Author Topic: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!  (Read 8760 times)

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Offline jake frawley

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #168 on: December 14, 2013, 10:18:00 PM »
Quote from: KC_Guy
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
Day 206... Why I Stay...

A couple days ago, ERuss texted me and gave me a heads up about Jake. I've been following that unfold and exchanging texts and feeling really deeply moved by the whole thing. It was beautiful and I'm so proud to be part of this group. It has certainly bonded us in a way that hasn't happened in over 200 days posting together.

But that's not why I stay. It's just a bonus.

Last night I went out to watch a band play and hang out with friends. I had several drinks and my guard was definitely down. The group I was with were smokers and at one point in the night, we were in the outdoor part of the club and my friend lit up and I had a split second of temptation and I realized with absolute clarity that if I had not committed to KTC and had not posted roll that morning, I would have bummed a smoke from her. And it might have taken awhile to buy my own pack again, but I would have been on the road to slavery. But I didn't. And it was easy. Because I made a promise to quit for that day and that's what I was gonna do.

So on this already somewhat sappy day, let me say thank you KTC community for continuing to  come back and promise every day to be stronger than this addiction. I'm not going anywhere. This place saved my life.
I can't speak for all of August. But I am definitely happy you are in our group. I quit with you everyday. Nice job on fighting off that crave.
Ah very cool..... had a strong crave on the way north this evening. And got on here to distract myself. Needed to see this..... you won. Way to be an example. Ktc needs you here also. Too many of us redneck men around. You bring class.

Offline KC_Guy

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #167 on: December 14, 2013, 10:08:00 PM »
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
Day 206... Why I Stay...

A couple days ago, ERuss texted me and gave me a heads up about Jake. I've been following that unfold and exchanging texts and feeling really deeply moved by the whole thing. It was beautiful and I'm so proud to be part of this group. It has certainly bonded us in a way that hasn't happened in over 200 days posting together.

But that's not why I stay. It's just a bonus.

Last night I went out to watch a band play and hang out with friends. I had several drinks and my guard was definitely down. The group I was with were smokers and at one point in the night, we were in the outdoor part of the club and my friend lit up and I had a split second of temptation and I realized with absolute clarity that if I had not committed to KTC and had not posted roll that morning, I would have bummed a smoke from her. And it might have taken awhile to buy my own pack again, but I would have been on the road to slavery. But I didn't. And it was easy. Because I made a promise to quit for that day and that's what I was gonna do.

So on this already somewhat sappy day, let me say thank you KTC community for continuing to come back and promise every day to be stronger than this addiction. I'm not going anywhere. This place saved my life.
I can't speak for all of August. But I am definitely happy you are in our group. I quit with you everyday. Nice job on fighting off that crave.
Quit Date 05/20/2013

HOF 08/27/13
2nd Floor 12/5/13
3rd Floor 3/15/14
4th Floor 6/23/14
5th Floor 10/1/14

Offline zam

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #166 on: December 14, 2013, 10:07:00 PM »
Quote from: Its_Got2Happen
Quote from: 2mch2lv4
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
Day 206... Why I Stay...

A couple days ago, ERuss texted me and gave me a heads up about Jake. I've been following that unfold and exchanging texts and feeling really deeply moved by the whole thing. It was beautiful and I'm so proud to be part of this group. It has certainly bonded us in a way that hasn't happened in over 200 days posting together.

But that's not why I stay. It's just a bonus.

Last night I went out to watch a band play and hang out with friends. I had several drinks and my guard was definitely down. The group I was with were smokers and at one point in the night, we were in the outdoor part of the club and my friend lit up and I had a split second of temptation and I realized with absolute clarity that if I had not committed to KTC and had not posted roll that morning, I would have bummed a smoke from her. And it might have taken awhile to buy my own pack again, but I would have been on the road to slavery. But I didn't. And it was easy. Because I made a promise to quit for that day and that's what I was gonna do.

So on this already somewhat sappy day, let me say thank you KTC community for continuing to  come back and promise every day to be stronger than this addiction. I'm not going anywhere. This place saved my life.
In my 500+ days there have also been nights just as you have described. Had it not been for my promise to you and the rest of my quit family, I too would fall back into daily slavery. Thanks for being my sister in quit.

:wub:
I love it. Nice win LHG, (and nice pic on the text thread).

I wish that I could get the two of you in a room with my little sister for a couple hours. She is a ninja smoker, or at least she thinks she is. She has been at it since childhood and I have been on her ass since she was 14. Of course until 340 something days ago my words were hypocritical and meaningless.

Keep up the great work girls.
Thanks for the reminder LHG. Hell, this (KTC) is the cheapest insurance I can think of against returning to years of nicotine slavery. Like you, I have had that day where I KNEW that a promise was the only thing between me and returning to the can. Good stuff. Thanks.
*Quit today. Full stop. No qualifiers. Tomorrow?... IDK, IDC.

Offline Its_Got2Happen

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #165 on: December 14, 2013, 03:09:00 PM »
Quote from: 2mch2lv4
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
Day 206... Why I Stay...

A couple days ago, ERuss texted me and gave me a heads up about Jake. I've been following that unfold and exchanging texts and feeling really deeply moved by the whole thing. It was beautiful and I'm so proud to be part of this group. It has certainly bonded us in a way that hasn't happened in over 200 days posting together.

But that's not why I stay. It's just a bonus.

Last night I went out to watch a band play and hang out with friends. I had several drinks and my guard was definitely down. The group I was with were smokers and at one point in the night, we were in the outdoor part of the club and my friend lit up and I had a split second of temptation and I realized with absolute clarity that if I had not committed to KTC and had not posted roll that morning, I would have bummed a smoke from her. And it might have taken awhile to buy my own pack again, but I would have been on the road to slavery. But I didn't. And it was easy. Because I made a promise to quit for that day and that's what I was gonna do.

So on this already somewhat sappy day, let me say thank you KTC community for continuing to  come back and promise every day to be stronger than this addiction. I'm not going anywhere. This place saved my life.
In my 500+ days there have also been nights just as you have described. Had it not been for my promise to you and the rest of my quit family, I too would fall back into daily slavery. Thanks for being my sister in quit.

:wub:
I love it. Nice win LHG, (and nice pic on the text thread).

I wish that I could get the two of you in a room with my little sister for a couple hours. She is a ninja smoker, or at least she thinks she is. She has been at it since childhood and I have been on her ass since she was 14. Of course until 340 something days ago my words were hypocritical and meaningless.

Keep up the great work girls.

Offline 2mch2lv4

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #164 on: December 14, 2013, 02:54:00 PM »
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
Day 206... Why I Stay...

