Me too, Impalla, but if we've quit enough times, we know that lighting up after X-number of days/weeks/months inevitably makes things a ton times worse, not better. The blood pressure skyrockets, the stress level goes through the roof, the anxiety levels spike. Nothing good ever, ever, ever happens when we light up.
One last word -- I saw on a post of yours somewhere on this thread that you're on the path toward becoming a non-smoker. Um, Dude, that is so NOT the case, with all due respect. You BECAME a non-smoker when you put out your last cigarette. You are ON a non-smoking path. The only question is how to stay on it and not turn back and resume the smoking path, which leads to nothing but failure, self-loathing, humiliation, and worst of all, PITY from the people who matter most to us. I will NOT be pitied again by anyone for any reason. I matter too much to myself for that.
You matter too much too, Dude. Let's make sure we keep one another on the right path.
Quit Meter
$68,691.00
Amount Saved
Quit Meter
Days: 1417 Hours: 8
Minutes: 34 Seconds: 55
Life Gained
Quit Meter
6542
Smoke Free Days
Quit Meter
196,260
Cigarettes Not Smoked
Quit Meter
$52,325.33
Amount Saved
Quit Meter
Days: 1208 Hours: 22
Minutes: 13 Seconds: 25
Life Gained
Quit Meter
5785
Smoke Free Days
Quit Meter
173,550
Cigarettes Not Smoked
Quit Meter
$59,026.00
Amount Saved
Quit Meter
Days: 1169 Hours: 2
Minutes: 54 Seconds: 27
Life Gained
Quit Meter
5366
Smoke Free Days
Quit Meter
118,052
Cigarettes Not Smoked
Peanut--Welcome! I can tell by your determination you WILL do it this time.
I have smoked for 30+ years and am amazed at how scared I was to quit...and at how do-able it really is. Oh--there were times that were a bit rough, but keeping lots of water nearby and the words NOPE on my lips--it passess.