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Part 2: Techniques, Troubleshooting, and Tips

by "Lynn" <lynn.scott@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 30, 2008 at 07:47 AM

Part 2: Techniques, Troubleshooting, and Tips

Last Updated: June 12, 2007

The urge will pass whether you smoke or not.
- Unknown

The urge will pass whether you kill or not.
- Graham King

23. Why is quitting smoking so difficult?

You have probably quit smoking (or using tobacco in another form) before, 
and you have probably gone back to the habit. Whether your "smobriety" (to

use a term from the addiction recovery program Nicotine Anonymous) lasted
an 
hour or a year, you no doubt learned a basic truth: breaking away from 
tobacco products can be, at best, unpleasant, and at worst, a living hell.

And the memory of that unpleasant experience may have left you with a fear

of trying again.

Understanding the source of your physical and emotion reactions can help
get 
you through those difficult early days. Quitting smoking will be one of
the 
hardest things that you will ever do. This is because smoking is actually
a 
three-fold problem: you have developed psychological, social, and physical

needs for the drug nicotine.

As a smoker, all your emotions were medicated with a nicotine packed 
cigarette: you relaxed with nicotine; you laughed with nicotine, wept with

nicotine, digested with nicotine. You used smoking to pass the time, ready

yourself for a crisis, calm yourself after one, even (ironically) to catch

your breath during a difficult task. You began your day by dosing with 
nicotine, your drug of choice (perhaps one among others), and ended it the

same way. No wonder that, suddenly deprived of all that, your mind and
body 
go wonky for a little while.

Nicotine attaches itself to you physically. From the American Heart 
Association:

Nicotine Addiction

When a person smokes a cigarette, the body responds immediately to 
thechemical nicotine in the smoke. Nicotine causes a short-term increase
in 
blood pressure, heart rate, and the flow of blood from the heart. It also 
causes the arteries to narrow. Carbon monoxide reduces the amount of
oxygen 
the blood can carry. This, combined with the effects produced by nicotine,

creates an imbalance in the demand for oxygen by the cells and the amount
of 
oxygen the blood is able to supply. Smoking further increases the amount
of 
fatty acids, glucose, and various hormones in the blood. There are several

ways that cigarette smoking may increase the risk of developing hardening
of 
the arteries and heart attacks.
First, carbon monoxide may damage the inner walls of the arteries that 
encourages the buildup of fat on these walls. Over time, this causes the 
vessels to narrow and harden.

Nicotine may also contribute to this process. Smoking also causes several 
changes in the blood. They include increased adhesiveness and clustering
of 
platelets in the blood, shortened platelet survival, decreased clotting 
time, and increased thickness of the blood. These effects can lead to a 
heart attack.

The 1988 Surgeon General's Re****t, 'Nicotine Addiction,' concluded that:

        * Cigarettes and other forms of tobacco are addicting.
        * Nicotine is the drug that causes addiction.
        * Pharmacologic and behavioral characteristics that determine 
tobacco addiction are similar to those  that determine addiction to drugs 
such as heroin and cocaine.

For additional information on this subject, contact your local American 
Heart Association office or call 1-800-242-8721.

The social attraction of smoking is perhaps the most insidious prong of
the 
nicotine addiction. Until recently, even after the dangers of smoking were

well known, smoking was widely seen as essentially harmless; though this 
opinion is now held by fewer people (and I'll wager that most of them are 
still smoking), it has not disappeared. We still often hear smoking
defended 
with the argument that the sale, purchase, promotion and use of tobacco 
products are legal activities nearly everywhere in the world.

While true, this statement obscures the question of the safety of smoking 
and fails to raise other explanations for its legitimate status, such as
the 
financial contribution which the tobacco industry makes to the world 
economy.

And, greater public awareness of the harm that smoking does has not
greatly 
altered its image as ***y, cool, adult, fa****onable. Books such as 
Christopher Buckley's Thank You For Smoking and movies like Reality Bites 
(where the sole non-smoker is Ben Stiller's dorky outsider character) 
override those public service announcements and notices on
the sides of cigarette packages in the minds of the tobacco industry's
most 
im****tant consumers: adolescents and teens. (Incidentally, we have it from
a 
very reliable source that the people who make a certain brand of popular 
cigarettes featuring a certain dromedary on the package paid for the
actors 
in Reality Bites to smoke their cigarettes. And for more
proof of this common industry practice, here's an interesting letter 
http://tinyurl.com/yup3u
( from one of America's top action stars.)  Give
it 
a minute's thought: do you really like smoking, or do you just like your 
smoker image and the props associated with it (the cigarette, the nifty 
smoke rings, the ash; the holes in your clothing, yellow stains on your 
teeth, nasty taste on your breath)?