A couple days ago, ERuss texted me and gave me a heads up about Jake. I've been following that unfold and exchanging texts and feeling really deeply moved by the whole thing. It was beautiful and I'm so proud to be part of this group. It has certainly bonded us in a way that hasn't happened in over 200 days posting together.

But that's not why I stay. It's just a bonus.

Last night I went out to watch a band play and hang out with friends. I had several drinks and my guard was definitely down. The group I was with were smokers and at one point in the night, we were in the outdoor part of the club and my friend lit up and I had a split second of temptation and I realized with absolute clarity that if I had not committed to KTC and had not posted roll that morning, I would have bummed a smoke from her. And it might have taken awhile to buy my own pack again, but I would have been on the road to slavery. But I didn't. And it was easy. Because I made a promise to quit for that day and that's what I was gonna do.

So on this already somewhat sappy day, let me say thank you KTC community for continuing to come back and promise every day to be stronger than this addiction. I'm not going anywhere. This place saved my life.
In my 500+ days there have also been nights just as you have described. Had it not been for my promise to you and the rest of my quit family, I too would fall back into daily slavery. Thanks for being my sister in quit.

:wub:

Offline LionHeartedGirl

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #163 on: December 14, 2013, 02:50:00 PM »
Day 206... Why I Stay...

A couple days ago, ERuss texted me and gave me a heads up about Jake. I've been following that unfold and exchanging texts and feeling really deeply moved by the whole thing. It was beautiful and I'm so proud to be part of this group. It has certainly bonded us in a way that hasn't happened in over 200 days posting together.

But that's not why I stay. It's just a bonus.

Last night I went out to watch a band play and hang out with friends. I had several drinks and my guard was definitely down. The group I was with were smokers and at one point in the night, we were in the outdoor part of the club and my friend lit up and I had a split second of temptation and I realized with absolute clarity that if I had not committed to KTC and had not posted roll that morning, I would have bummed a smoke from her. And it might have taken awhile to buy my own pack again, but I would have been on the road to slavery. But I didn't. And it was easy. Because I made a promise to quit for that day and that's what I was gonna do.

So on this already somewhat sappy day, let me say thank you KTC community for continuing to come back and promise every day to be stronger than this addiction. I'm not going anywhere. This place saved my life.
QUIT LIKE A GIRL!

Quit Date: 5/23/13
HOF: 8/30/13

Offline dabean22

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #162 on: November 06, 2013, 09:26:00 PM »
Quote from: Erussell
Quote from: Its_Got2Happen
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
Quote from: Its_Got2Happen
Quote from: AppleJack
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
I finally wrote a HOF speech... and then in a grand illusion of grandeur I tried to post in Hall of Legends! Sorry mods... I'm sure you'll figure it out. :) Anyway, I'll put it here in my thread for posterity.

*********************************

I needed 150 days to write a Hall of Fame speech. My 100th day fell on August 30thÂ… which would have been my 16th wedding anniversary if I hadnÂ’t left my marriage and moved out two weeks earlier. I wasnÂ’t ready to write a speech 50 days ago.

To say I picked a stressful time to quit using nicotine is an understatement. There were many times I questioned the wisdom of my decision. After all, donÂ’t many people actually START smoking while going through a divorce? The crutch would have been understandable. ExceptÂ… I left my marriage for me. I wanted to be healthier. I wanted to be better. I wanted to live my life fully.

And there was no place for smoking in that.

I started smoking at 16 while I was drinking. I begged a friend for my first cigarette and loved it. I was a ninja smoker until I moved out 4 years later for the Air Force. ItÂ’s not easy hiding the smell of cigarette smoke from ex smoker parents but I managed to do it by wearing an outer layer of clothing when I smoked and gloves. I was sneaky and pathetic. Also, I didnÂ’t smoke that much or everyday. That changed when I moved out and quickly started a pack a day habit. I hated being a smoker and it was years before I would buy a carton and admit to myself that I actually even was a smoker. I convinced myself that if I just bought a pack I could quit whenever I wanted. A carton was a commitment. The cost savings eventually won out.

I stopped several time, once even for five years. The first time I stopped wasn’t easy but after I had it kicked it was smooth sailing so it was easy to justify picking it up again for “just one”. I became a serial stopper. I don’t know how many times I stopped but it was probably around ten.

I’m writing this for anyone who might be like I was. I’m writing this for anyone who is scared and exhausted and isn’t sure it’s worth “trying again”. I’m writing this for the serial stopper who is feeling like if I could “attempt a quit” TEN times then what makes this time any different? And if I could quit for FIVE YEARS and start again, what hope is there for them? There is an answer to this question that I have come to see as tantamount to my quit and I would daresay yours as well. It is a simple fact that I have seen rejected over and over on this website… usually by “serial stoppers” such as myself. You may find yourself bristling at it and thinking “not me”! You might think yourself stronger than me. You might think yourself more resolved or convicted or even more upright than me. You might think yourself different but I can assure you with certainty… you are not different.

You are not stronger than me.
You do not have more resolve than I had.
You do not have a secret stash of conviction that I lacked.
You are not morally superior to me.
You are not special.

If you do not accept this, as I did, then you will likely fail. It might take five years, but the odds of you achieving a life without nicotine are incredibly low.  Here is that simple truth:

You are an addict.

For many on this site, that is such a no-brainer. They KNEW they were addicts… it was obvious to them. But for me… a good mom who cooks healthy food for her family and has normal friends and drives a minivan and is intelligent and strong and self controlled and moral and none of those things that addicts are? The fact that I am an addict totally blew my mind! See, I knew I was addicted when I was smoking. But I thought I could get “unaddicted”. And if I was “unaddicted”, then I could have “just one”. I genuinely believed I could control it.

I thought if I only had a cigarette while I was drinking with friends I could remain unaddicted. This thought always led to me smoking a pack a day within a week.

I thought if I only had a cigarette when my brother was visiting I could remain unaddicted. And then I would be smoking a pack a day within a week.

I thought as long as I wasnÂ’t smoking during times of high stress I could control it. This had me smoking a pack a day within a week. Every time.

I thought if I limited it to a couple cigarettes in the evening after work I would remain unaddicted. Guess what? Within a week I was smoking all day. Every day.

I thought (this one is good) if I just thought of nicotine as butter! Too much butter is bad, right?! Everything in moderation! When I stumbled upon this logic I was so proud of myself. I walked around in this fantasyland for a week when I found myself “moderating” a pack a day addiction again.

I went through ever single mental gymnastic a person could possibly concoct to figure out how to smoke without being addicted. None of them worked. It wasnÂ’t until I started reading on Kill the Can that the light turned on. And it turned on bright and harsh.

