My Plan : quitting smoking!!!

Ok so I have read a lot of posts on here about quitting smoking and the ugly thought of stalling my weight loss or worse gaining. To be honest that scares me...a lot!! Far too many are saying they either are not losing anymore since quitting or that they gained even though they tracked and exercised. At first...I was thinking ok I will get 10 lbs out of the way then try. Then I thought I still will not be happy with my weight so what is the point?!?!
So I decided today: I will quite smoking..maybe not this second but I have to promise myself that by the time my twins turn 9 I will not longer be a smoker.

My plan is as follows: This week I will keep a note pad and pen with my cigarettes. I will document every single cigarette I smoke, how much of it ( I tend to only smoke half of a cigarette and waste the other half..done it for years!!) and if there was a thought in my head of why i wanted it. Usually I do not think there is lol.. I am a boredom smoker..BIG time!!
I do not smoke within the first half hour I am awake - 45 minutes before working out (obviously not during) and not for about 45 minutes after working out. Other than that I think I smoke half a cigarette every half hour of the day!! I need to keep myself busy :(
Once I have an average of how much I smoke..I will start to eliminate one or two a day (going to try for at least eliminating two) Every couple days I will eliminate one more. The past month I have already been thinking about quitting so I do not smoke immediately after eating as this is a trigger of course for us smokers. I clean the table - do the dishes pack my husbands lunch - drink my water then smoke.

I have gotten quite a few ideas from people on here and I have a feeling Listerine will be my new best friend LOL

I have tried patches (made me vomit ridiculous amounts) - tried wellbutrin (I think thats the name) - gave me weird electronic shock feelings in my chest - am petrified of chantix (I am alone for 10 hours a day with children) - tried cold turkey before (my poor poor family!!!) -
I do not want to opt for electronic cigarette to help for two reasons 1: I tried a couple..they were too heavy and did not sit right in between my fingers which did not give me the relief. 2. I want to QUIT not replace with another addiction :/ - same reason i do not want to try the gum / candies. All though will most likely have the same effect as the patch did.

So..my plan is to cut down over a reasonable time. i feel keeping notes will help me obtain this goal along with all the ideas / advice I have read on this forum.

I have not seen too much on this method - has anyone quit in this manner? How did you do? Any good advice on this combined journey is welcomed too :)

Replies

  • walleyebob977
    walleyebob977 Posts: 201 Member
    Sounds like a great plan. I quit 3 years ago using the nic gum. Best of luck to you. Don't worry about the weight Issue and keep working out. Quit smoking is a very important thing to do. You got this:)
  • chasetwins
    chasetwins Posts: 702 Member
    Sounds like a great plan. I quit 3 years ago using the nic gum. Best of luck to you. Don't worry about the weight Issue and keep working out. Quit smoking is a very important thing to do. You got this:)

    :) Thank you!!! Through trial and error...I will make this happen!!!
  • SweetLove1988
    SweetLove1988 Posts: 353 Member
    I'm 2 week's smoke free, but I use the gum. It really helps me. Sounds like a good plan though, hope it works out and best of luck.
  • HollisGrant
    HollisGrant Posts: 2,022 Member
    What a wonderful goal for yourself and your children. I quit many years ago on my own, but I knew I would start again, so I signed up for a stop smoking program. It was the best decision I've ever made. The one I went to was called Smokenders. It lasted 6 weeks and was somewhat expensive. Many hospitals have similar programs that are free -- a good friend finally quit that way. You get a lot of support that way from people going through the same thing, plus the program teaches you to think like a nonsmoker. Best of luck! You can do it. And you don't have to gain a lot of weight, either.
  • dayr1993
    dayr1993 Posts: 102 Member
    I have quit for 7 weeks (excluding one drunken ciggie) and iv found it really hard and my weight has suffered I think I was compensating with food though, thats goig to stop now!! I did it with the mints for 2 weeks they made me sick like yoi so wemt on to have a sugar free mint when I needed one and it does help iv spent 3 weeks round , my family who all smoke so hard but iv done it amd wanna be smoke free forever.

