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How I Quit Smoking In Less Than One Minute And You Can Too! Part 2

This post is part of a series. Check out the other posts in this series:

Also subscribe to my feed to ensure you catch the whole series!

In the first part of this series we discussed how after 18 years of living nicotine free, a drunken encounter with the cancer stick led me down the desolate path of addiction to cigarettes. I say addiction to cigarettes because the addiction goes behind being hooked on a drug, it’s also a lifestyle, a social enhancer (and destroyer), and it’s something to do. It’s the last one that really gets you too. While waiting for a bus, walking down the street, taking a break from the cubicle, listening to someone talk, reading a book, and so on and on goes the list of activities made more bearable with a smoke in hand.

To those who’ve never smoked, it’s tough to explain why it’s so difficult (yet, easy) to stop. Before I started smoking I always thought that if I ever did smoke I could easily just quit whenever and be done with it. Once I started smoking I realized my previous thoughts weren’t quite 100% valid. There was some truth to the idea of just quitting, but when social factors such as friends, advertisements (the stop smoking ads would just remind me I hadn’t had a smoke lately), and other social situations are added into the mix it becomes tough to separate smoking from your daily, weekly and monthly activities.

The post-dinner smoke becomes a habit and eventually all activities are associated with how they relate to you having a smoke. Getting up in the morning means your first smoke of the day, showering means you can have a smoke while you wait to dry off, finishing your homework is a cause for a cancerous celebration, and look at that, the end of your cigarette is just a reason to light another one with its butt so you don’t waste lighter fluid. It’s not so much that quitting is difficult, it’s that returning to your regular life without a cig in your hand is awkward, foreign and overwhelming.

With that, as promised let’s get to the pros of smoking:

Now, for the cons of smoking:

Now there’s of course plenty of other negative aspects of smoking but I’m quite sure the vast majority of visitors here will be aware of the dangerous and unhealthy aspects of cigarettes so I’ll spare everyone from reciting the evils of smoking.

In the next (and possibly final) post in this series, we’ll tackle what I did to quit smoking, how you can use my strategy and we’ll open up the discussion for any other strategies or ideas you have. My strategy really did work and it’s simple enough that anyone can use it and logical enough that I feel it could work for a significant amount of you.

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  1. Jeff Egnaczyk Mar 11, 2009 · 4:06 pm

    I never got up to a pack a day (more like a pack a week, sometimes a pack a weekend if I was drinking) but I did smoke for 10 years. What you say about it being a habit is so true. In 2007 I broke my ankle and had a cast so big that I couldn’t fit pants on over it. I couldn’t leave the house for 2 weeks. I used that as an opportunity to quit. Right then I didn’t have boredom or drinking or stress to give me a reason to smoke and I couldn’t sneak out of the house to get a pack. Screwed my ankle, saved my lungs.

    Jeff Egnaczyk´s last blog post..Modesty

    1. Adam Pieniazek Mar 13, 2009 · 10:43 am

      Congrats on quitting Jeff! Your method is actually similar to one I’ll be suggesting when I post part 3 of the series, hopefully soon. Basically, you have to look at it as it’s less work to not smoke. You actually, literally, do not have to do anything. If you stay at home all day watching TV, but don’t leave to get a pack/smoke, you’re doing great! After 3 days, the nicotine leaves your system and it gets easier and easier.

      Though, as I know, relapses can and likely will happen. More on this soon.

  2. Tony Lee Mar 12, 2009 · 11:12 pm

    As a non-smoker, I must admit the smell cam be overwhelming.

    I always had a soft spot for those who did smoke however. It seemed my pity was simply for the fact that one must rely on something so addicting to carry them through the day.

    Congrats on overcoming the habit!

    1. Adam Pieniazek Mar 13, 2009 · 10:51 am

      Nicotine is a powerful drug, and in my opinion should be illegal. Many people will disagree and say that we should be able to choose if we want to smoke, but cigarettes create litter and release carcinogenic smoke into the air. It’s a public health hazard and there’s no reason nicotine shouldn’t join the list of other banned drugs such as cocaine, heroine, etc.

      Offhand, I remember seeing an interview on TV or the web somewhere with former heroine users and across the board every one of them said cigarettes are much, much more addicting and tough to quit. If that’s not enough to make us realize that cancer sticks should be illegal, well honestly it makes me a bit suspicious of our system.

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