Good on you! I just started again this November (after a little more than 3 years quit). It was a conscious decision as they meet both some of my ADHD & PTSD needs, and I was on some seriously thin ice. After I get some of this backlog sorted, it's back to healthier coping mechanisms!!! :D Part of how I quit smoking is meeting those needs elsewhere, & part replacement.
I don't know if any of these things will be useful to you, most aren't standard quit-tricks (some are!) but they're what helped me the most.
Top 4 ongoing things for me:
- I still go outside each and every single time I want to smoke. In the beginning, that was a lot. After a few months, that gradually lessened, but was still typically a couple times a day. Part of my going outside was feeding the addiction, but only part. It was also a guaranteed 5-7 minutes of chilling out, regulated breathing, changing my environment... A whole helluva lot of other things. So it's unsurprising that after 15 years of smoking? If I needed any of those other things? My brain didn't go "So, bitch! Take your happy ass outside and sit down for 7 minutes to do/get XYZ." Nope. It just told me I needed a cigarette. Okay! Outside we go, then! ;)
- I still took regular breaks between activities. This is an ADHD+PTSD thing. If I just keep going from thing-to-thing-to-thing-to.... ? I vey quickly become overwhelmed and shut down. Mission creep, central. So if I'd Ordinarilly go take a smoke break in between cleaning the kitchen and the next thing on my list? I still took a 5 minute break! LOL, in fact, my son called it "having a cigarette". Hey, mom! Do you need to have a cigarette before we leave? Yep! Thanks, kiddo. (It confused our friends, no end. As I hadn't smoked for months/years).
- Sandalwood Beads. Just a me-thing; I love the way they smell, I'm mad sensory, and I could wear them as a bracelet. I would roll them between my fingers, "hold" them between my fingers, or press really hard between my thumb and forefinger. Kinda like the "tapping" thing which calms a lot of people's anxiety, having them to mess with helped a whole helluva lot. Initially with needing my hands busy, later just because they were soothing.
- Creating new rituals.
Top 3 Immediate Withdrawal things that helped me:
- Xanax. ((I usually prefer Valium for anxiety attacks, but Xanax also knocks my as out. I slept through most of the first 3 days! ))
- Sensory tricks to keep my brain busy. Menthol lip balm, massage, grounding tricks, mints, music, those beads, exercise, all kinds of stuff.
- I was doing it to myself. I quit in the middle of my divorce. It was a control thing.... So much sucked that was outside of my control, that I wanted something that sucked I could control. If it ever got too bad? I knew I could smoke, again. Bit of a control-freak, me! ;) It's one of the awesome things about quitting... It's pure control. I am choosing not to. (Smoking again? That's out of my control. I'm completely back to where I was when I quit, and was within about 2 days.)