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Some smokers say they smoke because they are nervous. Others say
they smoke to celebrate. Some think they smoke for energy. Many
smoke to look sexy. Yet others smoke to stay awake or to sleep.
Some think they smoke to think. One truly unique smoker once told
me she smoked to breathe better. Another once said she returned
to smoking when experiencing chest pains. She figured the fear of
a heart attack is enough to make anyone smoke. None of these reasons
satisfactorily explains why people continue smoking. However, the
answer is, in fact, quite simple. Smokers smoke cigarettes because
they are smokers. More precisely, smokers smoke cigarettes because
they are smoke-a-holics.
A smoke-a-holic, like any other drug addict, has become hooked
on a chemical substance. In the cigarette smoker's case, nicotine
is the culprit. He is at the point where the failure to maintain
a minimum level of nicotine in his blood stream leads to the nicotine
abstinence syndrome, otherwise known as drug withdrawal. Anything
that makes him lose nicotine makes him smoke.
This concept explains why so many smokers feel they smoke under
stress. Stress has a physiological effect on the body which makes
the urine acidic. Whenever the urine becomes acidic, the body excretes
nicotine at an accelerated rate. Thus, when a smoker encounters
a stressful situation he loses nicotine and goes into drug withdrawal.
Most smokers feel that when they are nervous or upset cigarettes
help calm them down. The calming effect, however, is not relief
from the emotional strain of the situation, but actually the effect
of replenishing the nicotine supply and ending the withdrawal. It
is easy to understand why smokers without this basic knowledge of
stress and its nicotine effect are afraid to give up smoking. They
feel that they will be giving up a very effective stress management
technique. But once they give up smoking for a short period of time,
they will become calmer, even under stress, than when they were
smokers.
The explanation of how physiological changes in the body make smokers
smoke is difficult for some smokers to believe. But nearly all smokers
can easily relate to other situations which also alter the excretion
rate of nicotine. Ask a smoker what happens to their smoking consumption
after drinking alcohol, and you can be sure they will answer that
it goes up. If asked how much their consumption rises, they will
normally reply that it doubles or even triples when drinking. They
usually are convinced that this happens because everyone around
them is smoking. But if they think back to a time when they were
the only smoker in the room, they will realize that drinking still
caused them to smoke more. Alcohol consumption results in the same
physiological effect as stress - acidification of the urine. The
nicotine level drops dramatically, and the smoker must light one
cigarette after another or suffer drug withdrawal.
It is important for smokers considering quitting to understand these
concepts because once they truly understand why they smoke they
will be able to more fully appreciate how much more simple their
life will become as an ex-smoker.
Once the smoker stops, nicotine will begin to leave his or her body
and within two weeks all the nicotine will be gone. Once the nicotine
is totally out of the body, all withdrawal will cease. No longer
will they experience drug withdrawal states whenever encountering
stress, drinking, or just going too long without smoking. In short,
they will soon realize that all the benefits they thought they derived
from smoking were false effects. They did not need to smoke to deal
with stress, or to drink, socialize, or work. Everything they did
as a smoker they can do as a non-smoker, and in most cases they
will now do these activities more efficiently and feel better during
them.
They will become a more independent people. It is a good feeling
and a major accomplishment to break free from this addiction. But
no matter how long they are off smoking and how confident they feel,
the ex-smoker must always remember that he or she is a smoke-a-holic.
Being a smoke-a-holic means that as long as they don't take a single
drag off a cigarette, cigar or pipe, or chew tobacco, or inject
it into their bloodstream with a syringe, they will never again
become hooked on nicotine. If, on the other hand, they do make the
tragic mistake of experimenting with any nicotine product, they
will reinforce their addiction. This will result either in returning
to their old level of consumption or experiencing a full fledged
withdrawal process. Neither situation is fun to go through.
So, once off of smoking, the ex-smoker must always remember just
who and what he is - a smoke-a-holic for the rest of his life. Remembering
this, you can remain truly independent from nicotine by following
one simple practice -
Never Take Another Puff!
Table of Contents
1. Why
People Smoke
2. I
Smoke Because I Like Smoking!
3. I
Smoke Because I'm Self-Destructive!
4. You
Smoke Because You're A Smoke-a-holic!
5. I
Have to Smoke Because of All My Stress!
6.
I've Smoked for So Long and So Much, What is the Use in Quitting
Now?
7.
What A Relief, I Think I Have Cancer!
8. The
Power of Advertising
9. A
Safer Way to Smoke
10.Are
You Smoking More and Enjoying it Less?
11.A
Fate Worse than Death?
12. Quitting
by Gradual Withdrawal
13. I
Can't Quit or I Won't Quit
14.Why
Did I Start Smoking? Why Did I Quit?"
Quit
Smoking Tips
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