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Quitting Smoking; Tips And Advice For The Ptsd Sufferer?

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Thank you pontifixmax, you are very kind. And I agree with what you've said.

Quit once for a year and once for about 2 1/2 years, know it's substantially better after 6 months (actually, by then felt 'normal' again, and liked I'd never smoked- Miraculous)

Good luck, as well! :tup::)
 
I took Chantix and it worked great. The dreams on the other hand were pretty crazy, now with ptsd I'm not sure I would take it again. Probably reacts with my meds anyway and my dreams and sleep are already messed up.
 
Arrgghh. I started smoking again. And I dont want to smoke, I dont like smoking, but I'm smoking more than I ever did when I was a smoker. But whatever it is the reason I am smoking doesnt do whatever it is making me smoke because I am smoking nonstop and even take a nicotine chewing gum to bed to chew.

I cant seem to stop shoving nicotine into me since the problems really ramped up that led to my eventual breakdown. At first I thought I was smoking instead of saying.....but now I'm blurting everything out and smoking even more. (pls see arrrrrgghhhhhh above)

I can only conclude its more about my mental/emotional state than a physical addiction (as the reason I started smoking again) but now with the overload of nicotine I am throwing at my body, lord knows what that is also doing physically.

But am I game to try at this point stopping? Not a chance. But I am still in the thick of the whole thing that caused this, so when that part has gone away, I'll see if I am still needing to smoke as much and tackle this part of it later.
 
I gave up smoking for around ten years, then had a meltdown, was diagnosed with CPTSD and started again.

This year I gave up for 17 weeks, then had another crisis. That sent me straight back to the cigarettes. I am still smoking, and don't feel ready to quit again yet. I will, in due course, but don't want to do anything to jeapordise the stability I am currently feeling.

I had always promised Rory that I will give up smoking when I give up my meds, but I have no idea when that will be.
 
While I personally have never smoked, my husband used to and he quit cold turkey after reading this book by Allen Carr "The Easy Way To Quit Smoking" or something like that. He hasn't touched a cigarette in close to 2 years and hasn't even had the slightest craving. It might be worth a try. The book is fairly cheap and not long at all. It took him about a week or so to read it.
 
Electronic Cigarette is the best option for the people who is not able to quit smoke or again and again they fall in to use real cigarettes.
 
I quit last year after 9 earlier attepts of quitting and 40 years of smoking. This time I used the pills, Champix. It's weird as it wasn't so tough... but the habbit of doing SOMETHING after a meal was strong.

There were side-effects with the pills such as worst sea-sickness feeling every morning for like 3 months and have problems with my bowls as they didn't do as they should ;)

The 2 smokers that come here noe and then smoke in the living room and that's ok by me. very strange...
 
And how many smokers will say they wished they never started. My hand is up on that one.
Na... I enjoyed smoking and really loved it. If it wasn't so unhealthy and dangerous, I would still smoke.

I don't smoke purely because the evidence is overwhelming on how dangerous it is for long term effects. It also jogs my memory when I smell a smoker, how disgusting it is, being the smell that gets all over you and through your car, clothes, bed, house, etc... and that gives me another reason not to smoke again.
 
this might seem harsh but it worked for me. I hope no one takes this as a condescending attitude towards any other methods, some work for others but this is what worked for me.

I find that if I say no to myself in anything less than a totalitarian, unaccomadating, no compromises fashion, I will find ways to rationalise backing away from my decision to say no in small increments and then larger and larger steps until i am thoroughly able to rationalise smoking or whatever the behaviour I am trying tio deny myself happens to be.

just one with coffee doesn't work because then I have to say no again at first break or at lunch or while waiting for someone or whatever, all day long, no, no, no, no over and over.

using the gums and patches isn't really denying yourself the drug you seek, just changing the delivery method and i am soon rationalising that one cigarette and two patches isn't bad, I can do that and still be working towards quitting, on and on until I just say to heck with the bother and smoke.

But saying no in a loud clear voice that reverberates in my mind and makes the decisions easy to make as they come up on a daily or hourly or constant basis that much easier to make- I already made it, it is cast in stone and unbending and it is NO to tobacco and nicotine.

And it doesn't hurt if you can reward yourself with a little self care for honoring the NO decision, like a trip to see a favorite band or a day at the beach with a friend. After you have accepted these rewards, it just makes it that much harder to allow yourself to cave in, it strengthens that one unbending NO by allowing yourself to see some benifits for having followed through.

The health benifits are definite, just not fast in arriving. It helps me to give myself little rewards to take the place of the larger benifits i am waiting for.

By the way, 6 years and not one smoke, not one bummed cigarette, not even one deep inhalation of someone elses second hand smoke, and I don't even think of it anymore at all. I said NO and I meant it.

Hope this helps someone- without sounding condescending to anyone that is struggling with maintaining their decision to quit. I know what that is like too, and I have empathy for anyone that knows what it is like to fail themselves and go back to a habit they were determined to break. I used to beat myself up horribly over it and I don't want anyone to take this as part of a beating. This is the way I found to stop the beatings, stop the daily obsession with quitting, stop the ever present necessity to keep saying no to myself over and over by doing it once and really meaning it.
 
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