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Can people share their relapse stories?


10 years ago 0 2508 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Not much of a relapse story to tell really.  I see no reason in trying to justify it or romanticize it..Just a little news.
I have a slip tonight..Not sure if is a full fledged relapse yet but one thing is for sure I will not be back until I know for sure and if it is a full fledged relapse and I decide to quit again and come back here to quit, I will not be crawling back with my tail between my legs thats one thing you can on count for sure...
 
Red..
10 years ago 0 153 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Wow Working On It!  I just read your July 3rd post and absolutely everything you wrote totally resonates with me.  All of what you said applies to me.  Gave me a chill but so insightful and paints the picture with such clarity.  Thanks!
10 years ago 0 1140 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Oh, let me add one more item to my list of coping assets: support groups like this. It has been amazingly helpful for me to hear and learn from people at various stages of the quitting game. The quitting adventure would have been so lonely and probably unsuccessful without the support of all the people on this board. Thanks to everyone here for reading, sharing their thought, giving words of support. This place has truly been a safety net for me. 
  • Quit Meter

    $22,536.40

    Amount Saved

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    Days: 602 Hours: 12

    Minutes: 1 Seconds: 59

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    87,520

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10 years ago 0 1140 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Thanks Eyja. I have found that a combination of introspection, raw honesty, and humor seems to be my greatest asset when the going gets tough. I truly don't know any other way to cope. 
  • Quit Meter

    $22,536.40

    Amount Saved

  • Quit Meter

    Days: 602 Hours: 12

    Minutes: 1 Seconds: 59

    Life Gained

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    4376

    Smoke Free Days

  • Quit Meter

    87,520

    Cigarettes Not Smoked

10 years ago 0 823 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Ya Workin' - I love your honesty. You do have a handle on this now I believe!  I think you can safely lose the smoke (and wasted time, money, health and breath) without losing your fire one bit.  How much more can you do with your interesting outlook on life with your best health to take you there?  Who knows for sure - but you sure the heck have an incredible edge now! Great post. 
10 years ago 0 1140 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hi Sly,
 
You raise a lot of interesting thoughts here. I'm trying to remember exactly what I was thinking when I first posted this, as my thought process has already changed again. If I recall correctly, it wasn't so much a crave or a desire to smoke. Instead, it was more my own ornery curiosity, which has gotten me into more escapades than I would probably even be allowed to describe here. Let's just say that, for many years, I didn't expect to live long enough for smoking to kill me. 
 
I tend to engage in various behaviors--both positive and negative--in order to learn what they feel like. There is also an element of rebellion ("I can do this even though people say I'm not allowed") and adrenalin-seeking/ thrill seeking that motivates me. The honest, perverse truth is that, as I was becoming physically addicted all those years ago, I didn't care because I wanted to know what it felt like to be addicted to something. Unfortunately, my risk calculation on that one was pretty poor. I thought I would be able to quit in a year or so, as opposed to nearly a quarter century later
 
Wow, writing that last part just gave me a strong reminder of why I don't want to play with even one puff. I don't want to do this for another 25 years. Not to mention the fact that the limitations that smoking creates will interfere with my own adventure seeking as I get older. I would rather be doing something outrageously stupid or fun than dealing with doctors, hospitals, pharmacies, or even just the interruption of having to smoke every hour or so. 
 
I think that maybe what I needed from the relapse stories was the reminder that smoking another cigarette would not be thrilling or fun. Instead, it would be a very predictable path into a very repetitive and pointless behavior. What I needed most of all (and got) was a description from people of how surely and quickly relapse happens. I was beginning to doubt the author of Freedom from Nicotine, and needed to verify the law of addiction from real live ex-smokers. And I truly appreciate everyone who came on here to go through the difficult process of sharing those experiences. In short, I just needed a reality trip, and the people here gave me one. 
 