    Good luck hun its hard but so worth it just keep thinking bout your twins :)
  • leahhm91
    leahhm91 Posts: 11
    Good luck! I've quit smoking cold turkey before for almost a year and sadly slipped again and started off and on and the more I kept slipping the harder the withdrawals got and harder to quit, I smoke a pack a day (used to be less but I'm at home bored all day recovering from surgery) so I'm on wellbutrin. the best thing would be the notepad and pen, also if you want to gross yourself out with them inhale a cigarette and blow directly on a paper towel with your mouth touching it, you will see how gross it is. Another thing that might work is using suckers or straws, they've always helped me quit! I just think I tend to slip because I live in Las Vegas and going into casinos and a lot of smokers made me need one lol. You can do it though, takes a lot of will power but can be done. I've read online smokers tend to burn 300 calories a day so when you quit you gain it, but that's where suckers, straws and exercise comes in. Good luck again! :) Feel free to add me if you need support I am trying to quit as well.
  • jonathanmhobson
    jonathanmhobson Posts: 44 Member
    I tried everything to stop and could not do it. However i tried using an e ciggarette 4 months ago now and have had no problem stopping. I have had no cravings at all. I have lowered my nicotine dose and plan to quit using it in a month or so.

    I think personally it's best to attack one thing at a time. It's like a frog being boiled slowly, it does not realise what is happening to it. However if you throw a frog in a pan of hot water it would jump out immediately. When people try stopping smoking and dieting all in one go they find it really difficult. It boggles the mind.

    All the best with this! I'm sure you will reach your goals but my advice would be to take things one step at a time.
  • Aleta7
    Aleta7 Posts: 92
    After many tries, I quit smoking cold turkey 13 years ago. It is difficult. I pictured something I called a "Nicodemon" a little demon who would try to get me to pick up and smoke. I would have arguments with this imaginary being. Silly I know but it helped me. Also, I quit smoking in my house. Hope this helps.
  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 7,962 Member
    Good luck.

    I quit smoking in 1993 cold turkey after smoking 2 packs a day for about 10 years. A couple of things i found helpful:

    I heard that nicotine is water soluble, so the physical addiction is out of your system after 3 days (not sure if this is correct though). So after a couple of days tried to convince myself it would just be really stupid to start smoking again.

    Psychological addiction is nonetheless very real (ask a gambler). It helped me to introduce some positive reinforcement. I calculated how much I spent on cigarettes per week, and bought myself a little gift with that money at the beginning of the week. A new CD or a designer lipstick, say. Then my contract with myself was to refrain from smoking until the end of the week when the gift was paid for. Having the weekly short term goal really helped. As time progressed I would increase the size of the gift, ie designer shoes using 3 months of cigarette money with the equivalent time commitment not to smoke.

    i found it also helped to think of not smoking as potentially temporary. It was hard to face never smoking again because I enjoyed it. I told myself I would quit for a few years, which would have a positive impact on my health, then reassess.
  • Zereoue20
    Zereoue20 Posts: 18 Member
    Good luck! Like jonathanmhobs, I quit using an e cigarette. After spending about $500 on different models, I've been happy with an ego ecig and juice from johnson creek. You can lower your nicotine dose while getting most of the same habits as regular cigarettes.

    Even with ecigs, it took me a few tries to quit but I've been completely cigarette free for 8 months or so at this point.
  • chasetwins
    chasetwins Posts: 702 Member
    Wow thank you ALL so much for all your advice, encouragement and fabulous ideas (I am loving the demon one LMAO)..I also really like the "tell yourself it is temporary" even though it's not. For me (since I tried so many times) it is really the mental addiction not the drug itself :/

    I am sure with all the help from you guys..I can make this happen!! Thank you all tons!!
  • mdelcott
    mdelcott Posts: 529 Member
    I suggest Allen Carr's easy way to stop smoking. I read it and quit cold turkey, will be 2 years in august, not a single puff since. I love it best thing I ever did. I did gain weight but have since lost all that I put on. You just have to make it past day 3, I will never smoke again because I NEVER want to do day 3 again lol. Best of luck
  • Miss_Hiker_Pants
    Miss_Hiker_Pants Posts: 229 Member
    You can do it! I smoked heavy for 30 years. Every time I quit, I started to gain weight , freaked out, and started smoking again. Then I would battle losing the weight, try to quit again , gain weight , freak out etc. A vicious cycle for me.

