Smoker?

2

Replies

  • Thank you for the replies. Congratulations to all who have quit! I will quit. I know it. I want to thank all of you for your support as well.
  • My uncle quit after 25 years or something and hikes and bikes now like a madman. That's why I said that.
    Thats crazy. Thanks for the tip. I been wanting to go hikin and I love bike riding!
  • I used to smoke 1 1/2 to 2 packs a day. I had heard about chantex is a prescription from the doctor. I read the side affects and heard different reviews about it. I smoked from the time I was 16 until Dec. 20th 2010. I'm only 24 but I took it for the first week and you can smoke with it and it comes in a 2 month supply and you are supposed to take it everyday until its gone. I took it for the starter week and 3 more days. The urge was gone. I havent picked up a cigarette since. Everything is better. The taste of food exercising EVERYTHING. Lol I didnt gain any weight. The key to that is to keep busy with something else. Sometimes easier said than done. The good thing is that when I went to the doctor for it he actually gave me a coupon for it and I actually got it for free!! So if you haven't quit yet I highly suggest to give it a whirl. Good luck and let me know how your coming along.
  • How do people actually get into smoking ever since the 90s it's pretty much common knowledge it's suicide...

    Just like other people get into drugs and alcohol. I am not here to discuss how I got started but I posted this to get advice on quitting because I am obviously aware of the health problems it creates. Thank you for your wonderful reminded though.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    I quite on September 25, 2012. I went the harm reduction route and use a Personal Vaporizer (PV), also known as an e-cigarette (though we don't reallylike that term. It's been awesome..morning hack is gone, smokers cough is gone, lungs are clearer and clearer every day. Currently training for a 5K...a few months ago if you would have asked me if I would ever train for a 5K I would have thought you were joking...I got winded just walking around with my fat smokers *kitten*. I smoked for 20 years...the last 10 years + I was a 2 pack/day smoker.

    Add me if you like.
  • I used to smoke 1 1/2 to 2 packs a day. I had heard about chantex is a prescription from the doctor. I read the side affects and heard different reviews about it. I smoked from the time I was 16 until Dec. 20th 2010. I'm only 24 but I took it for the first week and you can smoke with it and it comes in a 2 month supply and you are supposed to take it everyday until its gone. I took it for the starter week and 3 more days. The urge was gone. I havent picked up a cigarette since. Everything is better. The taste of food exercising EVERYTHING. Lol I didnt gain any weight. The key to that is to keep busy with something else. Sometimes easier said than done. The good thing is that when I went to the doctor for it he actually gave me a coupon for it and I actually got it for free!! So if you haven't quit yet I highly suggest to give it a whirl. Good luck and let me know how your coming along.

    Nice! I have heard of it but I have not looked into it. I am glad it worked for you. If the book people are recommending does not work then I will got ahead and look into something like Chantix. I have tried the gum and that was worthless. I have also heard of drinking baking soda but it taste awdful
  • cakemewithyou
    cakemewithyou Posts: 132 Member
    Instead of smoking cigarettes, pop a peppermint in your mouth. Same concept, MUCH better smell. :)
  • I got an e-cigarette. It's cheaper, safer, you still get the nicotine and the "habit" of smoking, and it comes in hundreds of yummy flavors. Plus you can taper down from high nicotine content to 0 nicotine and wean yourself off gradually. Plus, I can now actually breathe and jog.
  • Erica262
    Erica262 Posts: 226 Member
    How do people actually get into smoking ever since the 90s it's pretty much common knowledge it's suicide...

    Exactly. Not to be a Debbie Downer, but maybe this will be motivating...

    My aunt had a mini-stroke at the age of 36 and was a 2-pack a day smoker... Of Reds, no less. Her doctor told her if she didn't quit smoking she would be dead in 5 years. So she switched to ultra lights. She, quite literally, dropped dead at the age of 40 because she didn't quit smoking. She had a heart attack. At the age of 40. She was at a healthy weight and ate relatively healthy. A "bad habit" killed her. Did I mention she was only 40 years old?
  • Onesnap
    Onesnap Posts: 2,819 Member
    My uncle quit after 25 years or something and hikes and bikes now like a madman. That's why I said that.
    Thats crazy. Thanks for the tip. I been wanting to go hikin and I love bike riding!

    You're welcome! He's doing really well. His lungs have grown new healthy tissue and he's back to being healthy.
  • Onesnap
    Onesnap Posts: 2,819 Member
    How do people actually get into smoking ever since the 90s it's pretty much common knowledge it's suicide...

