I've been smoker for 25yrs, for past 5yrs its gotten out of hand @ 3pck/day. I've tried quitting 100's of times, and used all the nicotine replacement gums, lozenges, patch... All the drugs, and cold turkey methods. I failed each and every time, and ultimately found myself smoking just as much if not more shortly after. <---If this had been a diet, I'd be seen on news being carried away on back of a flatbed. But each time I learned something from my failure.
I think the hardest part beside the obvious physical/physiological addiction is there isn't a bottom to hit, as with alcohol and drugs. There is no intervention more than nonsmokers in your family saying 'take that outside'. You don't wake in a gutter somewhere on bad side of town wondering what happend... you just slowly kill your wallet and likely yourself.
I'm smoke free, for 3 weeks... so I'm by no means preaching, #### I'd prob take a cigg if someone offered me one. I'm only posting my experience, for others to learn from, whether just save a few dollars or entirely give it up. And I'd encourage anyone that has something to add, please do!
- Chantix: I tried when it was first available, I can't say enough good things about it! The horror stories of night terror's, mood changes, suicide, I didn't experience anything other than normal withdraw symptoms associated w/ cold turkey. The drug blocks nicotine receptors in the brain and no matter how much you puff on the cigg, it does nothing for you. <---It was as if I went cold turkey, and taught me I wasn't ready to quit, all my triggers were still there. Coffee, after dinner cigg, beer. I couldn't wait to get that drug out of my system so I could enjoy my cigg.
- Nicotine Replacement Gum/lozenges: Great help to replace physiological addiction with chewing along w/ nicotine therapy @ 1 piece at a time.
- Nicotine Replacement Patch: 24hr patch does its job, and will leave you disappointed when you slip and try smoking. Does zero for physiological dependance.
- E-cig/Vaping: Its a good crutch, but feels like eating rice cakes when your hungry. I've only purchased cheap ones at TS, and once tried a hit off very heavy top shelf tank type... WOW! <--that is some good stuff, just ask an oil field worker.
In my case, motivation is directly proportional to will power, I think that goes for most? Without getting too personal, wife put me on strict budget, and if I wanted a pack go ahead... but I'd give up eating for a day. (I love her/hate her at same time LOL) so yes I've been quitting for 4weeks and learned how important food is!
On this latest try, to date I've spent ~$100 quitting vs $350 smoking. If that is not motivation enough, and you can make it to day 4, cough into a rag.(its very convincing what you did when you see it come from your own lungs.)
If your still reading this, and uninspired to quit. I'd absolutely suggest investing in a top shelf vaporizer. <-- its cheaper overall, by about $1,000+/ yr. depending on cost of ciggs.
Most of all, be well my friends!
Quit smoking: Chantix,patches,vaping,cold turkey
Discussion in 'Driver Health' started by TheDude1969, Sep 16, 2013.
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Skydivedavec, KW Cajun, vaportrail and 3 others Thank this.
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Chantix is not allowed by a driver. As your story shows the side effects. This is for anyone else considering it.
http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/statement-5-23-08.htmTheDude1969 and NavigatorWife Thank this. -
I was 3 packs a day running OTR & quit cold turkey. It was very difficult the first 2 weeks, especially because the couple of companies I drove for then, we ran dirty and depended on those smokes to help stay awake on those coast to coast runs with little sleep. About 2 months after quitting, I had a coughing spell that lasted about 6 weeks which was due to my lungs cleansing themselves which was horrible; lots of stuff built up in those lungs that had to come out. For several years afterward I had regular dreams about smoking and enjoying those cigarettes. It paid off; haven't been really sick since and colds are few and far between, like years. Didn't realize how bad I felt most of the time, until I was cured of smoking.
rickybobby, NavigatorWife and TheDude1969 Thank this. -
Thx Roadmedic, Oh wow I was about to ask for prescription again JIK I failed. Thanks for the update!
I think FMCSA went bonkers w/ this one. -
Actually, they were really slow about it. There are many good reasons for the ban. Sudden mood swings in a heavy vehicle.
http://www.ttnews.com/articles/basetemplate.aspx?storyid=19910TheDude1969 and KW Cajun Thank this. -
Cold turkey is the best way to do it. You literally kick the physical addiction within 5-7 days. Which is why all of these patches and gums are a total scam. We're programmed so much to think that the mental addiction is so intense and strong, you really don't understand how bad the physical addiction really is.
I've been clean now for 3 years and let me say, the first 3-5 days after quitting was insane LOL. I was hallucinating, I had severe vertigo, room just spinning and ringing in my ears. Just crazy. Once I hit the 7 day mark I totally felt like the physical addiction was completely gone. That's when it becomes easier to declare war on the mental aspect of things and how you brain does get programmed into smoking. And once you do kick the physical aspect of the addiction you can identify your mental triggers more easily.KW Cajun, NavigatorWife and TheDude1969 Thank this. -
Yep my parents havent smoked in 7 years did for 20+ they feel so much better and save so much money its unbelievable. They used patches and prescription meds and it worked for them. What ever it was made smoking taste like ####. Did i mention they started on there week long vacation. Run for the effing hills
stevep1977, NavigatorWife and TheDude1969 Thank this. -
Yeah, I would suggest personally, to get out of the truck when you decide to do it. Take off at least a week and "sequester" yourself, literally. Don't leave the house, don't do anything you normally would, lock yourself in your bedroom if you have to. Just literally remove yourself from society completely for a week. Trust me, it was much easier to do that than to have to deal with the normal everyday grind AND trying to quit at the same time. After a week of quitting and the physical addiction being gone you'll be ready to continue your quitting in a normal functioning way.TheDude1969 Thanks this.
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I read through this website quite a bit while planning my quitting strategy. They have a lot of the "shock and awe" stuff where they show holes in people's throats and all that stuff. Personally, that does absolutely nothing for me and I don't like that stuff. What I did like is the written tips and different mental approaches they suggest you can take to be successful. Good website IMO
http://whyquit.com/TheDude1969 Thanks this. -
Its simple will power and the want to quit. With out both you will fail. My look on smoking is if you love your smokes and each one brings more happiness than the last then roll with. If you are like I was and you thought of death and sickness with every one the worry and stress would have killed me before the smokes. Drugs are for ###### Remember when we first started smoking how you got sick and it took time to get used to it samething at quiting time power though it.
NavigatorWife and TheDude1969 Thank this.
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