    I didn't know how to be a "non-smoker" I smoked my entire adult life + my entire adolescence. For me I had to give in & welcome the weight. Everyone is different.
    You just have to go with the flow, and don't give in to the nicotine. The May it will be 3 years. I might be a little heavier, but I'm more healthy, and more active than I was when I was smoking.
    Good luck!
  • Angeloftheshore
    Angeloftheshore Posts: 227 Member
    In case this helps...this is my blog post about my quit smoking journey ;)

    On Quitting Smoking better known as taking back the power.

    I recently had a friend request from a person who was quitting smoking and she had appaently seen my on the message board commenting tips to another MFP member. She asked me for some advice and tips and somehow my message back to her ended up being my monologue of my quitting smoking journey. Something I had never done before. I mean yeah obviously my family and friends know about my journey and I have given tips to people since. But never really opened up about the process and how painful it was at times. My new friend said she felt ANY person who wants to quit should read my story. So for the even remote possibility that I can reach out and help someone who wants out of the smoking addiction, and also for myself, because I am proud of what I went through and where I ended up. I will post my story here. Edited for a few spelling errors and a slight bit of bad language.



    It started as a journey to quit smoking cigarette's but ended up being a journey of me taking back my life, my body and my power. Take a deep breath and begin....



    "Hi! I am happy you added me as a friend and I am happy you are quitting. This may ramble a bit but I want to give as much help as I can and so I will just go with the flow of things I remember that I did and how I felt.

    First let me start by saying I loved smoking. I loved the calming effect I thought it had on me, loved the inhale and exhale of the smoke, it was like yoga to my mind. So quitting was going to be no easy task. I failed at my first attempt by thinking a substitute would make me break the addiction. I failed at my second attempt by thinking the actual addiction was not as strong as it was. I learned very quickly I had to be stronger than it. I had to be stronger, even when it was painful (will discuss that later). I tell you I failed, not because I think you will. I tell you I failed, so hopefully you will not make the same mistakes as I did.

    So day one and first attempt, I tried smoking the smokeless water vapor no nicotine cigarette's (ecigarette's aka electronic cigarette's). Well, what happened is that I craved the nicotine so much I puffed those babies hard and smoked a lot more trying to get my fix. They gave me a horrible sore throat, I mean really bad. And I figured smoking in extra tar is no better than the nicotine, even if it was not the addictive part. I was smoking in a ton of tar and whatever else they put in them. Plus heated vapor. It all seemed very messed up and was only creating it's own problems. I tried this form, at this time though, not to quit smoking, but to make my house smoke free because....

    My husband is Navy and he had been away at a training facility for a couple months with Marines. Well, they had him out doing their PT (physical fitness) and their PT was more extreme than the Navy's, lots of running. My husband fell in love with running there, and in turn quit smoking there himself, cold turkey. So he could breathe better to run. He decided he wanted to be a distance runner. So he came home smoke free. And....

    My 4lb Chihuahua was suffering badly from smoke in the house. After a few hours of me smoking in the morning, she would leave the room, stand outside the door and bark. I looked up some info and find out that it is usually a way an animal tries to tell you there is danger and you need to move away from the area (like a fire). So she sense danger by me. Plus she coughed all the time. So....

    I decided that the house needed to be smoke free, for them.

