIGHT IT! Whenever you want to smoke, replace that with a walk, a jog, a swim, a bike ride. NEVER A DRIVE!
    You can do this. I am. Next week will mark the longest I have ever gone without a cigarette since I was 13. I am turning 26 on Tuesday.

    P.S.----I have tried 3 times before to quit, but I was fooling myself, because I didn't quit for me. I also had knick-knack tricks too, like gum, straw, patch. This time, I Don't have nothin like that. I choose healthy food to snack on. Love me some carrots, and it takes forever to eat a serving of sunflower seeds.
  • LesaDave
    LesaDave Posts: 1,480 Member
    ACV straight for tough cravings that wont go away (like a shot) and a tsp ACV mixed with water and sip throughout the day to keep you sane. I smoked since I was 12 and was able to quit, cold turkey with hardly no withdrawals, no nic patch or gum.

    ACV = raw apple cider vinegar ( i use braggs)

    Never heard of this before. This is something I should pass around to a few friends of mine. Is it hard to find?
  • WickedPixie1
    WickedPixie1 Posts: 111 Member
    This is my second *serious* time around. First time I quit for 5 years....add a very drunk birthday evening and a lot of smokers and bang.
    This time it's been 3 months, pretty much cold turkey. Chewed Nicorette gum for about a week...about 1 or 2 a day and that was it.
    I still get cravings, but they don't last and I can breathe again. The crap is starting to make an exit from my lungs, and while it's not very pleasant, I know I'm so much better off.
    Keep up the good work, it's so worth it and I kick myself in the @ss for ever starting up again.
  • brasslady1
    brasslady1 Posts: 113
    My Hubby and I quit almost 11 years ago and let me tell you if my husband can quit anybody can do it....Actually I felt like it was easier to quit smoking than it is to lose weight......After all you have to eat...but you don't have to smoke....
  • ShinyFuture
    ShinyFuture Posts: 314 Member
    I quit the end of March '12. The nicotine mini-lozenges saved me. I use the brand name ones and they are spendy - about $35 for a 3-pack, but it got me through the first month. You can get the regular size lozenges in a larger amount for less money at Costco, but the mini's worked better for me. I did need a second 3-pack, but after 20 years I don't smoke anymore and I love being a non-smoker.

    Good Luck!
  • MABfit01
    MABfit01 Posts: 11 Member
    TEN reasons. I'll have to think about it. But, that should really provide motivation. Getting lots of good info from this site. I'll check in more often. Start my own tracking system for cig's.
  • Sooo hard!! Don't know what to do..using ecig,chewing lots of gum and drinking water.
  • Maurice1966
    Maurice1966 Posts: 419 Member
    I'm into my second week. I use nicotine gum and I'm not yet getting withdrawal other than being a little snappy which I manage to keep under check because I'm cognisant that I might be. Whenever I feel like lashing out, I take a deep breath and think about what I will say before it comes out as a rant :o).

    This about the 4th time for me in the last 15 years and I know it will be the last because of all the things I've learned along the way. You must stay strong and just like in any endeavour, you have to really want it to be successful e.g. health and weight loss. Same principles apply.

    Good luck.
  • Keep in mind, though. As I said: it doesn't matter if you have ten, or one. If one reason is NOT for yourself, you will not succeed. Sure, quit for your kid, your dead grandma, your profession. That will only last for so long. You have to tell yourself that you want to live longer, that you want to breathe better, that you dont want to stink all the time. That you want a hotter wife/husband. bottom line. You have to quit for yourself. I have quit for my girlfriends, for how others will think of me, and because I was broke. All times, you put me in a bar with a NASCAR race, and guess who's back smokin again? yup.

    This time, I am not broke. I have a liquor store a block and a half from me, that I can EASILY decide I need that cigarette. I could, but I dont. I don't have a girlfriend, this time around. I dont want one, nor need one. The only one to keep me from smoking is ME.

    Quitting is not for everyone. It will take THE MOST WILL POWER YOU WILL EVER NEED IN YOUR LIFE, probably with exception to hardcore drugs, like heroin or something. If you dont have it between the ears, you will continue to have it between the lips.

    An easy excuse to smoke would be: my great grandma smoked since high school, and she lived to be 93. I make the choice to not smoke based on me.
  • Sooo hard!! Don't know what to do..using ecig,chewing lots of gum and drinking water.