148 days ago (after a relatively easy first two days) I sat on this website and said to myself, “Oh my God, Danielle. You are an addict. How did you miss this?” I knew what that meant. Addicts are addicts for life. It’s not about the act of smoking. It is what I am, whether I’m smoking or not. And recognizing this saved my life. And it freed me from the burden of figuring out how to feed my addiction without being its slave that has plagued me for 24 years. No longer did I have to try to figure out how to smoke without becoming a smoker. I could just get off that dizzying and exhausting and deadly merry-go-round of deadly “logic” and say this:

Never again. For ANY reason.

And you my friendÂ… You can do this too. Post roll everyday. Promise yourself, your brothers (and sisters!) that TODAYÂ… you wonÂ’t use nicotine. Keep your guard up.

Remember my failed marriage? After day 100 I was living in an apartment and dealing with stress and worry like I have never experienced before. I am surrounded by smokers and I have a lovely back porch where I can picture myself every single night unwinding slowly while exhaling cigarette smoke. I loved my first cigarette. I loved my last one too. I just happen to hate killing myself more. There are daysÂ… even at 150Â… where that daily promise is the only thing making it easy. There isnÂ’t a decision to make once IÂ’ve made that promise. ItÂ’s done. I know firsthand that in five years, a day may come where I will be thankful I made that promise for that day.

I will always be an addict, but I am no longer a slave. And freedom is so sweet. I invite you to come taste it with me.
Well said, my sister. Well said.
Well done LHG. That was worth the wait. I am happy that you stuck it out. I had a great feeling about you even when you were only a few weeks in.

There is one part about your speech that I am struggling with though.....

It is the word "love". It concerns me because I know there is a falseness in the "love" that you remember. Sometimes the memory of that "love" can become very powerful in a persons life, under certain circumstances. Addiction is powerful. Heroin addicts "love" the rush of a needle in their arm. Crack heads "love" to inhale deeply of their poison. Alcoholics "love" the what that first swallow seems to do to their nervous system. These are fleeting moments of "pleasure".....that come along with a terrible price and horrible consequences. That is nature of addiction. Your addiction mind clings, even subconsciously, to a memory of "love".

There are many pleasures in this world that come without such a high cost. For the past 300 days I have been trying to find those, and "love" them, as much as I thought I "loved" my dip. Sun sets, full moons, children laughter, a good movie, a good book, a good conversation.

You have a great quit going LGH, I am glad to have gotten to know you a bit. I am sorry to pick on just one word, but I just thought I would encourage you to develop some good old fashioned HATE. Hate for a poison that made you a slave for so long. Hate for a poison that has stolen every single one of my grandparents, and countless other family members. I trust that you have lost loved ones too. I am glad that your parents had the wisdom to quit. And now look at you. You have done the same, and you had the courage to bring your brother along with you. Love your new found freedom, hate the poison. Do not romanticize your addiction. Nicotine is so unworthy of your fond memories.

Never again for any reason, LHG. Damn proud to be quit with you. Keep up the great work. Stay active on the site, your words help many.
Ryan, you are absolutely correct and I thought... "IG2H is gonna call me on that!" when I wrote it.

I absolutely hate nicotine. I do think though that for a serial stopper like me, some people think they will get to a place where they just don't like it anymore. They are waiting for this to happen and think that is when they will finally be able to "control" it. That is why many people (my brother can attest to this one, I know) will even switch to a brand they find distasteful. They think that will help them regulate it. Been there, done that.

My point was not to romanticize nicotine. I don't. But for someone who finds it relatively easy to stop but keeps coming back, I wanted to address those games they play with themselves. And one game is (I've heard it here) is "I hate the taste". Hating the taste doesn't make anyone's quit stronger. The only thing that makes a quit foolproof in my opinion is throwing all the bullshit away and admitting you're an addict and promising daily to not use it.

Anyway, again, I knew that you specifically would call me on it and I appreciate it! I hate it as much as you though. I just didn't quit because I hate the taste or the rush. Can't wait around for that, won't happen. Nicotine will NEVER release you.
Ahh, you know me. Great points LHG. Cant wait around until you hate it. I get it. Awesome speech anyway. Congrats on 150 :)
I just read your HOF speech,, your a bad ass! I quit with you my Sister!
Yeah that's right sis. If you took much longer to write your speech I was going to beat you to it. That just wouldn't be right. I join you in HOF in 5 days.

Damn sis, you are setting the bar pretty high. I don't think I'll be able to beat it but you know I'm competitive and I'll try.

Thank you for convincing me that NOW is the time to quit and that this place was worth the hassle of figuring out the process of "posting roll".
Quit 8/04/13
HOF 11/11/13
Thanks mostly to LHG. That girl rocks the world. I love you Sis.
Someone, somewhere out there is suffering through a more intense crave than me and that person is staying quit. As will I. -JoeMellow
SkyDiver - The first step is a bitch but that's when the fun starts.

Offline jake frawley

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #161 on: October 24, 2013, 11:48:00 PM »
Finally got to read you H.OF. speech! It was great! You said it better then I ever could. The day we realize we are ADDICTS is the day we recognize what it takes to be truley free! Well done. You are an inspiration!

Offline Radman

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #160 on: October 24, 2013, 07:51:00 AM »
Quote from: DennyX
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
But for meÂ… a good mom who cooks healthy food for her family and has normal friends and drives a minivan and is intelligent and strong and self controlled and moral and none of those things that addicts are? The fact that I am an addict totally blew my mind!
Wow, well said LHG. If I may quote my favorite part of your speech (don't usually get to respond to speeches line by line!) I think this is brilliant. You know how many people think this? How many people think, "I'm a professoinal, not an addict", or "addicts lay in the gutter looking for their next fix", and so on and on. WE are the same as the poor guy or gal laying in the gutter, with sores all over their arms and faces, looking for the next bag of xxxxx, whatever it may be. For better or worse, our drug is legal and sold on almost every corner, and that's one of the reasons I absolutely hate nicotine. I'm proud to be quit right next to you every damn day, LHG, and proud to yell with you from the rooftops that nic has no chance today. Never again for any reason. Because just one and we will be covered with sores, laying in the gutter all over again. And I don't know if I can pull it off again. Way to go, Freedom!
Word. I work in a professional setting, and thought I was being the best dad in the world. Teaching the kids to be polite, responsible, charitable, self-sufficient, etc. Turned out, at age 2, the one thing they mimicked was my addiction.

Freaking FAIL!!! So, here I am, still...... many moons later.

NAFAR

Well done LHG.