    Exactly. Not to be a Debbie Downer, but maybe this will be motivating...

    My aunt had a mini-stroke at the age of 36 and was a 2-pack a day smoker... Of Reds, no less. Her doctor told her if she didn't quit smoking she would be dead in 5 years. So she switched to ultra lights. She, quite literally, dropped dead at the age of 40 because she didn't quit smoking. She had a heart attack. At the age of 40. She was at a healthy weight and ate relatively healthy. A "bad habit" killed her. Did I mention she was only 40 years old?

    That's why I'm glad my uncle quit. I only have one other uncle left on that side
  • christinekry
    christinekry Posts: 86 Member
    Here is the Allen Carr book:
    http://media.wix.com/ugd/74fa87_2010cc5496521431188f905b7234a829.pdf

    Here is another powerful read: Never Take Another Puff by Joel Spitzer
    http://whyquit.com/joel/ntap.pdf
  • I've never heard about the drinking baking soda. I bet that does taste aweful. Another thing I did after I quit just to try and help out was I always carried a pack of mints. I honestly think that it helped a lot too. One mint... about 5 mins.. one cigarette about 5 mins. So thats one other thing to think about for a possibility. If you get an urge eat a mint lol
  • margiea7
    margiea7 Posts: 8 Member
    I smoked from age 12 to 40, and was up to two packs a day. (It went hand in hand with editing for long hours and drinking coffee by the bucket). I'm not the type who usually responds well to "self-help" books, but like others on here, I quit successfully after reading Allen Carr's book. Haven't had a smoke for over two years now. So I recommend the book.

    My only other advice - it helped me to be in a completely different environment for the first few days. I went and stayed with my brother's family. I took one cigarette with me and smoked it on the first evening I was there, knowing it would be my last. Being away from my usual smoking "zones" at home and having a break in my routine made it easier to quit.
  • MellyGibson
    MellyGibson Posts: 297 Member
    I just quit a week and a half ago. In just that time I've been able to add weights to my lifts - I jumped rope for 3 minutes without feeling like I was dying (I considered going for 5 minutes....).

    What worked for me was plain-old willpower. I have been on a 12-week weight-training program, and have gotten so used to telling myself "NO" that I decided to apply the same concept to cigarettes. I tried using Zyban, but the side-effects were so bad that I just couldn't take it anymore. So I quit cold turkey. Yes, it's tough...but it isn't as tough as I thought it would be. Not to mention how AWESOME I feel about myself for being able to say no when I get cravings...which DO happen.

    Congrats on your decision to quit!

    Congrats to everyone that HAS quit!

    To anyone that doesn't smoke and has never smoked - don't judge. You have NO idea what it's like.
  • JennaM222
    JennaM222 Posts: 1,996 Member
    I usually smoke between 14-28 grams per week. ...Well lately I've been vaping and baking so I guess I'm a cheater. Gotta keep them runner lungs!

    :drinker:
  • ExcelWithMel
    ExcelWithMel Posts: 192 Member
    I quit using Chantix. I smoked 1.5-2 packs a day for @10 years, and then cut back to a pack every 2-3 days for another 9 years. Quit 12/2/09 and haven't looked back. Yes, it was hard, but it was so worth it. I also have lost @45 lbs. since then and can run for an hour non-stop so whoever tells you quitting smoking causes you to gain weight is wrong. You do have to replace your oral habit with other things, like sugar free gum or life savers, and straws and toothpicks were a necessity for me for awhile. You can do it!
  • lawtechie
    lawtechie Posts: 708 Member
    Quit about 3 1/2 yrs ago. Was trying to quit for 5+ years before then. What worked for me. Cut out first of the morning smoke for a week or two, then cut out after breakfast smoke, then before work smoke, then mid-morning, etc. etc. Kept cutting till I was only smoking at night. Tried Chantix two times. First time the dosage was too high and it made me feel awful. Second time w/ 1/4 the dosage worked like a charm. Quit for 6+ months, but started again due to the stress of stuff. Finally one Sunday night, ran out of smokes and said that's it -- I'm done. That was about 3 1/2 years ago.

    If you are into support groups and boards, check out http://www.quitnet.com

    Good luck!
  • Sh1tsRainbows
    Sh1tsRainbows Posts: 1,227 Member
    I smoked a pack a day for 15 years...quit cause i got pregnant and it just made me sick...determined to not start again after I give birth cause i KNOW how hard it is to quit... good luck!!!
  • Heaven71
    Heaven71 Posts: 706 Member
    I just decided I wanted to quit and I did. I stopped going the places I went to get them and changed my route so I didn't pass them, stopped going places where people smoke and stoped being around smokers. I stayed busy and kept a pen to chew on. I did have cravings and I still do and it has been 2 years and 2 days. I did gain weight and that was when I found MFP. Just keep watching what you eat and exercise like you have been doing and you will be fine.

