Get the Support You Need

Learn from thousands of users who have made their way through our courses. Need help getting started? Watch this short video.

today's top discussions:

logo

Challenging Worry

Ashley -> Health Educator

2024-04-20 11:42 PM

Depression Community

logo

Hello

Linda Q

2024-04-11 5:06 AM

Anxiety Community

logo

Addiction

Ashley -> Health Educator

2024-04-08 3:54 PM

Managing Drinking Community

logo

New Year's Resolutions

Ashley -> Health Educator

2024-03-25 2:47 AM

Managing Drinking Community

This Month’s Leaders:

Most Supportive

Browse through 411.748 posts in 47.053 threads.

160,481 Members

Please welcome our newest members: CPADUA, DSHAIRRA PE, CLOVELY GRACE, kathleencabralmd, TestingDHA

101 things.....


15 years ago 0 10 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Pete you said it well, " forge a new normal and you will never go back" thanks for your honesty.
(my favorite time for a cigarette is in the morning with my cup of coffee)
 Life is more than being held back by cigarettes, at the movies, at a restaurant, almost everywhere you go, you can not smoke. I am tired of looking around for the lighter and to remember if I have cigarettes or do I need to stop and buy some. Oh how about the way you smell after you smoked, now its in your clothes your hair, your car, your house.................It really is good to be in my 3rd day of Hell Week
15 years ago 0 406 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Great tips members .  Keep building!
 
Karen, Health Educator
15 years ago 0 4 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
13- get some physical activity. When I get tired I don't think about smoking.

My Milage:

My Quit Date: 2/6/2009
Smoke-Free Days: 13
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 260
Amount Saved: $35.10
Life Gained:
Days: 1 Hrs: 14 Mins: 20 Seconds: 5

15 years ago 0 80 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Last one from motor-mouth tonight, I promise.  (Gotta be a job 1 early on Thursday, and gotta be a job 2 early Thursday night for a big meeting that will run late.)
 
Which is my point.  My tip?  Identify your most vulnerable point during the week.  I believe that most people have one, simply because we're into routine.  Me, I have a lot of runner-ups:  finishing the yard work or house work late on a Saturday afternoon, when it's time to kick back; coming home from an intense meeting, seminar, or whatever at about 10:00 at night after being at your desk since 8 that morning; and so on.
 
But my most vulnerable time is 4:00 on Sunday afternoon, week in and week out, because no matter what else is going on in my universe, that's when I sit down with the Sunday crossword puzzle, a glass of wine, and a well-deserved cigaratte.  It has been my favorite time of the week for more than 20 years.
 
And guess what?  It's still my favorite time.  Spouse is usually off watching grandkids or ailing parents; people in crisis have gotten bored with themselves by Sunday afternoon, and normal people are watching sports on TV.  God, how I love that time!
 
So now I love it in a new way.  I learn to love it differently until I find a new love that works for me.
 
I've said before on this board (but it's been so long that no one here has probably ever heard it before) that after any disaster, all people want to do is return to normal.  After a disaster, normal is very different than it was before the disaster.  Stopping smoking is a pretty huge disaster, in my view!!  We can't go back to the way things used to be; we have to create a new normal for ourselves, and we are the only ones who can do it.  If we're not ready for a new normal, we're not ready to quit.
 
(Not sure how the numbering works here -- am I 12?  Forge a new normal once you accept you will not go back to the way you were.)
 
(God, I LOVE it that there's this gray box on my screen that won't go away that says "Normal.")
 
pete
 

My Milage:

My Quit Date: 2/10/2009
Smoke-Free Days: 8
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 400
Amount Saved: $90.00
Life Gained:
Days: 1 Hrs: 15 Mins: 18 Seconds: 21

15 years ago 0 303 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
10 - Go for a walk.  I used to drive to the mall and walk around for hours in the beginning.  I was focused on the items in the stores I was looking at and usually bumped into at least one person I knew.  In the first few weeks it really helps to pass the time.
 
11 - Think about bad scenarios that you don't like.  Sound weird?  For instance when I had a cold I would think about when I had a respitory infection and could barely breath.  I was literally gasping for air and all I could think about was when I could have my next cigarette.  Remembering these things helps remind you that this thing is an addiction.
 
Mr Q

My Milage:

My Quit Date: 8/4/2008
Smoke-Free Days: 185
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 4,440
Amount Saved: $1,387.50
Life Gained:
Days: 20 Hrs: 15 Mins: 22 Seconds: 36

  • Quit Meter

    0

    Amount Saved

  • Quit Meter

    Days: 0 Hours: 0

    Minutes: 0 Seconds: 0

    Life Gained

  • Quit Meter

    0

    Smoke Free Days

  • Quit Meter

    0

    Cigarettes Not Smoked

15 years ago 0 802 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0

9.  Shovel, shovel, shovel - will this winter never end??  lol    BUT, I can do it without huffing, puffing and feeling like my chest is about to explode....


My Milage:

My Quit Date: 1/3/2008
Smoke-Free Days: 398
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 7,960
Amount Saved: $3,024.80
Life Gained:
Days: 43 Hrs: 11 Mins: 1 Seconds: 27

15 years ago 0 567 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0

Number 8--Cold water--get that detoxed feeling!

 

You CAN do this:)

 

Deb


My Milage:

My Quit Date: 3/1/2008
Smoke-Free Days: 339
Cigarettes Not Smoked: 13,560
Amount Saved: $3,051.00
Life Gained:
Days: 39 Hrs: 20 Mins: 25 Seconds: 21


Reading this thread: