It's A Snowflake...shut Things!
News0 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by jridgeback. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.According to the NHS quit smoking helpline, it takes 48hrs for nicotine to leave the body (no matter how heavily you smoke). So technically, 48 from your last cig you are no longer physically addicted and it's all just a case of will power after that.
That helpline also advises people who are stopping to describe themselves as "non-smokers" rather than "I've just quit". This apparently gets you into the mindframe that you don't smoke and don't need to.
Key to quitting is to want to. If you don't want to quit forever, you'll start again sometime. Good luck!
jridgeback
I gave up (cold turkey) on 30th June 2004. My previous attempt lasted 5 weeks but this time I'm just coming up for 10 months.
I had a friend who gave up several years ago. About 2 years after he gave up, I asked him how long it was before the craving went away. He said "I'll let you know when it does!".
Anyway, there is another aspect to all this that helps you get through the temptation. After a while you realise that you have invested so much effort and suffering (for you and the people around you) that it would be such a waste to light up again. You start to get proud of yourself (in a good way) and the potential disappointment of giving in to temptation gets greater, Eventually, you just don't want to light up again - even if you get a craving! For me, that came when I reached the magic 5 weeks and 1 day.
Try this method - just give up for just one day. You know you can get through 1 day without smoking, whatever you have to do to achieve it.
Then the next day, just give up for just one day. You did it before - you can do it again.
Either call yourself a non-smoker right now and resolve right now never to light up again or tell yourself you're only doing it for one day.
It helps if you bin all the tobacco you've got.