The minute you quit smoking your life changes drastically. Your identity
as 
a smoker is gone; the crutch which helped you handle situations is kicked 
out from under you; your body and mind begin to play quite clever tricks
on 
you to get their drug. All these changes can be nearly overwhelming, but
the 
im****tant thing to remember is that things will
get better as you learn new and better ways to live your life. And
everyone 
can learn; a few hundred of us at AS3 alone will testify to that!

(Paraphrased from 'The Cigarette Papers' by Dr. Stanton Glantz)

  According to researchers, nicotine stimulates the Hypothalmus to produce

the same chemicals it does in stressful situations: corticosteroids.  This

makes one feel less anxious, and yet possibly more focused.  Add nicotine
to 
a stressful stiatuion, and you get more than a regular dose.

  Over time (and number of cigarettes), the hypothalmus adjusts.  Now, 
"without" a cigarette, you're getting less than average corticosteroids,
but 
smoking brings you back up to a normal level, maybe not even surpassing
what 
a non-smoker gets, but compared to a lowered baseline it feels good.

  After quitting, over time the hypothalmus adjusts back.  The research 
doesn't say how fast. (AS3 may be able to add some estimates to that).

24. I smoke lights. Aren't they safer?

(Excerpted from New York Times News Service, May 2, 1994)

Quote:
WA****NGTON--Smokers of cigarettes low in tar and nicotine may be getting 
more of those substances than they think, Federal Trade Commission
officials 
and experts on smoking say. ...

     National polls conducted by the Gallup organization have found that 
smokers believe that cigarettes labelled "light" are less hazardous and
will 
deliver less tar and nicotine. But evidence has ac***ulated that the 
measurements, which are carried out by tobacco company laboratories under 
the supervision of the FTC, bear little or no relation to how much
nicotine 
and tar smokers actually get from smoking.

 "The commission has been aware for a while that the test has problems 
regarding the actual intake that consumers will get," Judith D.
Wilkenfeld, 
assistant director in the FTC's Division of Advertising Practices, said in
a 
telephone interview.

     The FTC cigarette tests are carried out by machines that hold the 
cigarette and draw air through them in 2-second puffs once every minute 
until the cigarette is burned down to the filter.

     But cigarettes now include several features that make the machine
tests 
meaningless, according to Dr. Jack Henningfield, chief of clinical 
pharmacology research at the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

     For example, a majority of cigarettes now have tiny, nearly invisible

hole in their filter paper or in the cigarette paper near the filter. When

the smoking machine draws on a cigarette, a large amount of air is drawn
in, 
and this dilutes the smoke getting to the measuring device, making today's

cigarettes appear to contain less tar and nicotine.

     But smokers do not handle the cigarettes the same way machines do.
They find the diluted smoke milder, and to make up for the "lighter"
taste, 
or less satisfying amount of nicotine, they puff more or draw deeper, 
pulling in more total smoke, so that the result is the same amount, or
more, 
of nicotine and tar.

     In addition, the tiny filtration holes are often blocked by smokers 
with their lips or hands, thus cutting off the air that would have diluted

the smoke....

     Scientific studies over recent years have shown that smokers get
about 
the same amount of nicotine and tar no matter what kind of cigarette they 
use.

25. Are cigars any better?

[From the on-line page "Ask Dr. Weil," Copyright =A9 1994, 1995, 1996,
1997 
HotWired, Inc. All rights reserved. Used without permission]

Quote:
Cigar consumption is climbing rapidly in the United States, where people 
smoked 3 billion cigars last year, compared to 2.1 billion in 1993. Around

the world, cigar makers are especially trying to target women by promoting

their wares as a sign of affluence and sophistication. There are cigar 
magazines, cigar bars, and even instructional cigar dinners.

Donald Shopland, coordinator of the smoking and tobacco control program at

the National Cancer Institute, calls the increase in cigar consumption 
"astounding" - particularly since it has been in decline for many decades.