    Good Luck, it is the best thing you will ever do for you.
  • I smoke an e-cig. And instead of getting more cartridges, i refill the ones i have already. I have like 30 flavors, and havent smoked for almost 6 months. i love smoking, and this is a great alternative.

    I recommend www.themagicmist.com
    they make compatible parts for most cigarette style models, The Mirage is a model of the Mistic cig, and its GREAT.

    Andwhen you are ready for some amazing tasting flavors of e liquid, try www.fuzionvapor.com

    also you can do it permanently with juice with nicotine levels, or choose ever lessening amounts, to quit altogether. eventually you just have vapor, with no nicotine. suddenly you just... forget about it. its amazing.
  • sammyneb
    sammyneb Posts: 257
    I was a pack (or more) smoker from when I was 18 to last year. I quit many times, including when I was pregnant. But always started back up, it was usually oh I can have just one..but that never worked for me. Finally a year ago I went on Chantix..I was only on it for a month and I haven't smoked since..but I also started running (literally a month before I quit I could not run 1 mile) But when I quit I signed up to run a half marathon the following spring (6 months later) and trust me running is hard enough, but you add smoking?? UGH!! That is what helped me keep the cigarettes away..my husband still smokes (all though not as much) and a lot of my friends do..i can be around them no problem now. I am also running my second half marathon next month :) So find a good reason, and for me I had plenty..but running was what finally made me actually do it :) It has been 13 months!
    You got this!!
  • trogalicious
    trogalicious Posts: 4,584 Member
    I don't condone littering, but when I decided to quit.. I literally threw my last pack and lighter out of the window on my way home one night.

    Haven't touched one since.
  • meg7399
    meg7399 Posts: 672 Member
    My friend was a pack a day smoker...then she got preggers...she quit cold turkey! Apparently being responsible for human life is a huge motivator! :P
  • AubreySue81
    AubreySue81 Posts: 167 Member
    I read Allan Carr's book as well. A couple of different times. It didn't work for me, but it has worked for many people. It's worth giving it a try. :happy: What have you got to lose, especially if you can check it out from a library? :happy:

    I also tried Chantix. It didn't make me have really crazy dreams like some people have reported. But, my dreams were very vivid. I did not continue with the follow-up pack and ended up smoking again.

    What really did it for me was joining a local MMA gym and starting up with their Fighter Fitness class. I was a pack a day smoker, for 14 years. And having to stop so I could breathe was really quite embarrassing (to me). Then I saw and paid attention to how much it was really holding me back in that class. After my free week trial at that gym, I quit. Cold turkey, never looking back and feeling great ever since! It really wasn't hard at all this time (for me). I'm now 10 months smoke free and LOVE the fact that I can run in the COLD and not have a coughing fit afterwards. :drinker: My point in all of this is that maybe it is just a matter of finding something you love (like the fitness classes for me).

    Good luck and stay strong! :bigsmile:
  • I smoked at least a pack a day, sometimes a pack and a half, and when I found out I was pregnant I quit cold turkey..it was really hard especially since all my friends were smokers and they would come hangout then go outside to smoke and I'd be all alone knowing what there were doing. but if you put your mind to you, you can. .I have been quit since the middle of February (2012)...I still crave them, and a lot of times I'm like 'Holy **** I need a ciggerette!!!' but I haven't had another one since....
  • landersmegan
    landersmegan Posts: 5 Member
    Maybe if you are going to be negative and judgmental you should refrain from commenting. When someone is asking for help and encouragement and you can't provide that, then say nothing. I'm sure most of us have enough negative influences without being put down in a community that's supposed to be supportive!
  • landersmegan
    landersmegan Posts: 5 Member
    How do people actually get into smoking ever since the 90s it's pretty much common knowledge it's suicide...

    Maybe if you are going to be negative and judgmental you should refrain from commenting. When someone is asking for help and encouragement and you can't provide that, then say nothing. I'm sure most of us have enough negative influences without being put down in a community that's supposed to be supportive!
  • bugaha1
    bugaha1 Posts: 602 Member
    I was smoking a pack a day and just quit one Sunday in 2003
  • Going on five year quitter now...I was two packer a day...Now saving money