Offline Erussell

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #159 on: October 23, 2013, 07:51:00 PM »
Quote from: Its_Got2Happen
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
Quote from: Its_Got2Happen
Quote from: AppleJack
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
I finally wrote a HOF speech... and then in a grand illusion of grandeur I tried to post in Hall of Legends! Sorry mods... I'm sure you'll figure it out. :) Anyway, I'll put it here in my thread for posterity.

*********************************

I needed 150 days to write a Hall of Fame speech. My 100th day fell on August 30thÂ… which would have been my 16th wedding anniversary if I hadnÂ’t left my marriage and moved out two weeks earlier. I wasnÂ’t ready to write a speech 50 days ago.

To say I picked a stressful time to quit using nicotine is an understatement. There were many times I questioned the wisdom of my decision. After all, donÂ’t many people actually START smoking while going through a divorce? The crutch would have been understandable. ExceptÂ… I left my marriage for me. I wanted to be healthier. I wanted to be better. I wanted to live my life fully.

And there was no place for smoking in that.

I started smoking at 16 while I was drinking. I begged a friend for my first cigarette and loved it. I was a ninja smoker until I moved out 4 years later for the Air Force. ItÂ’s not easy hiding the smell of cigarette smoke from ex smoker parents but I managed to do it by wearing an outer layer of clothing when I smoked and gloves. I was sneaky and pathetic. Also, I didnÂ’t smoke that much or everyday. That changed when I moved out and quickly started a pack a day habit. I hated being a smoker and it was years before I would buy a carton and admit to myself that I actually even was a smoker. I convinced myself that if I just bought a pack I could quit whenever I wanted. A carton was a commitment. The cost savings eventually won out.

I stopped several time, once even for five years. The first time I stopped wasn’t easy but after I had it kicked it was smooth sailing so it was easy to justify picking it up again for “just one”. I became a serial stopper. I don’t know how many times I stopped but it was probably around ten.

I’m writing this for anyone who might be like I was. I’m writing this for anyone who is scared and exhausted and isn’t sure it’s worth “trying again”. I’m writing this for the serial stopper who is feeling like if I could “attempt a quit” TEN times then what makes this time any different? And if I could quit for FIVE YEARS and start again, what hope is there for them? There is an answer to this question that I have come to see as tantamount to my quit and I would daresay yours as well. It is a simple fact that I have seen rejected over and over on this website… usually by “serial stoppers” such as myself. You may find yourself bristling at it and thinking “not me”! You might think yourself stronger than me. You might think yourself more resolved or convicted or even more upright than me. You might think yourself different but I can assure you with certainty… you are not different.

You are not stronger than me.
You do not have more resolve than I had.
You do not have a secret stash of conviction that I lacked.
You are not morally superior to me.
You are not special.

If you do not accept this, as I did, then you will likely fail. It might take five years, but the odds of you achieving a life without nicotine are incredibly low.  Here is that simple truth:

You are an addict.

For many on this site, that is such a no-brainer. They KNEW they were addicts… it was obvious to them. But for me… a good mom who cooks healthy food for her family and has normal friends and drives a minivan and is intelligent and strong and self controlled and moral and none of those things that addicts are? The fact that I am an addict totally blew my mind! See, I knew I was addicted when I was smoking. But I thought I could get “unaddicted”. And if I was “unaddicted”, then I could have “just one”. I genuinely believed I could control it.

I thought if I only had a cigarette while I was drinking with friends I could remain unaddicted. This thought always led to me smoking a pack a day within a week.

I thought if I only had a cigarette when my brother was visiting I could remain unaddicted. And then I would be smoking a pack a day within a week.

I thought as long as I wasnÂ’t smoking during times of high stress I could control it. This had me smoking a pack a day within a week. Every time.

I thought if I limited it to a couple cigarettes in the evening after work I would remain unaddicted. Guess what? Within a week I was smoking all day. Every day.

I thought (this one is good) if I just thought of nicotine as butter! Too much butter is bad, right?! Everything in moderation! When I stumbled upon this logic I was so proud of myself. I walked around in this fantasyland for a week when I found myself “moderating” a pack a day addiction again.

I went through ever single mental gymnastic a person could possibly concoct to figure out how to smoke without being addicted. None of them worked. It wasnÂ’t until I started reading on Kill the Can that the light turned on. And it turned on bright and harsh.

148 days ago (after a relatively easy first two days) I sat on this website and said to myself, “Oh my God, Danielle. You are an addict. How did you miss this?” I knew what that meant. Addicts are addicts for life. It’s not about the act of smoking. It is what I am, whether I’m smoking or not. And recognizing this saved my life. And it freed me from the burden of figuring out how to feed my addiction without being its slave that has plagued me for 24 years. No longer did I have to try to figure out how to smoke without becoming a smoker. I could just get off that dizzying and exhausting and deadly merry-go-round of deadly “logic” and say this:

Never again. For ANY reason.

And you my friendÂ… You can do this too. Post roll everyday. Promise yourself, your brothers (and sisters!) that TODAYÂ… you wonÂ’t use nicotine. Keep your guard up.

Remember my failed marriage? After day 100 I was living in an apartment and dealing with stress and worry like I have never experienced before. I am surrounded by smokers and I have a lovely back porch where I can picture myself every single night unwinding slowly while exhaling cigarette smoke. I loved my first cigarette. I loved my last one too. I just happen to hate killing myself more. There are daysÂ… even at 150Â… where that daily promise is the only thing making it easy. There isnÂ’t a decision to make once IÂ’ve made that promise. ItÂ’s done. I know firsthand that in five years, a day may come where I will be thankful I made that promise for that day.

I will always be an addict, but I am no longer a slave. And freedom is so sweet. I invite you to come taste it with me.
Well said, my sister. Well said.
Well done LHG. That was worth the wait. I am happy that you stuck it out. I had a great feeling about you even when you were only a few weeks in.

There is one part about your speech that I am struggling with though.....

It is the word "love". It concerns me because I know there is a falseness in the "love" that you remember. Sometimes the memory of that "love" can become very powerful in a persons life, under certain circumstances. Addiction is powerful. Heroin addicts "love" the rush of a needle in their arm. Crack heads "love" to inhale deeply of their poison. Alcoholics "love" the what that first swallow seems to do to their nervous system. These are fleeting moments of "pleasure".....that come along with a terrible price and horrible consequences. That is nature of addiction. Your addiction mind clings, even subconsciously, to a memory of "love".

There are many pleasures in this world that come without such a high cost. For the past 300 days I have been trying to find those, and "love" them, as much as I thought I "loved" my dip. Sun sets, full moons, children laughter, a good movie, a good book, a good conversation.

