|
Stop
Smoking Strategy
Step 1: The Decision
The Difference
Between Wanting and Deciding
Let’s
get one thing straight. Wanting is very different from deciding.
It may seem like the same thing but really it’s not. There
is a sea of difference between wanting to quit and actually
deciding to quit. You have probably wanted to quit the very
day that you started smoking, but as can be clearly seen, it
just didn’t happen.
On
the other hand, deciding is a very serious issue. It is something
that can affect our self esteem and our dignity because once
we decide then we have to stick to the decision right? And
that is not going to be easy.
Any
decision that one takes must be based on sound common sense
and in the case of smoking too, this holds true. I would support
any smokers decision to quit; but my request to every such
prospective quitter is that they should get their facts right.
The
problem is that if the prospective quitter is not proceeding
in the right track, there is a greater tendency to fail. And
once a person tries and fails, it is going to be all the more
difficult to break the habit.
Rick
Beneteau's Quit Smoking Right Now!
Rick
Beneteau is one of the most respected entrepreneurs on the
internet. Whether you know him or not doesn't matter.
What
IS important is this: Last year, he quit smoking. Finally.
For good. Forever. As easily and painlessly as the above headline
states. And most important, he is prepared to help you (or
a loved one) QUIT SMOKING, once and for all, the stress free
way too!
Click
Here To Find Out More About Rick's Program
The
Actual Decision
Before
we come to the real decision we might have to do some serious
thinking. The decision to quit smoking is not something that
can hit your mind in the middle of work. You need to feel composed
and have everything well within your control. You need to sit
and think about it for at least ten minutes. Oh yes ten minutes
is more than enough time.
You
have to remember what I told you the odds are all against it.
You have to work really hard to think of a reason to go on
smoking “the feel good” thing is not good enough an argument.
Obviously you are going to end up feeling terrible maybe within
the next couple of months if you do not break the habit. So
there is absolutely no point in dwelling on temporary pleasures.
What
I would suggest would be to browse through this manual, an
exercise that would hardly take you ten to fifteen minutes
and then sit and think about it for another ten minutes and
then hit the right button (which means take the right decision).
Hey, come on, we’re just talking about half an hour of your
time. Surely any one can spare half an hour of their time for
a matter of life and death...their own life and death to be
precise.
Right,
so now that we’ve done the serious thinking, all we have to
do is make up our minds. Please remember that it is not the
decision making that is difficult. It is sticking to the decision
that is going to be the difficult part. So go ahead and make
up your mind.
Let
the World Know
Once
your mind is made up, you have a very important thing left
to do. You have to announce your decision to quit smoking to
as many people as possible. Tell all your friends that you
have decided to quit and ask them earnestly to help you as
much as they can. Remember, that bit is not going to be an
easy task and you are going to need all the help in the world
so it is all the more better that a lot of people know about
your decision to quit.
There
is one good thing about letting others know about decision
to quit. It makes you more accountable. It lessens down your
chances of taking a sneak puff. Having people who support you
all around you, keeps you distracted from that great pull.
And believe me it is a lot easier to stick to promises made
in public than to keep promises made in private.
In
one word, it just makes you all the more accountable. Hey you
have a word to live up to, and the fear of being scorned and
ridiculed by others for breaking your promise is a strong force
that can keep you going. Discuss your decision with your family,
tell them about your decision and the difficulties that you
are going to face. Tell them that you are going to need their
support and help ad that it is not going to be easy for you.
An
excellent thing you could do is draft out a contract for your
self about your decision to stop smoking and sign it. It would
be an awfully good decision to hang up this contract for all
to see so that the next time you take a puff and somebody sees
you with the contract above you ganging on the wall; they would
at least raise an eyebrow.
It
is best if you can get one or two others to quit smoking with
you. Quitting smoking is a lot like loosing weight, so it is
best if it can be done in small groups. If your partner also
smokes then it’s a wonderful thing for both of you to take
the decision to together so that you can go on backing and
encouraging each other.
A
Formidable Foe
The
battle is not going to be easy, because you will be pitted
against a very formidable foe. Most people tend to under estimate
the intensity of the issue. Again I repeat that quitting is
not an easy task. I would recommend that you do not measure
the size of the enemy by the size of the cigarette. Size does
not matter sometimes. After all a stick of dynamite is not
very big but just consider the amount of damage that it can
bring about.
It
is not just one cigarette that you are going to be fighting
against. Consider that great chunk of humanity that has been
removed from the face of the earth just because of tobacco.
You have the statistics given above to prove it. If so many
people have succumbed to cigarette smoke, then obviously it’s
no ordinary killer.