Alarmed, the institute plans to issue a re****t on safety, chemical 
composition, advertising, health policies, and other cigar issues in the 
fall.

I'm not impressed by the sophistication of rolled brown tobacco leaves lit

up in anybody's mouth. If you smoke cigars, you're tripling your risk of 
lung cancer compared to not smoking at all. True, cigarette smokers have 
nine times the risk of developing lung cancer, so I suppose that's one
good 
point. Cigar smoke is harsher than cigarette smoke, so most people can't 
inhale it deeply enough or often enough to establish the pattern of
chemical 
dependence on nicotine that makes cigarette smoking so risky.

But if you inhale regularly, the risk is the same as with cigarettes. You 
are also increasing the possibility of head and neck cancers, cancer of
the 
esophagus, and cancer in the oral cavity. If you compare cigars and 
cigarettes smoked in equal amounts, the risk of mouth and throat cancer
are 
the same.

Cancer of the oral cavity is one of the nastiest cancers that can occur,
in 
many cases causing disfigurement and death. Sigmund Freud smoked 20 cigars
a 
day and died of tobacco-related oral cancer. Ulysses S. Grant, the 18th US

president, also smoked about that much and died of throat cancer. He
dropped 
70 pounds and became addicted to cocaine in his efforts to escape the
pain.

Also, cigar smoke is at least as hazardous to the people around you as 
cigarette smoke. In a recent study published in the New England Journal of

Medicine, tobacco use - including cigar smoking - by spouses increased the

risk of lung cancer by 30 percent in people who didn't smoke at all 
themselves. Exposure in the workplace and social settings bumped up the
risk 
even more. Eating fruits and vegetables, or taking supplemental vitamins, 
didn't improve matters for the spouses.

A new California Environmental Protection Agency re****t released after
years 
of peer review and government scrutiny (and some would say suppression), 
blames secondhand tobacco smoke for the deaths of at least 4,700
nonsmoking 
Californians a year. The re****t says California smokers cause between
4,200 
and 7,440 deaths from heart attacks and stroke each year among the people 
around them, and 360 deaths from lung cancer. Their secondhand smoke is 
responsible for up to 3,000 new cases of childhood asthma annually. Cigar 
smoke billows out in greater volume and contains high quantities of 
unhealthy substances, so it's not an improvement.

There are plenty of healthier ways to satisfy an oral fixation. Try
carrots.

Disclaimer: All material provided in the Ask Dr.Weil program is provided
for 
educational purposes only. Consult your own physician regarding the 
applicability of any opinions or recommendations with respect to your 
symptoms or medical condition.

26. Should I switch from smoking to smokeless (chewing) tobacco?

It would be a very poor trade-off to use smokeless tobacco as a
replacement 
for smoking. For one thing, it's pretty disgusting to watch someone 
chewing - and spitting out the tobacco juice. And though the risk of 
developing lung cancer and emphysema may be lowered, chewing has its own
set 
of horrors.

David Drupp (ddrupp@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
) writes:

"I have been asked to explain why smokeless tobacco is not a safe
substitute 
for smokers who want to quit.

"First of all my wife works for an oral surgeon, and she is my main drive,

along with my 2 young sons, to quit this nasty habit.

"She has told me of this one guy who had to have his entire jawbone
removed 
and had hip bone taken to replace it. This was a direct result of
smokeless 
tobacco wreaking havoc and causing cancer that had gotten to the bone.
This 
guy, early 30s (who I would love to meet myself) has to wear a face ****eld

with pins in his neck area to hold the hip bone replacement in place until

it bonds and starts to grow. If that isn't bad enough to not start this 
habit then what is. This is not the only case they had on smokeless
tobacco 
users -I can only imagine how many people have it and don't know. I am one

of the lucky ones who had access to the warning signs but most don't. I 
started when I was 15 years old playing baseball and am now 29 years old 
married almost 10 years with 2 kids. I am damn lucky I didn't have
anything 
happen to me. The absolute clincher was when a 24 year old came in to have
a 
biopsy on his lip and found out he had cancer. 24 years old - think about 
it!!!

"For those who must chew - please do not put the chew in the same place 
every time you chew. This is what causes the breakdown of the lip. It
first 
turns white - leukoplakia is the term - which is a pre-cancerous sign.
Then 
is may get hardened and change color - IF you have any of these signs - GO

GET CHECKED!!

