![]() |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Keep it going both of you :tup: |
So yesterday I totally forgot to put the patch on. Didn't realize it till midday when I was chewing the hell out of a pen and fidgeting like crazy. Anyway I made it through and I decided not to wear the patch today either and see how it went. So far so good, but I did bring a back up just in case.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
And yes, I puked once from smoking but that didn't stop me .... ****** up **** I'm in |
Day 41 no smoking and Day 7 of no nicotine/patch. I'm still hanging in there still not smoking. **** still isn't fun and I still think smoking a ciggarette would be fantastic but I know just one smoke is all it would take for me to be back to a pack a day. Why can't the things I really like be healthy for you lol. I'm also pretty sure if I smoked a cigarette right now I would get a massive headache and puke my guts up so I'm not going down that path.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
55 days of no smoking!
21 days of no nicotine! I'm glad I wrote down all the reasons I wanted to quit smoking. Amazing how in such a relatively short period of time you can forget why you did something and could use a little reminder. I was not having a good day yesterday and came realllllllly close to falling off the wagon but thankfully I carry this list with me in my wallet. |
Quote:
My biggest reason, and I carry it with me to this day, was that I didn't miss waking up like this... COUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGH HACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZE COUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGH HACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZE COUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGH HACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZE COUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGH HACKWHEEZECOUGHCOUGHHACKWHEEZE |
congrats man!!!! That is awsome that you got that poison out of our blood stream! Remember, keep it out of your blood and you will be fine. Find something else, like car parts. lol
|
Keep it up :tup:
|
Keep it up man and maybe modding your car could help out.
|
Okay so I had been smoking for the past 10 years. Cigarette prices varied through the years but I'm going estimate the average cost for a pack of smokes to be $4.00, I lived in SC for a while they were like $2 a pack down there and the highest price I regularly paid here was about $6.25. I didn't always smoke a pack a day for 10 years but for simplicity reasons we will just say that I did. In the past 10 years I've thrown away about $15,512.50 on smokes. That number blows my mind, wish I had that to help put towards a down payment on a house...
|
Someone I know from NY is paying 12 bucks a pack.
|
That's crazy! Just think of how much money you will save in the future :tup:
|
Quote:
|
Its been a while and I havent thought much about smoking recently so this thread kind of died off which is technically a good thing. Anyway just an update for the hell of it, I'm still holding strong and on day 74 of no smoking!
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Congrats, Andrew! |
Good job!!!!!! But please stay vigilant. I have seen many people relapse and go back, several months or years later. It's been 74 days, that is not very long. Bum one smoke and you are right back where you were 75 days ago.
There are like 4 people where I work that have all quit at one point or another over the last few years, and guess what. They are all smoking again right now... It's f!@#ing tough. NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF! |
Quote:
I also still have a bunch of signs around at home and work to remind me to not smoke. The particular one that I like is the law of addiction. "Administration of a drug to an addict will cause re-establishment of chemical dependence upon the addictive substance." That one reminds me that this is for the long haul. |
Congrats man, keep up the good work :tup:
|
Quote:
|
Thanks Glokwork, its not easy at all. I'm on day 87 now and not smoking is pretty easy now. The thing I have to do now is to realize that this is for the long run so when I'm at 11 months in I don't get too relaxed and think just one smoke isn't going to hurt. I'll be perfectly honest with you quitting f'ing sucks and I decided to quit while I was going through a rough patch with a girl acting stupid. Go back and look, I wrote out a lot of embarrassing sh*t in this thread that I think about deleting on occasion but decided I don't give a f*ck. Use it as fuel or a distraction, I was so caught up with what this chick was putting me through it took my mind off smoking at times. Other times it made me want to smoke but you just got to power through it.
Pick a date to quit and tell everyone you know you are quitting on that date. Seriously tell everyone, it increases your accountability and believe it or not people will support you and try to help you in your decision. Track your smoking habits before your quit date and write down why you felt the need for that smoke. This helps identify what triggers you to want to smoke. It sounds simple but you will find triggers you never knew you had before or didn't seem all that obvious. Then you find ways to overcome those triggers when they arise. Cravings last 2-3 minutes but to an addict those 2-3 minutes seem like an eternity so if you can find something to take your mind off of smoking for that duration you have one of the most important keys to success. I used to just casually lift weights maybe once or twice a week but now its an every other day thing for me and the off days I'm running about 2 miles. The whole goal is to wear myself out so much that by the end of the day when I go to bed I just crash. No laying there with the mind going a mile a second thinking about anything and everything. Quitting smoking is one of, if not the hardest, things I've ever done and I still have a long ways to go. You honestly have to really really want to quit to be successfull. Educate yourself as much as possible about how to quit and what your body goes through during the process will set you up for a much greater chance for success! |
I wanted to start this off by saying "Mission Accomplished!" but visions of George Bush started swamping my mind and what a failure that was. Anyway I really wanted to quit smoking before I turned 30 and well guess what. I did it. Today is my 30th bday and I have been nicotine free since April 1st, 2011. I was feeling kinda crappy about turning 30 but just realized that I had set a goal for myself and I managed to achieve that goal in the time period that I had alloted for it. I had been telling myself for several years now that I'd quit before turning 30 and I did it and you know what? I still have a long ways to go, but this was one of the hardest things I've ever done in my life and it feels really damn good to be able to say I set a goal for myself, I didn't back down from it, and I nailed it! :happydance:
|
GJ, bro!!! Congrats!
|
Congrats and happy birthday Andrew... happy success story!
|
Congrats and Happy Birthday Andrew!!!
:welcome: :vuvuzela: |
Quote:
Sorry I couldn't resist :p |
Congrats man, that is great. You have all the tools and know how in your hands and you know what you must do. You really must not ever smoke another cig again, or you know what will happen!
It really is up to you, and you are trulely beating the odds and you should be commended. Go use that money saved on some new car parts :) |
Congrats man!
|
Thanks everyone!
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Glad you're still hanging in there and happy birthday man!
|
update on smoking?
|
April 1st is my one year mark, and that's no joke! To celebrate I purchased the 40th anniversary Z's BBK for my car! I literally put the order in this morning lol.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:52 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2