That
is why it is highly recommended that you approach the issue
only after thorough preparation. I suggest that you compare
yourself to a commando who’s preparing to venture into a thick
forest shrouded with danger to rescue a hapless child from
the clutches of some hardened criminals. Such a commando would
be armed to the teeth. He would have been taught all the survival
skills and would be a force to reckon with.
The
commando would be constantly on his guard and even while resting
his eyes and ears would be alert. Success for him is not a
matter of luck but comes as a natural consequence of his training,
his skills and his alertness. He’s brave, he’s sharp, he has
nerves of steel and that is just what you must try to be. This
battle should be fought to be won, because just like for the
commando, for you too this is a matter of life and death.
A
Myth to Break
First,
let us break a myth. Most smokers honestly believe that they
can quit at any time they want. This is far from reality. The
fact is that most smokers can’t just do that. The decision
to quit is not something that is wholly controlled by the brain.
This
exercise of control by the brain happens only in the first
few days. After that, the brain or mind takes the back seat.
It will seem as if the whole body is screaming out for more
and more, and the brain has no choice but to comply. As we
can see, every part of our body is connected and the brain
too prefers to toe to line.
So
when a smoker believes that he or she can quit at any time
that he or she wants, then the person is actually fooling himself
or herself. I don’t want to under estimate any body. I agree
that some people do have more will power than others. But what
I would like to point out is that we are talking about a force
that is more than just a physical or mental control. We are
talking about withdrawal symptoms.
Withdrawal
Symptoms, What’s That?
This
is the stumbling block over which many a would-be quitter trips.
The problem with many smokers is that they fail to recognize
these symptoms as symptoms. A withdrawal symptom is something
that a person experiences once he or she stops using a substance
that gives them a kick. Opps, is that too hard to digest? Well,
let’s try to make it simpler.
There
are many things that are identified with substance abuse. Alcohol
is one of them, narcotic drugs are another and tobacco is in
no way to be left behind. The problem, or let us say that the
similarity among all these substances, is that once one gets
used to them, breaking away is not easy.
Contrary
to popular belief, it is not the fear of deprivation of the
pleasantly high feeling that drives the person to use the substance
again and again so that it is used, misused and eventually
abused. The person returns for his or her daily shot because
of certain altered conditions in the body. These substances
are indeed very potent and they affect certain specific spots
or centers of the brain.
The
brain quickly gets used to these alterations and then before
we know it, these centers of the brain cannot do without the
daily doze of the substance. The brain did not ask for the
substance in the first place but we gave them to it. When we
experience that pleasantly high feeling we do not bother about
the changes that are taking place within.
It
is common knowledge that the entire processes carried about
in the brain are maintained by a delicate balance of the various
chemical salts there. Once we start using substances like the
above mentioned tobacco, narcotics and alcohol, the balance
of these chemical salts gets altered. The body as I mentioned
earlier is a self adjusting machine and so this new chemical
balance is established and it takes no time for the brain cells
to get adjusted to the new balance.
Then
when the brain cells do not get what is required to maintain
the new balance (read that as the daily puffs) things go hay
wire. The old balance was disturbed and altered and a new balance
was set up. But this new balance is not the real natural thing.
It is something that has to be artificially supported and when
that daily, or timely dose of nicotine does not get to the
brain, the new balance gets upset.
That
is when a person gets those peculiar feelings, which can be
broadly called the withdrawal symptoms. You know what I am
talking about don’t you? Haven’t you felt uneasy and jittery
when you were unable to get that puff? It’s a strange kind
of feeling isn’t it?
It’s
a feeling that can only be soothed when you take that long
refreshing pull of highly toxic smoke. Some people break into
a sweat, some get the tremors, some feel queasy, some get constipated…
All
these are withdrawal symptoms, so unless you prepare yourself
to face the pressure of withdrawal, you’re going to face a
losing battle.
Psst…let’s
not leave out an important detail...
The
new balance in the brain that was established with the help
of the used substance can indeed be broken. I’m not saying
that it is easy but once you start conditioning your brain,
that it just not going to get what it wants, that is the external
substance, the brain will be left with no alternative than
to go back and restore the old balance.
Of
course the brain is not going to give up without a fight and
that is what we are going to experience as the withdrawal symptom.
Initially the brain had been doing all too well without the
help of any external substance; and then we made the brain
become dependent on something. So when we stop using that something,
it is only a matter of time before the brain goes back to its
original state of functioning. All we have to do is to muster
up the will power to over come the withdrawal symptoms that
might set in.
But
again I do admit that it is easier said than done. In the end,
however, knowing that withdrawals will come (and recognizing
them as such), is a vital part of the quitting process.
|