"I never put it in the same spot twice and had as many as 6 areas I used
so 
I wouldn't get the bad spots on my lips. I am not condoning chewing but IF

you must and are reading this - move it around until you have the courage
to 
quit."

27. How can I prepare to quit smoking or chewing tobacco?

It is generally agreed around here that preparation is the single most 
im****tant factor in successfully overcoming nicotine addiction. Getting 
yourself to a state of psychological readiness starts with the thought
that 
you may be about ready to stop smoking, and when that thought occurs, IMHO

you've begun the process of becoming a non-/ex-smoker.
Then, if you read the posts in alt.sup****t.stop-smoking, soon you may
find, 
as many have, that you've begun to think that you are ready to stop.
Before 
you know it, you'll be setting a quit date! Once you've reached that
stage, 
here are some suggestions to aid in your preparation:

  a. Set a quit date, preferably around a relatively stress-free time, 
although you shouldn't wait until the perfect time, because it doesn't 
exist! If you like, announce your intended quit date to the group and ask 
for quit buddies, or join in a group which has already formed.
Belonging to a club usually gives you extra sup****t, and makes you extra 
accountable!

  b. Until your quit day, smoke without guilt, but do keep planning. Think

about what provisions you will have on hand to comfort you, what
(brainless) 
projects to keep you busy, what comfy quiet spaces if you find you just
want 
to sleep, and whether you'll have access to AS3 and to e-mail. If the
people 
you spend time with have not had the pleasure of seeing you go insane 
before, consider apologizing in advance for any bad behaviour you may 
exhibit. :) (After you quit, the statement, "I just quit smoking" will 
excuse much. Milk it for all it's worth!) As you read other people's posts

and the info available on the web, you'll get some ideas that will help
you.

  c. Make any appointments, join any cl*****, lay in any provisions
(herbal 
teas, cinnamon sticks, licorice root, comfort foods, Valium, etc.), and
buy 
your patches, spray or Nicorette if you decide to use nicotine replacement

therapy.

  d. Start emptying your ashtrays into one or more clear glass jars which 
you'll save as long as needed - I kept one for a few months after I quit. 
(ed.) This 'revulsion therapy' will be of help after the initial
motivation 
begins to leave you and you start thinking that smoking wasn't so bad
after 
all. And each time you open the jar to add more butts and ashes, you'll
get 
a whiff of negative reinforcement. Some people add a bit of water to their

'butt jars' to make them that much more nauseating - not recommended for 
those with sensitive stomachs!

  e. Keep a running list of reasons you want to quit. Especially as your 
date gets closer, really study the list; pick one of the most compelling 
reasons and repeat it to yourself over the course of the day. It's best to

keep the reasons positive, upbeat; e.g., instead of saying "I want to quit

so that I don't die a horrible ravaging death by lung cancer" you might
say 
"I want to take a proactive role in my good health."

  f. [Hot off the cyberpress! From Ask Dr. Weil, downloaded 21 Nov. 96]:

Quote:
If you smoke, do breathing exercises. They will help motivate you to quit 
and help you with your cravings for cigarettes. Here's how to start. Sit 
with your back straight. Place the tip of your tongue against the ridge of

tissue behind your upper front teeth, and keep it there
throughout the exercise.

   * First, exhale completely though your mouth, making a whoosh sound.
   * Next, close your mouth and inhale quietly through your nose to a
mental 
count of four.
   * Next, hold your breath for a count of seven.
   * Then exhale through your mouth, making a whoosh sound, to a count of 
eight.

This is one breath. Now inhale again and repeat the cycle three more
times.

Endquote.

  g. [From the same Ask Dr. Weil column; see above.]

"If you smoke, you should take antioxidant vitamins and minerals, which to

some extent can reverse the changes in respiratory tissue caused by
smoking, 
and so help protect against lung cancer. Also, increase your intake of 
dietary sources of carotene (carrots, sweet potatoes, yellow squash, and 
leafy green vegetables)."

  h. Visualize: Start looking at people functioning normally without 
smoking. People who don't smoke are capable of having an argument, talking

on the phone, waiting for a bus, playing pool, and basking in the
afterglow 
just as well as people who smoke. Picture yourself getting through moments

you normally associate with smoking, without doing so.
Don't overwhelm yourself, i.e., you don't need to picture yourself getting

through life or even the day without smoking; just one activity at a time.

