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13 years ago 0 618 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Whodda thunk it!!!

 
Congratulations Carlos!!!   What a happy, cheerful post you wrote!  It's quite cheered me up before bed.  I hope lots of new quitters see the post and feel the happiness and freedom in every word!
 
Lolly.  

My Mileage:

My Quit Date: 11/25/2004
Smoke-Free Days: 2044
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 71,540
Amount Saved: �17,885.00
Life Gained:
Days: 271 Hrs: 8 Mins: 7 Seconds: 38

13 years ago 0 618 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Yes it is me!


You are a cheeky Sassenach Pen!!!  
 
I'll have you know I was indeed a speech therapist and most of my work was in England!  Now I live in France it's a bit more difficult!  
 
Lolly.      Your Scottish friend!

My Mileage:

My Quit Date: 11/25/2004
Smoke-Free Days: 2046
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 71,610
Amount Saved: �17,902.50
Life Gained:
Days: 271 Hrs: 12 Mins: 39 Seconds: 15

13 years ago 0 618 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Yes it is me!

 
Sorry Leelaknight, 
 
I don't think it was me.  To tell you the truth I cannot actually remember.  I do remember the time period in my quit though, and it was a kind of dangerous time for relapsing.  I did save some old posts so I'll do some research among them.
 
Stay Strong!    Love Lolly.  
 

My Mileage:

My Quit Date: 11/25/2004
Smoke-Free Days: 2046
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 71,610
Amount Saved: �17,902.50
Life Gained:
Days: 271 Hrs: 14 Mins: 27 Seconds: 21

13 years ago 0 618 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Yes it is me!

 
  Hi Leelaknight, 
 
I found this article on relapsing faster than I thought.  I've no idea where it came from but it does mention 17 weeks.  Hope this helps you.   Lolly.  

Hi.  We all know about the first week and the next one, but after that, many people expect that it's all over.  Well it just isn't.  Nicotine metabolites can hang around for three weeks in your system, for instance, and those toxic additives in cigarettes have been affecting your body too.

The entire body goes through major changes. It's in serious recovery mode.  In every single cell, from your lungs, your brain, your skin, to every part of you, everything is affected when you stop feeding it nicotine and its accompanying toxins.  That requires a lot of cellular energy, a whole lot of adjustment.  It's no wonder people are tired or feel spacey at certain moments.  Those recovery changes do not end for a while.  They are quite intensive in the beginning.  

The brain undergoes physical and neurological changes too.  Things start to even out or dampen at around 17 weeks, though the changes and the recovery still keep happening in a less obvious and perceptible way, except perhaps for a few cluster days every month.  

Now while it's true that some people feel a whole lot better after the second month, many don't think they have it under control until the fourth month, though they have had increasingly good moments in between.  
This does not mean that there can't be tough moments in the months that follow, but by the end of the fourth, if your skills have been developed, you have enough time in, determination and confidence to get through those moments.

If people know that they can feel depressed around 10 weeks and have lots of junkie thinking in the third month (inability to feel pleasure while the neurotransmitters are "realigning" so the question comes up "Is it all worth it?" (Along with a bargaining stage where they toy with the notion of having "just one", they will be better prepared to handle the quit.) Thus it's wise to have a reward plan.

Many of the letters I get about relapsing occur around weeks 12-16.  They inevitably say "I thought I could have just one" to get through a stressful moment, or test the quit, or "I expected it to be all over by now."  



My Mileage:

My Quit Date: 11/25/2004
Smoke-Free Days: 2046
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 71,610
Amount Saved: �17,902.50
Life Gained:
Days: 271 Hrs: 14 Mins: 29 Seconds: 48

13 years ago 0 618 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Happy Independence Day America ! ! ! !

 
HAPPY INDEPENDENCE DAY TO ALL.
 
Love Lolly.  

My Mileage:

My Quit Date: 11/25/2004
Smoke-Free Days: 2047
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 71,645
Amount Saved: �17,911.25
Life Gained:
Days: 271 Hrs: 17 Mins: 39 Seconds: 19

13 years ago 0 618 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
I am SO upset

 
Dear jeniwho,
 
I am so sorry this has happened to you.  The lying about it aside, you must feel devastated that she has done this.  It's not for me to say what you should do with your family, but I feel that I can advise you about your quit.
 
 "I quit smoking mostly for my kids"  It's the word 'mostly' I picked up on.  I feel sure you quit also for yourself.  Go back to when you first quit and the reasons you gave.  To have kept a quit going, as you have, for more than 7 months calls for strong will and determination.  Did you not do some of it for yourself? 
 
Now you feel a bit betrayed!  I think you need to step back and work out what you can do.  Take time to think.  Maybe you cannot control the situation with your daughter, but you can control your quit.  Will you going back to smoking help the situation?  I don't think so.  Please do not give this as a reason for smoking again.  You are stronger than that! 
 
Stay Strong!       Love Lolly.  

My Mileage:

My Quit Date: 11/25/2004
Smoke-Free Days: 2048
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 71,680
Amount Saved: �17,920.00
Life Gained:
Days: 271 Hrs: 19 Mins: 0 Seconds: 55

13 years ago 0 618 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hello SSC

 
Hello Lady,
 
5 years is such a long time my friend, and I am so happy to wish you Congratulations, and celebrate with you.  The Freedom is so great isn't it?
 