...So, a couple of other related insights here:
 
1) I don't really crave cigarettes anymore. I do crave adventure, relief from boredom, relief from a full belly after dinner, excuses to leave difficult situations, etc. Those are real needs that can be met in a multitude of ways. Seeking to fulfill them with a smoke is actually a very non-adventuresome and non-creative way of doing that.
 
2) A while back, earlier in my quit, I was really struggling with the idea of someone relapsing and coming back to everyone with open arms to try it again. It just didn't seem fair somehow. ...As I was reading this and a few other posts yesterday, I realized that no longer bothers me. The person who keeps doing this again and again is only being unfair to him or her self. I should count myself lucky and proud to have gone a whole year and then some without one single puff. Unlike the person who has relapsed, I don't have to go through withdrawal again. Nor do I have to come crawling back here with my tail between my legs. ...And that last bit--not wanting to be humbled by failure or the need to ask for help again--is one of the things that keeps me going strong. After all, I am still a very rebellious person, just as I was when I first came here. 
  • Quit Meter

    $22,536.40

    Amount Saved

  • Quit Meter

    Days: 602 Hours: 12

    Minutes: 1 Seconds: 59

    Life Gained

  • Quit Meter

    4376

    Smoke Free Days

  • Quit Meter

    87,520

    Cigarettes Not Smoked

10 years ago 0 2508 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hi Sly,
 
Talking about relapse scared me too..and I still get strong cravings just like you...Talking about my relapses and how much I enjoyed that first cigarette is a trigger in its self for me..I visit another site whyquit.com and they have a relapse policy that they enforce..If you relapse you can not post on there site anymore..I know it sounds hard nosed, but I see their point. They feel that talking about a relapse and all the reasons/excuses why you relapsed and how good it felt can have a domino effect on the group as a whole and before you know it other members are relapsing..So the overall outcome can be very negative..
 
I know that when I talk about my relapses it just romantize the act and works as a trigger for my cravings again..Of course remember this is how it effects me and this may not be the way it effects others..As of me I do not plan on talking about my relapses again. I am still fighting the cravings and don't want to let myself romanticize smoking..Yes smoking stinks but still the craving are there..
 
Red.
10 years ago 0 186 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hi working on it . I have not been on here a lot lately.
I did see this post but was unsure how to respond to it as it kind of scared me.
I have followed yours and a few others quits from the beginning of mine and your posts and support gave me
strength in my quit. I have it in my mind that once I hit a year I will have passed all my triggers and life will be good.
A good portion of my triggers are hitting me now as I never smoked in my home so with summer came a time when I could enjoy
a smoke and often.
The curiosity thing is also playing on my mind like just for this one campfire I can smoke (NOT )
The fact that you have passed your first year and are thinking the same way started me thinking this will always be a battle and I do not want it to be.
I had never really quit before. I told myself a million times went I finished my last smoke on the way to bed that I was done and would not buy anymore.
Some days that would last till noon, some days longer but always too scared to give it up.
The majority of replies concludes that it is a nasty habit that can take over without even giving you enjoyment.
Your post has let me know I have to raise my guard a bit higher for a little longer than I thought.
N.O.P.E.
Sherry
 
 
10 years ago 0 2606 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hello working on it, 
 
I hope hearing this stories of relapsing has helped with your curiosity. It is definitley not worth, because it just takes one to put get you a one ticket back to where you started. Stay strong and keep fighting the good fight. 
 
Wishing you all the best,
 
 
Samantha, Health Educator
10 years ago 0 1140 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
I am so loving these stories, especially the part where people seem to have learned from the experience and gained the resolve to not go there ever again. 
  • Quit Meter

    $22,536.40

    Amount Saved

  • Quit Meter

    Days: 602 Hours: 12

    Minutes: 1 Seconds: 59

    Life Gained

  • Quit Meter

    4376

    Smoke Free Days

  • Quit Meter

    87,520

    Cigarettes Not Smoked


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