Believing In the Cigarette Posted: 12-23-07 10:31am
I used to believe that quitting smoking
was the hardest thing that I have ever
tried to do. I used to believe that I was
a hopeless addict that would die a smoker.
I have tried to quit smoking so many times
that I have lost count and every single
failed attempt only added validity to what
I already knew.... that quitting smoking
was impossible.
It wasn't until I learned about nicotine
addiction, that I realized something. It
wasn't necassarily quitting smoking that
was so hard to do. It was quitting
believing in cigarettes that was hard to
do.
See, I used to believe in the cigarette.
I used to believe that cigarettes kept me
calm. The truth though, is that nicotine
is a stimulant. Everytime I smoked a
cigarette, it raised my hearbeat by about
20 beats more a minute. Smoking
constricted my arteries and not only that,
but the carbon monoxide from the cigarette
was basically poisoning my blood's ability
to carry oxygen. Creating an even greater
strain on my heart. How could I be calm,
when I was putting this kind of strain on
my body over 40 times a day, everyday?
I used to believe that cigarettes relieved
my stress. Little did I know that smoking
created a lot of stress. The whole
business of smoking is relieving an
anxiety that the previous cigarette
created.
After each cigarette that I smoked and the
nicotine metabolized. Nicotine being able
to fit my adrenaline locks, pumped
adrenaline though my bloodstream leaving
me with a slight fight or flight feeling.
I was left with a heightened anxiety, an
antsy feeling that I didn't like. My mind
and body were being fooled into thinking
that something was wrong, like I was in
danger when in reality there was nothing
wrong. My subconscious figured something
out though. Smoking a cigarette would
relieve that anxiety. Not knowing that it
was being tricked and also looking out for
my best interest. It would say " Smoke a
cigarette and you'll feel better." So I
would smoke a cigarette, relieve that
anxiety and start the whole viscious cycle
over again. The only stress I was
relieving, was the stress that the
previous cigarette created.
Not only that, but whenever I was under
stress. It caused a physiological reaction
that caused nicotine to get pulled from my
bloodstream. So now was I not only under
stress, I had a compounded problem of
being in drug withdrawal. So I would smoke
a cigarette, "feel better" and think "Oh,
smoking helped me relieve some of my
stress." The reality is though, it did
nothing but relieve drug withdrawal. A
compounded anxiety, that should have never
been there in the first place. Nothing
changed after smoking that cigarette. What
ever caused my initial stress was still
there. The only difference was that I had
temporarily pacified the monkey on my
back.
I used to believe that smoking made me
happy. Sadly, smoking causes a form of
depression. Sure, I can say that smoking
releases dopamine, BUT that is only part
of the story. Being the amazing machine
that it is. My brain needed to regulate
how much dopamine was being released. It
couldn't regulate nicotine as it was a
foreign substance(poison). So it had no
other choice, but to turn down it's own
sensitivity to releasing dopamine. My own
natural neurotransmitters were being
hijacked, forcing me to rely a lot more on
the cigarette just to "feel good" or more
accurately, feel nicotine normal. The
truth was, I was happy DESPITE SMOKING and
not because of it.
I used to believe that smoking was social.
This makes me laugh now, because how can
smoking be social? Was it social when I
had to put my life on hold to put a stop
to drug withdrawal? Was it social when I
had to wash my hands, because I was
embarassed about stinking like a
cigarette? The only time that smoking was
even remotely social was when I smoked
around other smokers and that was because
misery loves company.
I used to believe that cigarettes were the
perfect companion to alcohol. Besides
stress, this one was a doozy for me. Oh
how I used to think, " If I only smoked
when I drank. I would be a happy smoker."
Even though this illusion was much
craftier than a lot of the other ones. It
was still an illusion.
The truth is that much like stress,
alcohol created a physiological reaction
that pulled nicotine out of my bloodstream
at an accelerated rate. Unlike like stress
though, whatever anxiety I was feeling
from drug withdrawal was being masked by
the intoxication from the alcohol. So even
though I was relieving an accelerated drug
withdrawal, I wasn't aware of it, because
I wasn't feeling the anxiety that stress
causes. I still love my beer and it sure
tastes a lot better now that I don't have
to chase it with a cigarette.
Whenever I quit smoking and saw people
smoking. I used to believe that they got
to smoke and I didn't. The truth is,
Smokers HAVE to smoke to "feel normal".
They HAVE to smoke to keep the anxieties
of not smoking at bay. They HAVE to smoke
keep the compounded problem of drug
withdrawal from happening 20, 30,40 time
plus a day. They do not GET to smoke.
Thankfully I no longer HAVE to do that.
I no longer believe in the cigarettte. I
used to. I used to belive that cigarettes
did something for me. I know better now.
They only DO TO ME.
Probably a quitter's biggest obstacle is
fear and a lot of times that fear has a
double edge sword. The fear of failure and
the fear of success. We don't want to
fail, because we want to finally rid
ourselves of this addiction, BUT at the
same time, if we succeed, that means that
we will never "get" to smoke again.
Don't be afraid to quit smoking. Don't
fear relapse. You can never relapse if you
don't smoke and smoking again is aways
YOUR choice, not some "Nicodemon's".
Don't be afraid to succeed either. Being
successful doesn't mean that you'll never
GET to smoke anymore. It means that you'll
never HAVE to smoke again.
I read a quote in a book a while back that
really stuck with me.
It said " Fear is only misguided faith."
Quit putting faith in cigarettes and you
might be surprised how much easier
quitting smoking can be.
Quitting smoking is a temporary
adjustment, but it just that....TEMPORARY.
FREEDOM IS FOREVER!!!
Be patient with yourself. This really is
the greatest gift that you are giving
yourself. Sometimes it just takes a little
time to unwrap it.
Eric
I Freed myself 7/7/04
|
yogahoneybunny
Supporter
Joined: 04 Jan 2006 Posts: 871 Location: Strumica, Macedonia
Thanks: 2
Thanked:0
Posted: 12-31-07 14:41pm
Right on... way to go, Eric. And thanks
for sharing your story.
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