    But the ecigarrette's failed miserably. But they did do one thing. They made me realize I am an addict. No different from a friend I helped get off cocaine other than it's legality. It still can kill you, Still makes you sick, Still impairs abilities, Still affects your organs and Still can take many years off your life. I realized the hard truth that I am an addict. That made me angry, very angry. I have never been a person who let things control me like that. I instantly felt like a slave to it. So I started looking at the savings that my husband not anymore smoking was adding to our budget and how much more it could be if I quit too. I thought of all the things that cash could go towards. Then I saw him run his first 1/2 marathon and cried because I got winded just taking trash out at times (also of course affected by my weight and lack of physical fitness at the time, but still a contributing factor). I saw him loving it and I got angrier at smoking, at myself that I was an addict. I already knew I wanted to get back into shape because I had been most of my life but when I married a military guy the stress and sometimes loneliness of moving around and having to make friends all over again just put me in a bad place and eating and the computer became life for me. Then my husband and I decided to sit down and watch an episode of Biggest Loser. Jillian Michael's said something to a contestant about taking control of their own life and something clicked, no, more like hit me with a large sledge hammer. So I decided enough was enough, it was time to take control back of me, my life, my mood, my body, etc.....

    So quitting part 2 began. I bought the patch system to quit. All started well enough, withdrawl, hunger pangs, mood swings, etc aside, it was as it would be with a drug addict. But then I decided I was smarter than the patch, smarter than the smokes, smarter than anything. I decided I was going to smoke 3 cigarettes a day because I was so addicted the patch alone at first was not going to work, for me. So I decided ...1 when I woke up, 1 after lunch and 1 after dinner or before bed. My husband freaked because it is very dangerous to smoke while on the patch so I made a deal with him that I would take the patch off a half hour before smoking and I decided not to wear it at night (bad dreams and restless sleep it caused plus I figured I did not smoke when I sleep anyway). I WILL STATE THIS IN HUGE LETTERS....WHAT I DID WAS HUGELY DANGEROUS AND I COULD HAVE STROKED OUT OR HAD A HEART ATTACK. EVEN THOUGH I TOOK THE PATCH OFF PRIOR TO SMOKING I STILL HAD THE PATCHES STEADY STREAM OF NICOTINE RUNNING THROUGH ME. IT STATES RIGHT IN THE DIRECTIONS...DO NOT SMOKE WHILE ON THE PATCH. I said that in huge letters so you won't do it. I admit now that when I did have a cigarette at those times, my heart rate increased. I could have killed myself. I was very very lucky.

    Anyway as I am sure you can guess, this plan did not work. I just wanted more cigarettes and it was not helping with the physical addictive part of holding a cigarette while doing something. So one day while my husband was at work I broke down crying, threw the patch away and said I can't do this and proceeded to smoke an entire pack of cigarettes. When my husband came home. I told him, I quit quitting, and he went out and bought me another pack. Later I realized he did this to make me think, and it did. During the smoking of that pack I went through more emotions than I ever have in my life. It was horrible, beautiful and tragic. I realized I was spending my last moments with my dearest friend, a friend I was saying my final goodbye to.

    When I finished the pack other than one cigarette that was left, I crushed it, decided enough was enough. The experience I had just gone through was enough to tell me my life belonged to a pack of cigarettes not to me. And I was done, no matter what I would have to go through, I was done. I crushed that cigarette, threw it and the pack away, threw out all the ashtrays and sat down to make a cleaning list for my house to get rid of the smell. I had been on step two of three of the patch and I decided to go back to step two. I wore step two for 2 days and said, no, I do not want anymore nicotine going through my body anymore. I threw the patches away and went cold turkey. For almost two weeks I lived like what I felt a junkie must feel like when they can't get a fix. I was moody, angry, mean at times, no patience with anything or anyone, even twitchy and shaky like a junkie. I slept a lot, and I recommend it because you sleep through the worst of it. The stress would not let me stay awake so I did not need a sleep aid. I cried a lot. I said I am going to fail a lot. That made me angrier and more determined I would succeed. I knew if I beat this, I could overcome anything.

    It was the worst and best experience of my life.
    I can honestly tell you I am no longer a smoker and never will be again. For one thing, I would never ever want to go through that again lol. And also, nothing, NOTHING should ever have that kind of control over you, ever.

    Breathe....
    So my tips and tricks.....

    -The computer was a horrible place for me to be since I smoked there and was online a lot. So reluctantly I knew I had to get the heck away from it. For how long I had no clue, all I knew is that sitting there made me want to smoke. It ended up being around two months I had to give up the computer.

