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Sobriety Thread: Special Nonsmoking Edition

On the last sobriety thread I was just wrapping up a book I’d been gifted by my wife like two Christmases ago on how to quit smoking, and planning the date for my last cigarette.  As of the evening of March 15, I smoked my last cigarette and have been smoke-free ever since.  It was right before midnight too by the time I finished it.

There were a lot of similarities between quitting smoking and quitting drinking, with an equal number of huge differences.  The key difference with quitting smoking was that it was something I was really looking forward to, but afraid I wasn’t going to be able to do it.  With drinking, I knew I had to stop, and I knew that I could do it, but I was afraid of being seen as a failure for not being able to handle my liquor.  I could easily stop drinking, since I didn’t have any sort of physical dependency, I was just afraid people were going to think less of me.  With smoking, I knew it was the smartest thing I could possibly do for my health, and for my wallet, but I was afraid I was just not going to be able to do it, and that I’d cave a few days later.  The addiction, really, to both, is a very strong mental one that utilize different ways of trying to convince you that life will just be easier if you keep on partaking.  Alcohol made me feel like a washed-up loser for quitting and nicotine made me feel like I could never, ever give it up–especially after having tried so many times, and failing, to quit before.

The good news is that, with the right preparation, quitting smoking is pretty fucking easy.  Seriously.  I’ve tried to quit at least five times with serious intentions in the past that I can think of off the top of my head.  The longest I’d made it on those attempts was a full 48 hours without smoking a cigarette, and the only reason I made it that far was because I had one of those dreaded two-day hangovers that made the idea of me smoking make me want to puke.  Other than that, I’d cave within a day, maybe make it to the next if I really, really utilized some strong willpower.  But now I’m well over two weeks without smoking, with Friday being my three-week anniversary, and I’m pretty confidently not a smoker, although I’ll catch a whiff of the occasional cigarette and think it’s the most amazing smell I’ve ever smelled in my life.

What made this time different was reading Allen Carr’s Easy Way to Stop Smoking.  I don’t want to spill the beans on it too much, or work as its infomercial, or be too cult-like in praising it, but it really, really did work, and what made it work was some pretty basic common sense ideas.  I feel like when it comes to the wide world of quitting smoking, the idea is this:  Quitting smoking is going to suck really fucking bad, you’re going to have nic-fits, you’re gonna be physically withdrawing from it, so you’re gonna need replacement therapy, you’re gonna need to ween off, and it’s going to take a really long time and even when you’re over the physical addiction, you’re going to have the mental fixation on smoking for a long, long time and you’re gonna need to exercise some serious determination to keep yourself from grabbing another cigarette for the rest of your life.

That sounds a lot shitter than it needs to be, so what happened with me, instead, I’ll detail in a little timeline below.  I scheduled a time to smoke my last cigarette and more or less quit cold turkey.

So, on that note, I just wanna say that if I can quit smoking, anyone can.  I mean that, even though it’s a cliche quote you see on the accolades of whatever quitting smoking plan you see.  I wanted to quit smoking by the time I turned thirty, and when that didn’t happen, I was really afraid that I was going to be a smoker for the rest of my life.  I’m so, so glad that’s not the case.  My wife, my brother and my sister were all really supportive, which helped a lot.

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