How To Quit Smoking: The
Easier Way By Garrett Davis
If you smoke and have been
thinking about quitting, or have tried quitting, then
this article is for you. If you don’t smoke, but have
some other addiction, then I also encourage you to read
this article, as it’s theory can be used to quit other
substances as well.
Quitting smoking is not all that difficult, if
done properly. So many people fail to quit because of a
lack of proper planning. Fail to plan and you plan to
fail, as the saying goes. So how will you go about
getting away from those tasty cancer sticks for good? If
executed with the proper plan, quitting will not be
agonizing, though you will experience some
discomfort.
I'll skip telling you about how bad cigarettes
are for you because you already know. You are bombarded
with that information constantly.
I won’t tell you that you need to try some new
nicotine patch or gum, or some other pill. These products
just give you more of what you don’t want: nicotine. They
are just a way for the drug companies to make more money.
Don’t let them sell you on these. Quitting smoking
requires no purchases.
So many people fail to quit each year because of
a lack of planning. "I’m going to quit smoking" is not a
plan. Not at all. Most of the time it does not work. This
is because it is the goal, not the plan. If
everyone who ever said or thought that actually quit,
their would be very, very few smokers in our society. In
fact, I suspect that the tobacco industry would have been
reduced to a negligible size altogether. However, the
tobacco industry remains massive because people do not
quit through a strategic plan. These people are the
bread-and-butter of the cigarette
manufacturers.
Quitting smoking presents a challenge for two
reasons:
1) Nicotine withdrawals. Nicotine is everything
to the tobacco industry. Without nicotine, cigarettes
would be no more addictive than chewing gum.
2) Taking smoking out of your day will be taking
out an activity that is associated with taking a break,
relaxing, or interacting socially with other
smokers.
If we will be successful, we will have to
address both of these challenges with a rigorous plan,
but before I get to that plan I will go over the mind-set
that is required for permanent termination of your
habit.
This mind-set is made up of 3 parts:
1. Know that you will quit
smoking. Think about this one for a while. Get used to
envisioning yourself as a non smoker.
2. Know that you will have to quit eventually,
or accept the likelihood of the onset of a terminal
disease.
3. Know that the sooner you quit, the easier it
will be to do so.
Let’s go over that last one a little. Often, as
a smoker, you will have a cigarette sooner rather than
later simply to avoid the onset of a craving. Cravings
can be quite uncomfortable, as any smoker will tell you.
So, you become proactive in your approach in that you
will have the cigarette before the craving becomes
uncomfortable. If you have one now, then you won’t need
one as badly later on, so your thinking goes.
The problem with this way of thinking is that it
is exactly wrong. The nicotine has tricked your
subconscious mind into such rationalizing. The reality is
that each and every time you have a cigarette, you are
reenforcing your addiction and thus making it stronger.
If your cigarette smoking has resulted in an addiction,
then it follows that with every cigarette you have you
are increasing the addiction. In the long run, there is
no such thing as having a cigarette to alleviate craving.
Sure, you are making yourself feel satisfied by having
the cigarette, but the satisfaction is temporary. With
every cigarette you have, you will crave the next one
that much more. This progression can be very subtle,
which is why nicotine addiction can creep up on so many
people. They become addicted before they know
it.
From this logic follows the required mind-set in
which you will know that the sooner you quit, the easier
it will be to do so. Never the less, you should not start
the quitting process until you have mentally prepared
yourself by mulling over all three steps for a while
until you get used to them, with an emphasis on step #1.
(Envisioning yourself as a non-smoker).
Now that we have the proper mind-set in place,
we may go about formulating a plan for addressing your
addiction to the drug itself (nicotine). If you've tried
quitting in the past and failed, nicotine was what drew
you back to smoking. Therefore, we must eliminate your
cravings for nicotine.
We will do this through a process of gradual
reduction that will follow a mathematical
algorithm.
The first thing that you need to do is to figure
out how many cigarettes you smoke per day. This number is
important, as it will be the starting point of our plan.
You may be tempted here to just come up with an estimate,
but I want you to be more precise than that.