    - But the computer was not the only thing. Sitting, anywhere for any length of time was rough. So change of routine is a must. Sitting through a movie, or even a TV show very hard. So don't plan on sitting much and don't try and force yourself to, it will only get harder to control the need for a smoke. If you work at a desk you must get something for your hands to play with, one of those hand exercisers, a ball, whatever. Also, if you work, something to chew on, gum, a straw maybe, (I did use the nicotine gum for a short time and it does help, BUT it's still nicotine so you have to wean off and I myself found I am not a weaner lol and why give yourself nicotine when you want off nicotine). Be patient with it, eventually you will get back to the computer and TV ;)

    - Get outside as much as possible. I found nature helped me a whole lot. Breathing fresh air was amazingly helpful. Plus it was distracting from anything that caused stress. I took up hiking at this time because I fell in love with walking trails. But even when I did not have time to take a long walk away from home. If I felt the urge to smoke I got up and went out for a 15 minute walk. Some days I went for 6 or 7 walks. The get up and do something else, any thing else from what you are doing is kind of like rebooting your brain.

    - Take showers, lots of them. Especially if it's too cold out to get out or the weather is bad. The shower obviously gives you a cleansed feeling and once again distracts you from what you were wanting.

    - Have healthy snacks around that are VERY low calorie. I say that because at first I had healthy ones, but they were not all that low cal, like nuts. But you will want to snack a lot, and may even binge a bit. So keep your fridge and cupboards free from danger foods lol. Some of my favorites were ; Carrots, Celery, Cucumber, Plain Rice Cakes (plain, because of the "you may eat too many" thing and the others are higher calorie), Roasted Chic Peas, Cherry Tomatoes, Snap Peas, Peppers.....whatever has crunch. Try and stick with very low calorie items.

    - This will sound silly because this is a fitness website we are talking on but ....work out! A lot, with whatever you can handle. Be careful it can become very addicting during quitting smoking because your hormones are all off balance and it's a good anger outlet. The first week I quit I think I was getting up and doing something every half hour or so. Even if it was just crunches or jumping jacks. It keeps you busy and is an optimal time to focus on overall health and fitness. After all you are going to preform better the longer you are off the smoking habit.

    - Go get your teeth cleaned at the dentist or buy one of those at home kits. And get a softer tooth brush because for a while brushing more often helps you mentally get that taste out of your mouth. Remember for a few weeks the tar and nicotine will be leaving your body which is why showers and teeth brushing is awesome.

    - Another thing that may sound silly, but get up, get yourself pulled together even if you don't feel like it. Pretty yourself up just for no reason in particular. This will make you feel better, stand prouder and give you a sense of accomplishment.

    - Buy flowers for the house and even room fresheners. Make your house smell like nature. Even if you did not smoke in the house. The fresh scents will lift your mood.

    - Plan to celebrate in some ways. Like dinner out when you survived a week, a manicure after 2 weeks, etc..... It can be a s small or as big as you can do. But it should be special things you don't always get to do, or things that make you feel reallly good.

    - Plan to avoid friends and family that do smoke. Sad to say but they will not be good for you for the first month or so. Even if they don't smoke in front of you, they will smell like smoke and you will crave it like you cannot even believe. You will actually feel hungry for it. So depending on how co-operative your friends and family are that do smoke, hopefully they will understand. And if they must see you. ask them politely to bathe and shampoo and not smoke after they bathe and shampoo till after your visit with them.

    (Side note...I went to our pool here at our apartment complex after quitting and I was about three weeks into it. I had not smelled a cigarette since I quit and someone lit up. I wanted to tackle her for her smokes lol. So I left the pool and went back later. Still to this day I occasionally smell it out of the blue)

    - You will go through stages of cravings. At first you will want a smoke and the want will last a long time, then will pass. Eventually those craving moments will get shorter and shorter. Now after almost a year I will, in a stressful situation say I want a cigarette. And then I laugh, because it's a memory of what I would have craved, but the craving is not actually there anymore. So yes, the craving goes away into a memory. Now I can sit right next to a smoker and not want one. It actually just reinforces that I don't. That smell gets back on you, and it's yucky. It smells dirty to me now, like how a fire would smell after the flames are out.