NEVER LOOK BACK!  THE FUTURE IS AHEAD!
 
Love Lolly.  

My Mileage:

My Quit Date: 11/25/2004
Smoke-Free Days: 2048
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 71,680
Amount Saved: �17,920.00
Life Gained:
Days: 271 Hrs: 19 Mins: 1 Seconds: 24

13 years ago 0 618 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Help from the Past

Hi there, 
The other day I was searching through some very old posts for leelaknight.  I either kept them because they could inspire me, or because they made me laugh, or just because I liked them.  Unfortunately, in most cases,  I deleted the name of the person who wrote them.  It may be from another quitter, or from a Moderator, I've no idea.  Sorry!
 
It occurred to me that, as they are from way back, some of them might be of use to newer quitters.  I'll put one in this Forum from time to time under the title "Help from the Past"  I warn you, some are very long.

The first addresses a problem a few quitters are facing right now on our boards.  It is called  

'Missing my left arm.'
 
  An older quitter on the patch and Zyban/Wellbutrin this time, writes that despite a quit going into the fourth week, he is still very much feeling that he is missing his left arm.  He is bothered by this constant feeling and can't seem to move to the next place.  

Well first of all, four weeks is worth my heartiest congratulations!  

This 'something missing' is a common feeling with which every quitter has to deal.  That's what addiction is all about, depending on a substance to control our lives.  Some quitters have smoked for forty years, so that feeling is a common one.  Getting from that place to one where we are in control is a process that takes a while.  At first there is the realization that something is controlling us.  We are angry, we bargain, we play games, denying it and sometimes accepting it.  We mourn the loss of our faithful companion, even though that companion was not good for us.  Until we get to the place of resolved acceptance and determination, we may return to the other phases, such as anger and bargaining, and place our quit in serious risk of self-sabotage.

I don't pretend to have all the answers to this.  I wonder though whether attitude going into a quit has something to do with it.  Preparation is the key.  I'm wondering if a reluctant quitter, like one who feels pressured to quit by the family, doctor, society and friends, and who thus harbours some resistance to the change isn't still carrying that internal resistance around, unresolved.  

A quitter who starts off with a determined attitude and defies the addiction from the onset seems to have an easier time of it, from my observations of quitters on this site. That doesn't mean that their quit is easy, but they seem to be embracing a life change as opposed to running 'kicking and screaming' to the winner's circle.

It's not easy to 'let go', especially if we are reluctant to do so in the first place, and especially if we have a set routine to our lives, built up over many years.  Quitting is a loss, no question about it.  We have to be conscious though of how much energy we are spending on mourning as opposed to building a new lifestyle and moving forward to the gains we are acquiring.  Maybe this is the area of your quit that needs more work?

There are people who have always been hard on themselves.  Sometimes people will post such things as "I am so stupid," or some such negative putdown of themselves.  This is negative self-talk.  You don't like other people talking to you this way, so why do it to yourself?  Be really conscious of this and work on substituting positive statements for talk such as this.

Anyone who quits and goes through withdrawal is a winner.  It takes character and strength.  So, Quitter, be your own best friend.  Talk nicely to yourself.  Really praise yourself for your month-long accomplishment.  You are really something.  Believe it, and reinforce it with rewards, even little ones that give you a pat on the back.  Give yourself permission to be admired by those who want to quit and who have not yet made the decision to do so. Allow your friends and family to praise and admire you.  You really are worthy of it.  

 

 


My Mileage:

My Quit Date: 11/25/2004
Smoke-Free Days: 2049
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 71,715
Amount Saved: �17,928.75
Life Gained:
Days: 271 Hrs: 22 Mins: 29 Seconds: 58

13 years ago 0 618 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Help from the Past

 
Hi Rose,
 
I was going to give each one a few days or so in order to let it all sink in so to speak!     I intend to see if there is a general feeling or need on sitefor a particular subject then I'll search through the ones I have and see what fits.
 
I'm glad that this one was of help to you Roses....it helped me...I think it was the 40years of smoking that caught my eye, as I smoked for 40 years.  I also had very low self-esteem and this post hit home and helped me to be positive and determined to succeed.  Quitting has given me new self-esteem and above all my Freedom from a life of addiction.
 
I'll post in this Forum, and label each one Help from the past/2 or 3 and so on.
 
Stay positive Rose, and congratulations on your first month.  You are doing an amazing thing for yourself!
 
Love Lolly.  

My Mileage:

My Quit Date: 11/25/2004
Smoke-Free Days: 2049
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 71,715
Amount Saved: �17,928.75
Life Gained:
Days: 272 Hrs: 0 Mins: 2 Seconds: 7

13 years ago 0 618 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Change..a duffism maybe?

Dear Duffis,
 
Yourt posts have been some of the most inspiring on this site.  Many people read them over and over.  Why not bump a few!  Your help was always so invaluable.
 
Love Lolly.  
 
 

My Mileage:

My Quit Date: 11/25/2004
Smoke-Free Days: 2049
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 71,715
Amount Saved: �17,928.75
Life Gained:
Days: 272 Hrs: 0 Mins: 2 Seconds: 44