You will start by taking a small piece of paper
and taping it to your box of cigarettes so that you can
make a simple marking with a pen for every time you
smoke. You may also just carry a piece of paper around
with you, but I find attaching it to the box to be more
effective because you'll never be without it when you
want to smoke. Do this for 1 week, then add up all of the
cigarettes that you smoked all week. At the end of the
week, divide the total number of cigarettes you smoked by
7 to get your average. If you are one of those people who
smokes significantly more on the weekends or your days
off, then it’s okay to calculate two separate
averages.
Here’s the formula: Take the average number of
cigarettes that you smoke per day and multiply that
number by (.05). This will tell you how much 5% of the
total amount of cigarettes that you smoke in a day is. If
you smoke 10 cigarettes per day then 5% of that will be
one half of a cigarette. For 30 cigarettes your number
will be 1.5 cigarettes, and so on. It really doesn’t
matter if you smoke 5 cigarettes per day or 40, you just
need to know what 5% of that number is.
Once you have your numbers calculated you will
start a gradual and consistent reduction in your smoking.
You will do this in increments of 5% per week. This
number will remain 5% of the original number of
cigarettes that you smoked. If 5% of the original number
of cigarettes that you smoked was 1 cigarette, then you
will reduce your smoking by 1 cigarette per week, every
week. Simple.
If your 5% number comes out to a fraction of a
cigarette, for example ½ of a cigarette, then you will
still reduce your smoking by that much. Simply take a
pair of scissors and cut off half of a cigarette before
you smoke it. Cutting the cigarette is important so that
you are not able to smoke more than the program calls
for. Also, I recommend that you cut all of the necessary
cigarettes as soon as you get the pack. This will take
some calculating in advance, but it will be worth
it.
You will have to figure out what part of your
day the cigarettes will be taken from. For starters you
should pick a part of the day when you’re most busy so
that you won’t be able to ruminate over the missing
carcinogen.
Once you get down to about 1 cigarette per day,
you may have to continue on with the gradual reduction by
either progressing to ½ a cigarette per day, or 1
cigarette every other day, or even ½ of a cigarette every
other day. The important part is that once you have quit,
you will have quit for good. However gradual the process
is in getting to quitting will be okay as long as it will
lead you to total cessation of the habit.
Now that the plan for addressing the nicotine
addiction is in place, we may formulate a plan for
addressing the second challenge of quitting smoking. This
is that in quitting smoking you will be deducting an
activity from your life. Getting the subconscious mind to
give up an activity that it is used to can be difficult
unless you take the proper steps to help yourself
along.
If you will be deducting from your life
by quitting smoking, and quitting smoking becomes
difficult as a result, then it follows that something
ought to be added to your life for compensation
purposes. What this something is will be up to you, but
it needs to be an activity that's productive and
enjoyable in some way. This may include reading,
exercising, meditating, a new hobby, or simply devoting
more quality time to your family. I find that activities
which involve some form of exercise work best. Cigarettes
stimulate the body and mind, and so does exercise, but in
a much healthier way.
Choosing something healthy to add to your life
in place of smoking will not only enrich your quality of
life, it will make quitting much easier by addressing the
needs of your subconscious mind. On the subconscious
level you will feel less like you are at a loss and more
like you have improved your general well being. The
subconscious mind does not really care all that much
about cigarettes being bad for you. It just cares that
they bring you some level of pleasure, which is why you
continue to smoke. You can help your subconscious mind
feel less cheated by replacing the nicotine with
something else that brings you joy.
It's also important to note that your change
needs to be documented on paper through out the entire
process. Keep a journal or a log detailing the number of
cigarettes that you are allowed each day. This log should
be small and mobile so that you can easily carry it with
you in your pocket or purse.
Writing the process down on paper is important
on two levels. The first is that it will allow you to
keep an accurate count, and the second is that writing
goals and procedures down on paper facilitates their
accomplishment. If you take the time to write out a plan,
you will be using more of your conscious power and your
objective will thus have more energy behind
it.
So there you have it, the easier way to quit
smoking. Notice that I did not title the article, "The
Easy Way To Quit Smoking". I used the word
easier because no matter what our approach is,
quitting permanently will take some effort on your part.
I have found that anything in life worth accomplishing
does take effort. I can promise you though that quitting
smoking for good will be worth your effort in the long
run. Not only will you improve your health, but the sense
of pride you'll get from the accomplishment will be
tremendous. You'll feel empowered and confident, ready to
concur your next goal.
So go ahead, quit for good. You'll be glad you
did!
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