    Most of all be patient with your moods. They will pass, ride it out, don't buckle. You will feel that the emotion, the crave will not end unless you get a smoke, but it will end without that smoke and you will be proud and you will realize just how strong you are, just how much you are capable of. You will be ready to take on the world. Let fitness and hobbies be your new best friends. Learn how to do new things while you are quitting.

    And just a funny about me, because I was a smoker and as heavy a smoker for so long what I am about to tell you are the three biggest things I learned and had to deal with....

    1. When I quit, I felt mentally challenged and that is not to insult anyone. I could not think straight. I went into the kitchen and making dinner was hard because I could not organize my thoughts without a smoke. IT WILL PASS. Just be patient with yourself. We ate PB&J a few times for dinner because I just could not cope. But it will pass and eventually you will actually think quicker and sharper.

    2. Smoking was my crutch. My crutch for every single thing in life that was hard to deal with. When I wanted to cry I smoked, when I was angry I smoked. When I wanted to stay awake I smoked. When I was frustrated with myself I smoked. When you quit, that's gone. And there is nothing else to replace it. Well there is, you could turn to food, drugs, etc... But if you really want to heal, learn to cope without any of that help. This is the hurt part I spoke of earlier. There are so many things from my past I realize now I never would have tolerated for as long as I did if I did not smoke. and that includes a bad relationship, Smoking helped me hide, helped me live with crap. But now, now I am empowered. Now I reallllllly live, and live for me and take no ^%#* (excuse the language). I am more outspoken and straight forward. I have learned to temper it a bit from when I first quit lol. I was pretty harsh at first. But all in all I am a more openly honest person and my coping skills are better than they ever were. Because now I am relying on myself instead of a cigarette. And a cigarette has no clue what will make me a happy person, only I know that.

    3. And this is a weird one. I touched on it briefly before and compared it to yoga. The inhale and exhale. When you do it with a cigarette you are releasing all that stresses you, it is almost a meditative action, a zen moment. You do not realize this till you quit. You will crave that because it's hard to find a substitute for it. The closest I have found is in Yoga, in nature, in just going outside and breathing deeply. I think this aspect is very individual but hopefully I have given you a feeling of a start for what will recreate that feeling, but in a healthy way. I am now finding dance, zumba and perhaps Tai Chi may also give a similar feeling.

    Anyway I know this was long, but I hope helpful. If you have any questions or want to use me as a sounding board please let me know. I will give as much encouragement to you along the way as I can ;)

    *Hugs* "

    I hope this maybe will help someone, not only to quit smoking but to take control of their own destiny and choices. Nothing should control you. Not a bad relationship, not a bad friendship, not a bad job, and not a cigarette!
  • chasetwins
    chasetwins Posts: 702 Member
    Angelofthesho...WOW!!! First thank you for taking the time to post that! Second..your message was powerful (few tears here and there myself just reading it!!)

    I plan on printing your message and keeping it in my "quit book". I think my quit book is going to be more of a journal in the end. I do not smoke in my home which is a good thing. But I am also not a big tv person either..so i get bored A LOT. I think when I do get a powerful craving I can go out to my "smoking porch" and read your message or write in my journal. This of course will give my hands something to do. I am a boredom smoker but also a high stress smoker. So I will need some of your advice to keep my head clear and set on my goal.
    I know it is an emotional roller coaster and that alone scares me. I HATE smoking though...seriously hate it. I hate the smell..hate the control it has.. everything. For years I could not smell it on me (neither could anyone else) but the last several months (oddly enough when I started to think about quitting) I have smelled it on my clothes, my hair icccck!

