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Elegy To Cigarettes
19 Answers
Tata to the tyranny of tobacco
No no to the neurosis of nicotine
Ciao to the craving for cigarettes
Farewell to the fixation on fags
Au revoir to abuse and addiction
I stopped smoking today.My elegy is to hopefully inspire others to give up too.I am not expecting any sympathy from non-smokers.
No no to the neurosis of nicotine
Ciao to the craving for cigarettes
Farewell to the fixation on fags
Au revoir to abuse and addiction
I stopped smoking today.My elegy is to hopefully inspire others to give up too.I am not expecting any sympathy from non-smokers.
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I gave up smoking in October 1978, when I was 25. I suppose I had smoked since I was a boy, of maybe 13/14, and smoked seriously since I started my apprenticeship at age 17.
In the very early days, I would buy a packet of ten Players No, 6, on the way to work, but when I was still smoking 10 years later, I bought a carton every Thursday, in Tesco, and got double Green Shield Stamps !
So, I was on my way up to 40 a day. If I was still smoking now, I would be smoking at least 60 a day....in other words, spending the thick end of £28/£30, EVERY DAY !
So when I finally gave up in 1978, immediately when out and bought a Sanyo Music Centre, on tick, for approx. the same amount of money that I had been spending in the fags.
That way, if I went back on the fags, I would then need to find twice as much money every week, for the fags, plus this new smashing music centre, which was my pride and joy !
The incentive worked and I have never smoked since, which will be 40 years next October.
I gave up smoking in October 1978, when I was 25. I suppose I had smoked since I was a boy, of maybe 13/14, and smoked seriously since I started my apprenticeship at age 17.
In the very early days, I would buy a packet of ten Players No, 6, on the way to work, but when I was still smoking 10 years later, I bought a carton every Thursday, in Tesco, and got double Green Shield Stamps !
So, I was on my way up to 40 a day. If I was still smoking now, I would be smoking at least 60 a day....in other words, spending the thick end of £28/£30, EVERY DAY !
So when I finally gave up in 1978, immediately when out and bought a Sanyo Music Centre, on tick, for approx. the same amount of money that I had been spending in the fags.
That way, if I went back on the fags, I would then need to find twice as much money every week, for the fags, plus this new smashing music centre, which was my pride and joy !
The incentive worked and I have never smoked since, which will be 40 years next October.
I smoked for about 50 years, suddenly decided one day that I'd had enough of it after another lecture from GP, bought myself some nicotine patches, sealed up my last fag packet, used orange juice instead of fags and after about a month had forgotten about smoking. At next GP appointment took my sealed up packet and lighter with me and dropped them on her desk. She was really pleased at my achievement as she threw them in her bin.
I haven't had a fag since then, don't miss them at all, stick at it!
I haven't had a fag since then, don't miss them at all, stick at it!
I have never smoked but both my parents did. Both died of smoking-related illnesses - mum was 58.
I have friends who smoke but they are always careful not to smoke where it will encroach on the airspace of others.
Smokers are made to feel that they are the bad guys for being addicted - this is wrong. None of us are perfect.
Good on you .
I wouldn't dream of pontificating to anyone who is a smoker , realises the harm it does and is trying to cut down / give up .
By the way - the number of cigarettes i've smoked , can probably be counted on one hand .
Cigarettes smoke makes me feel ill , so i've got an in built defence against them
I wouldn't dream of pontificating to anyone who is a smoker , realises the harm it does and is trying to cut down / give up .
By the way - the number of cigarettes i've smoked , can probably be counted on one hand .
Cigarettes smoke makes me feel ill , so i've got an in built defence against them
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