Watch someone enjoying a cafe latte without smoking. You can be in that 
picture!

  i. Keep reading alt.sup****t.stop-smoking daily (hourly, if necessary!),
so 
that you'll start to get a sense of what to expect (good and bad), and
post 
whenever you like, as often as you like, and as nonsensically as you like!

Try not to loosen your withdrawal temper on another AS3 poster though.

Most im****tant, keep in mind that quitting smoking is a journey, not an 
event. You will run into many obstacles on that journey, and meet many
false 
friends. The more you can feel good about the place you're heading (the 
smober life) and unsentimental about the place you're leaving (life
chained 
to nicotine), the more strength you will have to complete that
journey.

Joe Jaquez contributed the following observations to the group:

When you decide to quit, it has to be for you, not for your wife, kids, or

anyone else. Find a sup****tive friend(s) that you can call anytime of the 
day or night, someone who's shoulder you can cry on...because it's the 
hardest thing you will ever do, it's harder to quit smoking that to quit 
abusing heroin or alcohol....The desire to live has to overpower the
desire 
to smoke....Your primary relation****p has to change from the cigarette to 
you...to have a relation****p with yourself and to continue living for
years 
to come


28. How long will the physical withdrawal last?

Physical withdrawal symptoms last anywhere from between 48 hours to two 
weeks. This can vary from person to person depending on the amount that
you 
smoked and your physical and psychological make up. Many in the group have

found the physical effects typically last between 3 to 7 days. 
Unfortunately, you will probably not arise on the 15th day after stubbing 
out your last fag to find yourself completely disinterested in nicotine. 
Even once the drug is out of your system, you will have desires to smoke 
which will feel very much like withdrawal symptoms. They are not. Know
that 
your mind is playing tricks, and fight the urge!

29. Can't I have just one last one?

And then what? You don't want just one more, you want every one. The 
nicotine addiction is a very clever animal which is capable of putting 
strange thoughts into your head, such as: It's been three months since I 
quit; let me smoke one just to make certain I'm not addicted anymore. Or:
I 
haven't smoked in six months; let me remind myself how much I hate it.
Or: Now that I have a decade of smobriety behind me, I can be a social 
smoker.

There is simply no reason to smoke 'just one more' cigarette. You prove
that 
you're not addicted by not taking the drug. And you know you'll never be a

social smoker. And if you really listen to yourself, you also know that
9.99 
times out of 10, a social smoker is an addict in the making.

It is not safe to smoke even a single cigarette as this could send you
right 
back to smoking as much or even more than you did prior to quitting. 
Furthermore, it's not sensible. There is no reason to consume tobacco, and

very reason not to. Remember: You're only a puff away from a pack a day.
And 
if you don't believe this FAQ, read AS3; you'll see stories of people who 
found that just one cigarette was enough to send them back into smoking
even 
after years of not smoking. Here's Mona's experience:

"My experience during the nine years I was smober was that I almost never 
thought about cigs in any way remotely like I wanted one. In fact, that 
quit, after even the first couple months, I was so damned proud of myself 
that even if the junkie old part of myself momentarily thought it wanted a

cig, I was clear that I was very happy to be a non-smoker, and that 'urge'

just went away, nearly instantly.

"Of course, the fact I'm here, quitting again, the 13th time in my life,
is 
proof that, on some days nearly anyone can be unconscious or stupid or 
downhearted enough that the cig devil sees his op****tunity -- the old
junkie 
(me) who used the cig as emotional comfort encourages one to have one,
don't 
worry, you've quit all these years, you don't have to smoke tomorrow, just

let yourself have one now, when you 'need it'. HAH!

"I hope I'll never be that unsuspecting again! I hate quitting, and love 
being smober."




Thoughts to close the Alt.Sup****t.Stop-Smoking FAQ, Part 2:

"One cigarette is too many, and a thousand are not enough."- unknown

"What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to
what lies within us."- Ralph W. Emerson

"Hang tough, don't puff!"- Barry Pekilis

Please go on to Part 3.
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Part 2: Techniques, Troubleshooting, and Tips
"Lynn" <lynn  2008-05-30 07:47:47 

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