    I went out to dinner tonight with a friend..as usual lit up a cigarette the minute I got in my car which I always do when my children are not present. On the way back..I almost did then thought. i can drive 2 hours up to my mother without one..why is it when I am alone it is my first response...I never did light it so I know at least i have the power to fight the small "auto pilot" urges. I work from home (10.5 hr days) - usually do not go ANY where during the week except for rare trainings so once the last pack is gone...that is it I can not go running to the store thankfully. This in itself I think will help - I will be forced to go through the cravings without giving in..by the time I have the opportunity I just need to remind myself..I made it this far..bed is in 3.5 hours...I got this LOL..(btw..I do remember one of the times I quit that all I wanted to do was sleep.Felt like I had been up for 3 days!! .I am not liking that thought this time around as I can not nap this time, I also thought that was my own body mechanism since when I am upset...I sleep a lot)

    I hope others have read this post and have gained some self assurance...I know it got my mind going!! Thanks again :)
  • learnerdriver
    learnerdriver Posts: 298 Member
    Your plan sounds good, but I'd refine it to breaking down a small habit at a time ie stop smoking after a workout.

    I gave up in December- I used patches for 2 weeks at the intermediate level and then went cold turkey.

    I only craved nicotine in the morning, the rest was habit.

    You can kick this- I found giving up senseless snacking after dinner harder, so you're on your way!
  • rubypond
    rubypond Posts: 41 Member
    I myself plan on quitting and have the same fears you have. I have 1 pack of cigs left and they will be my last. I did quit once before for 2 weeks and ended up going back when I just had one hell of a horrible day. But if you have a smart phone (iPhone or Android) there are apps out there that will do just what you plan on doing. Input your info and it will tell you when you can have a smoke and each day it will lessen the cigarettes each day until you are down to zero. That is how I did it the last time I quit. I wish you all the luck in the world.
  • chasetwins
    chasetwins Posts: 702 Member
    I myself plan on quitting and have the same fears you have. I have 1 pack of cigs left and they will be my last. I did quit once before for 2 weeks and ended up going back when I just had one hell of a horrible day. But if you have a smart phone (iPhone or Android) there are apps out there that will do just what you plan on doing. Input your info and it will tell you when you can have a smoke and each day it will lessen the cigarettes each day until you are down to zero. That is how I did it the last time I quit. I wish you all the luck in the world.

    I do have an iphone...(course there is an app for that LOL) ~ I may just have to find that app :) Thank you tons!! I would rather my phone tell me when I can smoke while cutting down than staring at the damn clock!!
    Thank you tons!!
  • rubypond
    rubypond Posts: 41 Member
    I myself plan on quitting and have the same fears you have. I have 1 pack of cigs left and they will be my last. I did quit once before for 2 weeks and ended up going back when I just had one hell of a horrible day. But if you have a smart phone (iPhone or Android) there are apps out there that will do just what you plan on doing. Input your info and it will tell you when you can have a smoke and each day it will lessen the cigarettes each day until you are down to zero. That is how I did it the last time I quit. I wish you all the luck in the world.

    I do have an iphone...(course there is an app for that LOL) ~ I may just have to find that app :) Thank you tons!! I would rather my phone tell me when I can smoke while cutting down than staring at the damn clock!!
    Thank you tons!!

    You're very welcome. It is a great app, good luck. Wish you the best.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,989 Member
    When I made the commitment to quit, I set a precise date. I counted down till that date and did what I could to ween myself off. The day before the target date, I smoked continously till I was sick of it. Then I quit cold turkey. I had dreams about smoking for about a month and a half, but eventually it all went away.
    So you REALLY REALLY gotta want to stop and that will ensure success. Your plan sounds pretty good, just be prepared to quit when the day comes.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal/Group FitnessTrainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
  • bill323
    bill323 Posts: 100
    One of my MFP friends quit smoking and started his diet at the same time. He smoked 2.5 packs a day and is absolutely killing it with his diet and exercise.
  • t2kburl
    t2kburl Posts: 123 Member
    I suggest Allen Carr's easy way to stop smoking. I read it and quit cold turkey, will be 2 years in august, not a single puff since. I love it best thing I ever did. I did gain weight but have since lost all that I put on. You just have to make it past day 3, I will never smoke again because I NEVER want to do day 3 again lol. Best of luck

    ^^this
    It helped me to realize smoking was working against me in every way.
    I really got mad at tobacco.
    I hate it.
    It is evil.
    These things drive me to workout harder.

    ETA I quit about a year ago and rarely even think about it anymore