Voltaic
Darth Binks is real.
I am a smoker. Have been even before I was eighteen. It is not something I am proud of at all, between eating up my lungs and money, it is a nasty habbit that I would rather break. Problem is that sweet nicotine, and how ingrown it has become into schedule.
Along with being a smoker, I am a avid skier, biker, and hiker. With each passing day, the time I spend on my feet makes me grow in strength, but smoking is holding me back from the real things in life that bring me happinies. I have to choose between doing what I love, and smoking. Simple enough dessission, in execution it is a lot more different.
actually quitting smoking is to say the least hard, but I have to keep in mind not impossible either. The nicotine addiction is one element, but far from everything. How it is part of my schedule is a big factor. Smoke when I get up in the morning, after my meals, before I go to bed. I have been doing this for years, changing is a intimadating prospect.
I would compare smoking to eating in some respects. Both are a means of consumption. Eating food, smoking smokes. When you smoke as much and as long as I have, you consume smokes just as much or even more than food. Taking that away feels like a large part of your life just gone. So much of me enjoys smoking, it is hard to argue with that side. Who doesn't over eat just because that food is way to good? its bad for you but you do it anyways. I know it is bad, but it feels to good.
I don't think pure abstinance is the right way to go about quitting. I have learned from my repeated and quickly crushed attempts at quitting all together right then and there that this task will not be initiated by impulsive and unprepared spur of will. Though those moments of strength are apeasing, they are only moments, and soon fade back into "I want a smoke"
going off temporary emotional highs to put down the smokes isn't working. But does quitting need to be done all at once? such a monumental task, breaking years of habbit, all together, all at once? Would it be nice? yes. Practical? no. This needs to be broken down into a checklist step by step proses. incramental steps, instead of climbing a sheer cliff. No matter how I do this, it will be hard.
Any tips?
Along with being a smoker, I am a avid skier, biker, and hiker. With each passing day, the time I spend on my feet makes me grow in strength, but smoking is holding me back from the real things in life that bring me happinies. I have to choose between doing what I love, and smoking. Simple enough dessission, in execution it is a lot more different.
actually quitting smoking is to say the least hard, but I have to keep in mind not impossible either. The nicotine addiction is one element, but far from everything. How it is part of my schedule is a big factor. Smoke when I get up in the morning, after my meals, before I go to bed. I have been doing this for years, changing is a intimadating prospect.
I would compare smoking to eating in some respects. Both are a means of consumption. Eating food, smoking smokes. When you smoke as much and as long as I have, you consume smokes just as much or even more than food. Taking that away feels like a large part of your life just gone. So much of me enjoys smoking, it is hard to argue with that side. Who doesn't over eat just because that food is way to good? its bad for you but you do it anyways. I know it is bad, but it feels to good.
I don't think pure abstinance is the right way to go about quitting. I have learned from my repeated and quickly crushed attempts at quitting all together right then and there that this task will not be initiated by impulsive and unprepared spur of will. Though those moments of strength are apeasing, they are only moments, and soon fade back into "I want a smoke"
going off temporary emotional highs to put down the smokes isn't working. But does quitting need to be done all at once? such a monumental task, breaking years of habbit, all together, all at once? Would it be nice? yes. Practical? no. This needs to be broken down into a checklist step by step proses. incramental steps, instead of climbing a sheer cliff. No matter how I do this, it will be hard.
Any tips?