You have a great quit going LGH, I am glad to have gotten to know you a bit. I am sorry to pick on just one word, but I just thought I would encourage you to develop some good old fashioned HATE. Hate for a poison that made you a slave for so long. Hate for a poison that has stolen every single one of my grandparents, and countless other family members. I trust that you have lost loved ones too. I am glad that your parents had the wisdom to quit. And now look at you. You have done the same, and you had the courage to bring your brother along with you. Love your new found freedom, hate the poison. Do not romanticize your addiction. Nicotine is so unworthy of your fond memories.

Never again for any reason, LHG. Damn proud to be quit with you. Keep up the great work. Stay active on the site, your words help many.
Ryan, you are absolutely correct and I thought... "IG2H is gonna call me on that!" when I wrote it.

I absolutely hate nicotine. I do think though that for a serial stopper like me, some people think they will get to a place where they just don't like it anymore. They are waiting for this to happen and think that is when they will finally be able to "control" it. That is why many people (my brother can attest to this one, I know) will even switch to a brand they find distasteful. They think that will help them regulate it. Been there, done that.

My point was not to romanticize nicotine. I don't. But for someone who finds it relatively easy to stop but keeps coming back, I wanted to address those games they play with themselves. And one game is (I've heard it here) is "I hate the taste". Hating the taste doesn't make anyone's quit stronger. The only thing that makes a quit foolproof in my opinion is throwing all the bullshit away and admitting you're an addict and promising daily to not use it.

Anyway, again, I knew that you specifically would call me on it and I appreciate it! I hate it as much as you though. I just didn't quit because I hate the taste or the rush. Can't wait around for that, won't happen. Nicotine will NEVER release you.
Ahh, you know me. Great points LHG. Cant wait around until you hate it. I get it. Awesome speech anyway. Congrats on 150 :)
I just read your HOF speech,, your a bad ass! I quit with you my Sister!
I would rather lose to a cheater than win as a cheater.

Offline Its_Got2Happen

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #158 on: October 20, 2013, 01:17:00 PM »
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
Quote from: Its_Got2Happen
Quote from: AppleJack
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
I finally wrote a HOF speech... and then in a grand illusion of grandeur I tried to post in Hall of Legends! Sorry mods... I'm sure you'll figure it out. :) Anyway, I'll put it here in my thread for posterity.

*********************************

I needed 150 days to write a Hall of Fame speech. My 100th day fell on August 30thÂ… which would have been my 16th wedding anniversary if I hadnÂ’t left my marriage and moved out two weeks earlier. I wasnÂ’t ready to write a speech 50 days ago.

To say I picked a stressful time to quit using nicotine is an understatement. There were many times I questioned the wisdom of my decision. After all, donÂ’t many people actually START smoking while going through a divorce? The crutch would have been understandable. ExceptÂ… I left my marriage for me. I wanted to be healthier. I wanted to be better. I wanted to live my life fully.

And there was no place for smoking in that.

I started smoking at 16 while I was drinking. I begged a friend for my first cigarette and loved it. I was a ninja smoker until I moved out 4 years later for the Air Force. ItÂ’s not easy hiding the smell of cigarette smoke from ex smoker parents but I managed to do it by wearing an outer layer of clothing when I smoked and gloves. I was sneaky and pathetic. Also, I didnÂ’t smoke that much or everyday. That changed when I moved out and quickly started a pack a day habit. I hated being a smoker and it was years before I would buy a carton and admit to myself that I actually even was a smoker. I convinced myself that if I just bought a pack I could quit whenever I wanted. A carton was a commitment. The cost savings eventually won out.

I stopped several time, once even for five years. The first time I stopped wasn’t easy but after I had it kicked it was smooth sailing so it was easy to justify picking it up again for “just one”. I became a serial stopper. I don’t know how many times I stopped but it was probably around ten.

I’m writing this for anyone who might be like I was. I’m writing this for anyone who is scared and exhausted and isn’t sure it’s worth “trying again”. I’m writing this for the serial stopper who is feeling like if I could “attempt a quit” TEN times then what makes this time any different? And if I could quit for FIVE YEARS and start again, what hope is there for them? There is an answer to this question that I have come to see as tantamount to my quit and I would daresay yours as well. It is a simple fact that I have seen rejected over and over on this website… usually by “serial stoppers” such as myself. You may find yourself bristling at it and thinking “not me”! You might think yourself stronger than me. You might think yourself more resolved or convicted or even more upright than me. You might think yourself different but I can assure you with certainty… you are not different.

You are not stronger than me.
You do not have more resolve than I had.
You do not have a secret stash of conviction that I lacked.
You are not morally superior to me.
You are not special.

If you do not accept this, as I did, then you will likely fail. It might take five years, but the odds of you achieving a life without nicotine are incredibly low.  Here is that simple truth:

You are an addict.

For many on this site, that is such a no-brainer. They KNEW they were addicts… it was obvious to them. But for me… a good mom who cooks healthy food for her family and has normal friends and drives a minivan and is intelligent and strong and self controlled and moral and none of those things that addicts are? The fact that I am an addict totally blew my mind! See, I knew I was addicted when I was smoking. But I thought I could get “unaddicted”. And if I was “unaddicted”, then I could have “just one”. I genuinely believed I could control it.

I thought if I only had a cigarette while I was drinking with friends I could remain unaddicted. This thought always led to me smoking a pack a day within a week.

I thought if I only had a cigarette when my brother was visiting I could remain unaddicted. And then I would be smoking a pack a day within a week.

I thought as long as I wasnÂ’t smoking during times of high stress I could control it. This had me smoking a pack a day within a week. Every time.

I thought if I limited it to a couple cigarettes in the evening after work I would remain unaddicted. Guess what? Within a week I was smoking all day. Every day.

I thought (this one is good) if I just thought of nicotine as butter! Too much butter is bad, right?! Everything in moderation! When I stumbled upon this logic I was so proud of myself. I walked around in this fantasyland for a week when I found myself “moderating” a pack a day addiction again.

I went through ever single mental gymnastic a person could possibly concoct to figure out how to smoke without being addicted. None of them worked. It wasnÂ’t until I started reading on Kill the Can that the light turned on. And it turned on bright and harsh.

148 days ago (after a relatively easy first two days) I sat on this website and said to myself, “Oh my God, Danielle. You are an addict. How did you miss this?” I knew what that meant. Addicts are addicts for life. It’s not about the act of smoking. It is what I am, whether I’m smoking or not. And recognizing this saved my life. And it freed me from the burden of figuring out how to feed my addiction without being its slave that has plagued me for 24 years. No longer did I have to try to figure out how to smoke without becoming a smoker. I could just get off that dizzying and exhausting and deadly merry-go-round of deadly “logic” and say this:

Never again. For ANY reason.

