Right now I'm working this program by the minute, the hour, the day...
I've finally crossed the bridge of resistance and put my cigarettes down after approximately 40 years of smoking. It's been 30 hours since my last one.
I don't feel like I qualify as a non smoker yet, but rather a smoker who is torturing himself by denying himself a cigarette. But I'll make it another minute, 60 at a time, and they will equal an hour, and an hour at a time I'll put together another day.
I'm working the steps on this... if it relieved me of my alcoholism 20 years ago, I am willing to bet that the program can do this job as well.
The program works for cigarettes too. When I stopped drinking in Aug 1988, I had a strong desire to stop smoking as well. In Nov 1995, my God came to my rescue and removed the obsession to smoke. It was not easy. I had a long talk with my wife and told her that my irritation is going to return. She helped me also by putting up with some of my withdrawals. I will say a silent prayer for you, John.
good on ya john, ive used this prorgamme to help with other unmanageable areas of my life too, accepting the powerlessness and taking the action one step at a time, it worked for me i am not a smoker but both my parents are heavier smokers and id love to see them quit for themselves but thats there choice.
wishing you all the best
Tracey
__________________
life is a journey not a destination peace xx Trace
Good luck in your decision to quit smoking. I am, on Day 6 of my quit and it is easier than I thought it would be. I was diagnosed with COPD last week and quit immediately.
I am using the 12 steps to help me through and it really is working. Just keep taking it one day at a time as you did with the alcohol and you will be amazed at how fast the days will can go.
To help ease any cravings I drink ice water, chew gum, exercise, do puzzles, make lists, sleep, take lots & lots of showers (can't smoke in the shower, right?), and it is all working for me.
Congrats on making such a great and healthy decision, John.
Take care,
Carol
__________________
Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind. ~Dr. Seuss
Yeah you have the power of experience which is sooo convincing to we alcoholics. We know and know that we know what works and how when we apply the principles and the experiences of others. My experience with your condition was also to get around others who were working at getting nicotine free also...the group work because I know and know that I know I cannot do recovery alone. Nicotine owned me and it made me sick how I enslaved myself to it and made it the most important god in my life bigger than wife, family, friends and value system. I went to the VA quit smoking program the last time after I went to the lung specialist because I was sooo under the influence (we can use that term with alcohol too) with the awareness that I was born tuberculic (an attachment to alcoholism by the way). I did the same thing at those meetings that I still do in AA...sit down, all the way down, listen, learn and practice, practice, practice. I'm in support. Do the patch or the pill or whatever it takes to get and stay nicotine free. SA maybe?
I've tried to quit a few times, and compared with quitting smoking, quitting drinking was easy. Maybe because it's reinforced so many ways with other rituals--answering the phone, waiting for something, finishing a meal. (The after-meal ones were the hardest for me to give up.)
I hope to take another run at it one of these days, but I know I'm not ready yet.