Uk Economy Is Headed For The Worst Of...
News2 mins ago
I have tried the chewing gum, patches and cold turkey but nothing has worked. Has anyone got any ideas that could help me????
No best answer has yet been selected by dee5. 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.Well I do not usually agree with student upstarts like ali but I do here.
Simple, if you want to smell like a tramps armpits with stained teeth, yellow fingers, wrinkled skin, hacking cough. poor circulation, look like a council estate prostitute with thinning hair, desperate, often skint, cancer laden, phlegmy, ugly, cheap, unnattractive, foul, disgusting and ignorant person continue smoking.
If you don't just stop smoking. Simple. Have some pride in yourself.
Don't "quit" smoking -- instead become a "non-smoker".
There's a big difference. When someone offers you a cigarette your answer isn't "no thanks, i'm trying to quit" but "no thanks, i don't smoke!"
Psychologically it is difficult to "quit" smoking because your mind and body are accustomed to it and think that they need it. But, deciding and stating that you are a "non-smoker" tricks the mind and body by not letting them perceive that they are being denied something.
Find some kind of hard candy to keep around that you can put into your mouth when you have those oral fixation cravings.
i started smoking at 15 and, using the above method, became a non-smoker when i was 45. i utilized Gobstopper Jaw Breaker candies which are about the size of a marble and take about ten minutes to dissolve in the mouth.
i have been smoke-free now for 20 years. i will admit, however, that i still occasionally dream that i have broken my smoke-free status and end up disappointed with myself. (The dreams are so real.) Then i wake up and am so relieved that it was just a dream.
My benefits are that i no longer smell like smoke all the time or have holes burned in my clothes plus i feel better and have probably extended my life considerably and reduced the chances of contracting smoke-related illnesses later in life.
Good luck! And you do have the willpower -- you just have to exercise it.