And you my friendÂ… You can do this too. Post roll everyday. Promise yourself, your brothers (and sisters!) that TODAYÂ… you wonÂ’t use nicotine. Keep your guard up.

Remember my failed marriage? After day 100 I was living in an apartment and dealing with stress and worry like I have never experienced before. I am surrounded by smokers and I have a lovely back porch where I can picture myself every single night unwinding slowly while exhaling cigarette smoke. I loved my first cigarette. I loved my last one too. I just happen to hate killing myself more. There are daysÂ… even at 150Â… where that daily promise is the only thing making it easy. There isnÂ’t a decision to make once IÂ’ve made that promise. ItÂ’s done. I know firsthand that in five years, a day may come where I will be thankful I made that promise for that day.

I will always be an addict, but I am no longer a slave. And freedom is so sweet. I invite you to come taste it with me.
Well said, my sister. Well said.
Well done LHG. That was worth the wait. I am happy that you stuck it out. I had a great feeling about you even when you were only a few weeks in.

There is one part about your speech that I am struggling with though.....

It is the word "love". It concerns me because I know there is a falseness in the "love" that you remember. Sometimes the memory of that "love" can become very powerful in a persons life, under certain circumstances. Addiction is powerful. Heroin addicts "love" the rush of a needle in their arm. Crack heads "love" to inhale deeply of their poison. Alcoholics "love" the what that first swallow seems to do to their nervous system. These are fleeting moments of "pleasure".....that come along with a terrible price and horrible consequences. That is nature of addiction. Your addiction mind clings, even subconsciously, to a memory of "love".

There are many pleasures in this world that come without such a high cost. For the past 300 days I have been trying to find those, and "love" them, as much as I thought I "loved" my dip. Sun sets, full moons, children laughter, a good movie, a good book, a good conversation.

You have a great quit going LGH, I am glad to have gotten to know you a bit. I am sorry to pick on just one word, but I just thought I would encourage you to develop some good old fashioned HATE. Hate for a poison that made you a slave for so long. Hate for a poison that has stolen every single one of my grandparents, and countless other family members. I trust that you have lost loved ones too. I am glad that your parents had the wisdom to quit. And now look at you. You have done the same, and you had the courage to bring your brother along with you. Love your new found freedom, hate the poison. Do not romanticize your addiction. Nicotine is so unworthy of your fond memories.

Never again for any reason, LHG. Damn proud to be quit with you. Keep up the great work. Stay active on the site, your words help many.
Ryan, you are absolutely correct and I thought... "IG2H is gonna call me on that!" when I wrote it.

I absolutely hate nicotine. I do think though that for a serial stopper like me, some people think they will get to a place where they just don't like it anymore. They are waiting for this to happen and think that is when they will finally be able to "control" it. That is why many people (my brother can attest to this one, I know) will even switch to a brand they find distasteful. They think that will help them regulate it. Been there, done that.

My point was not to romanticize nicotine. I don't. But for someone who finds it relatively easy to stop but keeps coming back, I wanted to address those games they play with themselves. And one game is (I've heard it here) is "I hate the taste". Hating the taste doesn't make anyone's quit stronger. The only thing that makes a quit foolproof in my opinion is throwing all the bullshit away and admitting you're an addict and promising daily to not use it.

Anyway, again, I knew that you specifically would call me on it and I appreciate it! I hate it as much as you though. I just didn't quit because I hate the taste or the rush. Can't wait around for that, won't happen. Nicotine will NEVER release you.
Ahh, you know me. Great points LHG. Cant wait around until you hate it. I get it. Awesome speech anyway. Congrats on 150 :)

Offline DennyX

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #157 on: October 20, 2013, 10:18:00 AM »
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
But for meÂ… a good mom who cooks healthy food for her family and has normal friends and drives a minivan and is intelligent and strong and self controlled and moral and none of those things that addicts are? The fact that I am an addict totally blew my mind!
Wow, well said LHG. If I may quote my favorite part of your speech (don't usually get to respond to speeches line by line!) I think this is brilliant. You know how many people think this? How many people think, "I'm a professoinal, not an addict", or "addicts lay in the gutter looking for their next fix", and so on and on. WE are the same as the poor guy or gal laying in the gutter, with sores all over their arms and faces, looking for the next bag of xxxxx, whatever it may be. For better or worse, our drug is legal and sold on almost every corner, and that's one of the reasons I absolutely hate nicotine. I'm proud to be quit right next to you every damn day, LHG, and proud to yell with you from the rooftops that nic has no chance today. Never again for any reason. Because just one and we will be covered with sores, laying in the gutter all over again. And I don't know if I can pull it off again. Way to go, Freedom!

Offline LionHeartedGirl

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #156 on: October 20, 2013, 09:07:00 AM »
Quote from: Its_Got2Happen
Quote from: AppleJack
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
I finally wrote a HOF speech... and then in a grand illusion of grandeur I tried to post in Hall of Legends! Sorry mods... I'm sure you'll figure it out. :) Anyway, I'll put it here in my thread for posterity.

*********************************

I needed 150 days to write a Hall of Fame speech. My 100th day fell on August 30thÂ… which would have been my 16th wedding anniversary if I hadnÂ’t left my marriage and moved out two weeks earlier. I wasnÂ’t ready to write a speech 50 days ago.

To say I picked a stressful time to quit using nicotine is an understatement. There were many times I questioned the wisdom of my decision. After all, donÂ’t many people actually START smoking while going through a divorce? The crutch would have been understandable. ExceptÂ… I left my marriage for me. I wanted to be healthier. I wanted to be better. I wanted to live my life fully.

And there was no place for smoking in that.

I started smoking at 16 while I was drinking. I begged a friend for my first cigarette and loved it. I was a ninja smoker until I moved out 4 years later for the Air Force. ItÂ’s not easy hiding the smell of cigarette smoke from ex smoker parents but I managed to do it by wearing an outer layer of clothing when I smoked and gloves. I was sneaky and pathetic. Also, I didnÂ’t smoke that much or everyday. That changed when I moved out and quickly started a pack a day habit. I hated being a smoker and it was years before I would buy a carton and admit to myself that I actually even was a smoker. I convinced myself that if I just bought a pack I could quit whenever I wanted. A carton was a commitment. The cost savings eventually won out.

I stopped several time, once even for five years. The first time I stopped wasn’t easy but after I had it kicked it was smooth sailing so it was easy to justify picking it up again for “just one”. I became a serial stopper. I don’t know how many times I stopped but it was probably around ten.

