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23 December 2009
Hi, guys! Now you are to be congratulamating me. It's my two-week No-Smoking anniversary. After smoking a looooooooooooooong time. It's my xmas gift to myself. Pat me on the head, plz! →[More:]
Next up, the serious diet to get over the no-smoking poundage. I'm hungry all the time now. How do we make that stop?
Unfortunately, no idea about the hunger issues. The thing that works for me is to keep busy on stuff where I can't graze. It doesn't really get rid of the hunger, but it makes it far easier to ignore. Good luck!
John Coltrane was able to quit heroin cold turkey - and even he never managed to quit smoking. You've undertaken a hero's task. We're all rooting for you.
Drink iced tea maybe? I dunno I was lucky because I quit as soon as I fell pregnant and then puked up every time I smelled smoke. I still get nauseous actually from just the smell and I can't fathom how I used to smoke.
Oh taz .. this is really the best present you could ever give to yourself. Congrats on making it two whole weeks. That is so awesome. I recommend caffeine .. to help with the sleepiness you might feel from the nicotine withdrawl and lots of water and veggies for snacking. The veggies are more appealing if you have a little low fat salad dressing for dipping. And of course sugarless gum and Lifesavers. Keep up the great effort! Yay taz!!!
heh, Kangaroo, I think it was the sleepiness that got me through the first week. I was like... "cravings... cravings... whatever. I'm going back to sleep. Again."
Oh, for the hungries? the one person I know who managed not to put on lots of weight after quitting smoking drank gallons of coffee and learned how to make origami cranes. Lots of people suggest gum or candy or chewing on a pen or something to replace the cigarette in your mouth. She found something for her hands to fiddle with was a better substitute. She just carried a pack of paper instead of a pack of cigarettes and left origami cranes every where. A little like a film character.
I mean, isn't nicotine an appetite suppressant? So you're going to be more hungry than you ever were, right? But that doesn't mean you weren't eating enough before, so just try not to change your eating habits and make your smoking habit into a nonfood habit instead. Or something that sounds really easy.
Yeah, taz, keep it going, dear! I quit 9 years ago (after 20-plus years of relatively heavy smoking) and quitting is certainly one of the best things I ever did for myself. Don't slide back! Just STOP, from now on! It'll be better!
Marked and noted, Wolfdog. In about 50 weeks, plan to put the skirt on! and I will want pix... this will make it sooo worth it! :)
I've been doing a lot of dogwalking, danf! Sky's actually helping a lot, and, really, she's a big part of the reason I finally managed to wrap my head around quitting - because I felt so guilty about 2nd-hand smoking at her.
Congratumalations! That's fantastic! Good present to yourself, and to the people who love you. (Hey, that's us, too! So thank you!)
And now, in case you ever need it, I will give you the single best piece of not-smoking advice I ever got.
About two or three weeks after I quit, I was out at the bar with a friend having a drink. She took out her cigarettes and lit one, and caught the look of temptation on my face. I admitted to the temptation to have "just one," and she responded:
"Why would you do that? You're a non-smoker now."
She was right. After two weeks, the physical stuff is out of your system, so any temptation is just old habits. I decided to think like a non-smoker, and it really helped me rationalize away any other moments of temptation.
Good job! You are already past the worst of it, now it's just maintenance.
You can do it!
I'd go buy some sugar-free sucking candies so you can have things in your mouth and not rot your teeth.
On the eating thing, can you just, well, eat? You're trying to make a major change in your life; maybe concentrate on that and don't beat yourself up about the rest of it? Studies keep coming out lately showing that the more willpower we're exerting, the *harder* it gets to maintain (we start internally rebelling against all the "shoulds"), so, if it were me, I'd try to work on letting go of any pressure I felt to make other changes in order to make quitting as easy as possible.
You can certainly always change your diet or exercise later, if it's even necessary once your body gets adjusted to the lack of nicotine.
And other studies are showing that we're a lot more likely to make healthy changes in our lives when we feel good about ourselves, so beating ourselves up about our weight or body shape or whatever can be a bit counter-productive when we're working on changing habits.
Or, in a nutshell: Yay! You're making amazing progress, which is hard! So just be nice to yourself, because change is exhausting!
On the eating thing, can you just, well, eat? You're trying to make a major change in your life; maybe concentrate on that and don't beat yourself up about the rest of it?
When I quit smoking and put on a bit of weight, my doctor congratulated me and said, "I'd much rather see you gain 20 pounds than continue smoking." I agreed. (And this was a decade ago, before we'd seen so many studies suggesting that extra weight is not so closely linked to elevated morbidity/mortality.)
And since it's worth saying over and over: YAY YOU! Congratulations! You are doing so amazingly well! YAY!
I agree with Elsa's friend, that's partly why I said you are a non-smoker now! I really found that change in mindset helpful. I stopped being a smoker hoping to quit. I BECAME a person who doesn't smoke. Dammit it felt good. And it stuck!
I am always so happy for people who quit, I think partially because I remember the freedom I felt leaving that demon bitch behind!
Congratulations, taz. As others above have said you're now an ex-smoker. So whenever you're tempted, remember you're not thinking about whether or not to have "just one" cigarette, you're contemplating becoming a smoker all over again. Everyone's different but I found the "hunger" wasn't really hunger at all. It was my brain's way of trying to work through the change from constant cravings which were temporarily relieved by a smoke to a long steady decline (with occasional "blips") of craving. Eating only helped in that it was a distraction, so any distraction should do (danf's idea is a great one), and it will fade.
Bravo, taz! This is probably the hardest thing you will have to do, bar none. Be proud of yourself and keep thinking like a non-smoker. If you do happen to "have just one", you can easily stop again straight away - if that happens, don't make it an excuse to give up giving up.