    Find a pool, jump in, spend a couple hours.
    You cant smoke around splashing water, and your lungs cant handle it when you are swimming laps! :tongue:
  • I quit smoking 5 months ago after smoking for 40 years!!! It is very hard but well worth it. Now I have to try to loose weight. I used the patches and they seemed to work. I have good days and bad. Lately though the good out number the bad. I have been avoiding circumstances that trigger the urge.
  • cmcollins001
    cmcollins001 Posts: 3,472 Member
    I started quitting about 1 1/2 months ago, something I told myself I would do before I even thought about starting exercising and eating right. The Nicoderm CQ patches really really help, especially when you force yourself past the first 3 days. Although when I first quit I wasn't doing any form of exercise, I do exercise now and that seems to help.

    Good luck, and support helps as well.
  • mowree
    mowree Posts: 74 Member
    I smoked for 35 years. Been quit 2 and 1/2 years. Don't regret quitting. Feel better & can do things I couldn't do before.
    The KEY for my success was not allowing any negative thoughts about quitting to come to mind. As soon as that would try to start happening, I'd banish the thought before giving myself time to dwell on it at all. I KNEW that if I dwelled on a negative thought...it was only a matter of time before a weakness would appear.
    Hope this helps someone!
  • EvaStrange
    EvaStrange Posts: 59 Member
    I quit three years and three days ago (happy anniversary to me!) and it was tough the first four or five days. For about two months after that, habit made me reach for my (nonexistent) cigarettes and lighter when I sat down at my desk, when I got off the train, when a class had ended, … But it was just habit and not a real drive or a mad craving. Those first three days were the hardest and the next two weeks were uncomfortable. I got through them by eating tons of fruit (we picked the right time of the year!) and chewy candy and by exercising A LOT, simply to keep busy. Whenenever I was at home and felt a craving announce itself, I got on my (outdoor) bicycle and pedaled my heart out. I think I hardly sat still for five minutes during those first few weeks, except when at work, and that made up for all the extra sweets I ate. There was thus no harm in eating as a substitute for smoking.

    If your leg is twitching, why don't you give it something to do? Drive yourself to the point of exhaustion by exercising or doing housework, so that it will keep quiet even when you're not moving. It's only for a few more days at most, after all. As a reward, treat yourself to something harmless afterwards. And then some more. You will have burnt off all the extra calories beforehand, anyway!

    And focus on the positive effects. For me, it was a matter of days, if not hours, until my nose and my taste buds got more sensitive. Does food already have a more intense taste? Do you smell that candle at the other end of the room? How does an ash tray full of cold ash smell to you now? Noticing and appreciating these effects made it easier for me to hang in. Why would you want to give this up again??
  • brittfj
    brittfj Posts: 50 Member
    I quit three years and three days ago (happy anniversary to me!) and it was tough the first four or five days. For about two months after that, habit made me reach for my (nonexistent) cigarettes and lighter when I sat down at my desk, when I got off the train, when a class had ended, … But it was just habit and not a real drive or a mad craving. Those first three days were the hardest and the next two weeks were uncomfortable. I got through them by eating tons of fruit (we picked the right time of the year!) and chewy candy and by exercising A LOT, simply to keep busy. Whenenever I was at home and felt a craving announce itself, I got on my (outdoor) bicycle and pedaled my heart out. I think I hardly sat still for five minutes during those first few weeks, except when at work, and that made up for all the extra sweets I ate. There was thus no harm in eating as a substitute for smoking.

    If your leg is twitching, why don't you give it something to do? Drive yourself to the point of exhaustion by exercising or doing housework, so that it will keep quiet even when you're not moving. It's only for a few more days at most, after all. As a reward, treat yourself to something harmless afterwards. And then some more. You will have burnt off all the extra calories beforehand, anyway!

    And focus on the positive effects. For me, it was a matter of days, if not hours, until my nose and my taste buds got more sensitive. Does food already have a more intense taste? Do you smell that candle at the other end of the room? How does an ash tray full of cold ash smell to you now? Noticing and appreciating these effects made it easier for me to hang in. Why would you want to give this up again??


    your comment is inspiring. thank you! :]