I’m writing this for anyone who might be like I was. I’m writing this for anyone who is scared and exhausted and isn’t sure it’s worth “trying again”. I’m writing this for the serial stopper who is feeling like if I could “attempt a quit” TEN times then what makes this time any different? And if I could quit for FIVE YEARS and start again, what hope is there for them? There is an answer to this question that I have come to see as tantamount to my quit and I would daresay yours as well. It is a simple fact that I have seen rejected over and over on this website… usually by “serial stoppers” such as myself. You may find yourself bristling at it and thinking “not me”! You might think yourself stronger than me. You might think yourself more resolved or convicted or even more upright than me. You might think yourself different but I can assure you with certainty… you are not different.

You are not stronger than me.
You do not have more resolve than I had.
You do not have a secret stash of conviction that I lacked.
You are not morally superior to me.
You are not special.

If you do not accept this, as I did, then you will likely fail. It might take five years, but the odds of you achieving a life without nicotine are incredibly low.  Here is that simple truth:

You are an addict.

For many on this site, that is such a no-brainer. They KNEW they were addicts… it was obvious to them. But for me… a good mom who cooks healthy food for her family and has normal friends and drives a minivan and is intelligent and strong and self controlled and moral and none of those things that addicts are? The fact that I am an addict totally blew my mind! See, I knew I was addicted when I was smoking. But I thought I could get “unaddicted”. And if I was “unaddicted”, then I could have “just one”. I genuinely believed I could control it.

I thought if I only had a cigarette while I was drinking with friends I could remain unaddicted. This thought always led to me smoking a pack a day within a week.

I thought if I only had a cigarette when my brother was visiting I could remain unaddicted. And then I would be smoking a pack a day within a week.

I thought as long as I wasnÂ’t smoking during times of high stress I could control it. This had me smoking a pack a day within a week. Every time.

I thought if I limited it to a couple cigarettes in the evening after work I would remain unaddicted. Guess what? Within a week I was smoking all day. Every day.

I thought (this one is good) if I just thought of nicotine as butter! Too much butter is bad, right?! Everything in moderation! When I stumbled upon this logic I was so proud of myself. I walked around in this fantasyland for a week when I found myself “moderating” a pack a day addiction again.

I went through ever single mental gymnastic a person could possibly concoct to figure out how to smoke without being addicted. None of them worked. It wasnÂ’t until I started reading on Kill the Can that the light turned on. And it turned on bright and harsh.

148 days ago (after a relatively easy first two days) I sat on this website and said to myself, “Oh my God, Danielle. You are an addict. How did you miss this?” I knew what that meant. Addicts are addicts for life. It’s not about the act of smoking. It is what I am, whether I’m smoking or not. And recognizing this saved my life. And it freed me from the burden of figuring out how to feed my addiction without being its slave that has plagued me for 24 years. No longer did I have to try to figure out how to smoke without becoming a smoker. I could just get off that dizzying and exhausting and deadly merry-go-round of deadly “logic” and say this:

Never again. For ANY reason.

And you my friendÂ… You can do this too. Post roll everyday. Promise yourself, your brothers (and sisters!) that TODAYÂ… you wonÂ’t use nicotine. Keep your guard up.

Remember my failed marriage? After day 100 I was living in an apartment and dealing with stress and worry like I have never experienced before. I am surrounded by smokers and I have a lovely back porch where I can picture myself every single night unwinding slowly while exhaling cigarette smoke. I loved my first cigarette. I loved my last one too. I just happen to hate killing myself more. There are daysÂ… even at 150Â… where that daily promise is the only thing making it easy. There isnÂ’t a decision to make once IÂ’ve made that promise. ItÂ’s done. I know firsthand that in five years, a day may come where I will be thankful I made that promise for that day.

I will always be an addict, but I am no longer a slave. And freedom is so sweet. I invite you to come taste it with me.
Well said, my sister. Well said.
Well done LHG. That was worth the wait. I am happy that you stuck it out. I had a great feeling about you even when you were only a few weeks in.

There is one part about your speech that I am struggling with though.....

It is the word "love". It concerns me because I know there is a falseness in the "love" that you remember. Sometimes the memory of that "love" can become very powerful in a persons life, under certain circumstances. Addiction is powerful. Heroin addicts "love" the rush of a needle in their arm. Crack heads "love" to inhale deeply of their poison. Alcoholics "love" the what that first swallow seems to do to their nervous system. These are fleeting moments of "pleasure".....that come along with a terrible price and horrible consequences. That is nature of addiction. Your addiction mind clings, even subconsciously, to a memory of "love".

There are many pleasures in this world that come without such a high cost. For the past 300 days I have been trying to find those, and "love" them, as much as I thought I "loved" my dip. Sun sets, full moons, children laughter, a good movie, a good book, a good conversation.

You have a great quit going LGH, I am glad to have gotten to know you a bit. I am sorry to pick on just one word, but I just thought I would encourage you to develop some good old fashioned HATE. Hate for a poison that made you a slave for so long. Hate for a poison that has stolen every single one of my grandparents, and countless other family members. I trust that you have lost loved ones too. I am glad that your parents had the wisdom to quit. And now look at you. You have done the same, and you had the courage to bring your brother along with you. Love your new found freedom, hate the poison. Do not romanticize your addiction. Nicotine is so unworthy of your fond memories.

Never again for any reason, LHG. Damn proud to be quit with you. Keep up the great work. Stay active on the site, your words help many.
Ryan, you are absolutely correct and I thought... "IG2H is gonna call me on that!" when I wrote it.

I absolutely hate nicotine. I do think though that for a serial stopper like me, some people think they will get to a place where they just don't like it anymore. They are waiting for this to happen and think that is when they will finally be able to "control" it. That is why many people (my brother can attest to this one, I know) will even switch to a brand they find distasteful. They think that will help them regulate it. Been there, done that.

My point was not to romanticize nicotine. I don't. But for someone who finds it relatively easy to stop but keeps coming back, I wanted to address those games they play with themselves. And one game is (I've heard it here) is "I hate the taste". Hating the taste doesn't make anyone's quit stronger. The only thing that makes a quit foolproof in my opinion is throwing all the bullshit away and admitting you're an addict and promising daily to not use it.

Anyway, again, I knew that you specifically would call me on it and I appreciate it! I hate it as much as you though. I just didn't quit because I hate the taste or the rush. Can't wait around for that, won't happen. Nicotine will NEVER release you.
QUIT LIKE A GIRL!

Quit Date: 5/23/13
HOF: 8/30/13

Offline Mike from AB

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #155 on: October 20, 2013, 07:59:00 AM »
LHG, congrats to you  all the best going forward here! It took alot of work to get to 150 days  you should certainly be proud of your accomplishment today! Thanks for sharing this, the butter analogy was definitely me.

Offline Its_Got2Happen

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Re: Hello from an EX-smoker in Texas, y'all!
« Reply #154 on: October 20, 2013, 06:24:00 AM »
Quote from: AppleJack
Quote from: LionHeartedGirl
I finally wrote a HOF speech... and then in a grand illusion of grandeur I tried to post in Hall of Legends! Sorry mods... I'm sure you'll figure it out. :) Anyway, I'll put it here in my thread for posterity.

*********************************

I needed 150 days to write a Hall of Fame speech. My 100th day fell on August 30thÂ… which would have been my 16th wedding anniversary if I hadnÂ’t left my marriage and moved out two weeks earlier. I wasnÂ’t ready to write a speech 50 days ago.

To say I picked a stressful time to quit using nicotine is an understatement. There were many times I questioned the wisdom of my decision. After all, donÂ’t many people actually START smoking while going through a divorce? The crutch would have been understandable. ExceptÂ… I left my marriage for me. I wanted to be healthier. I wanted to be better. I wanted to live my life fully.

And there was no place for smoking in that.

I started smoking at 16 while I was drinking. I begged a friend for my first cigarette and loved it. I was a ninja smoker until I moved out 4 years later for the Air Force. ItÂ’s not easy hiding the smell of cigarette smoke from ex smoker parents but I managed to do it by wearing an outer layer of clothing when I smoked and gloves. I was sneaky and pathetic. Also, I didnÂ’t smoke that much or everyday. That changed when I moved out and quickly started a pack a day habit. I hated being a smoker and it was years before I would buy a carton and admit to myself that I actually even was a smoker. I convinced myself that if I just bought a pack I could quit whenever I wanted. A carton was a commitment. The cost savings eventually won out.

I stopped several time, once even for five years. The first time I stopped wasn’t easy but after I had it kicked it was smooth sailing so it was easy to justify picking it up again for “just one”. I became a serial stopper. I don’t know how many times I stopped but it was probably around ten.

I’m writing this for anyone who might be like I was. I’m writing this for anyone who is scared and exhausted and isn’t sure it’s worth “trying again”. I’m writing this for the serial stopper who is feeling like if I could “attempt a quit” TEN times then what makes this time any different? And if I could quit for FIVE YEARS and start again, what hope is there for them? There is an answer to this question that I have come to see as tantamount to my quit and I would daresay yours as well. It is a simple fact that I have seen rejected over and over on this website… usually by “serial stoppers” such as myself. You may find yourself bristling at it and thinking “not me”! You might think yourself stronger than me. You might think yourself more resolved or convicted or even more upright than me. You might think yourself different but I can assure you with certainty… you are not different.

You are not stronger than me.
You do not have more resolve than I had.
You do not have a secret stash of conviction that I lacked.
You are not morally superior to me.
You are not special.

If you do not accept this, as I did, then you will likely fail. It might take five years, but the odds of you achieving a life without nicotine are incredibly low.  Here is that simple truth:

You are an addict.

For many on this site, that is such a no-brainer. They KNEW they were addicts… it was obvious to them. But for me… a good mom who cooks healthy food for her family and has normal friends and drives a minivan and is intelligent and strong and self controlled and moral and none of those things that addicts are? The fact that I am an addict totally blew my mind! See, I knew I was addicted when I was smoking. But I thought I could get “unaddicted”. And if I was “unaddicted”, then I could have “just one”. I genuinely believed I could control it.

I thought if I only had a cigarette while I was drinking with friends I could remain unaddicted. This thought always led to me smoking a pack a day within a week.

I thought if I only had a cigarette when my brother was visiting I could remain unaddicted. And then I would be smoking a pack a day within a week.

I thought as long as I wasnÂ’t smoking during times of high stress I could control it. This had me smoking a pack a day within a week. Every time.

I thought if I limited it to a couple cigarettes in the evening after work I would remain unaddicted. Guess what? Within a week I was smoking all day. Every day.

I thought (this one is good) if I just thought of nicotine as butter! Too much butter is bad, right?! Everything in moderation! When I stumbled upon this logic I was so proud of myself. I walked around in this fantasyland for a week when I found myself “moderating” a pack a day addiction again.

I went through ever single mental gymnastic a person could possibly concoct to figure out how to smoke without being addicted. None of them worked. It wasnÂ’t until I started reading on Kill the Can that the light turned on. And it turned on bright and harsh.

148 days ago (after a relatively easy first two days) I sat on this website and said to myself, “Oh my God, Danielle. You are an addict. How did you miss this?” I knew what that meant. Addicts are addicts for life. It’s not about the act of smoking. It is what I am, whether I’m smoking or not. And recognizing this saved my life. And it freed me from the burden of figuring out how to feed my addiction without being its slave that has plagued me for 24 years. No longer did I have to try to figure out how to smoke without becoming a smoker. I could just get off that dizzying and exhausting and deadly merry-go-round of deadly “logic” and say this:

Never again. For ANY reason.

And you my friendÂ… You can do this too. Post roll everyday. Promise yourself, your brothers (and sisters!) that TODAYÂ… you wonÂ’t use nicotine. Keep your guard up.

Remember my failed marriage? After day 100 I was living in an apartment and dealing with stress and worry like I have never experienced before. I am surrounded by smokers and I have a lovely back porch where I can picture myself every single night unwinding slowly while exhaling cigarette smoke. I loved my first cigarette. I loved my last one too. I just happen to hate killing myself more. There are daysÂ… even at 150Â… where that daily promise is the only thing making it easy. There isnÂ’t a decision to make once IÂ’ve made that promise. ItÂ’s done. I know firsthand that in five years, a day may come where I will be thankful I made that promise for that day.

I will always be an addict, but I am no longer a slave. And freedom is so sweet. I invite you to come taste it with me.
Well said, my sister. Well said.
Well done LHG. That was worth the wait. I am happy that you stuck it out. I had a great feeling about you even when you were only a few weeks in.

There is one part about your speech that I am struggling with though.....

It is the word "love". It concerns me because I know there is a falseness in the "love" that you remember. Sometimes the memory of that "love" can become very powerful in a persons life, under certain circumstances. Addiction is powerful. Heroin addicts "love" the rush of a needle in their arm. Crack heads "love" to inhale deeply of their poison. Alcoholics "love" the what that first swallow seems to do to their nervous system. These are fleeting moments of "pleasure".....that come along with a terrible price and horrible consequences. That is nature of addiction. Your addiction mind clings, even subconsciously, to a memory of "love".

There are many pleasures in this world that come without such a high cost. For the past 300 days I have been trying to find those, and "love" them, as much as I thought I "loved" my dip. Sun sets, full moons, children laughter, a good movie, a good book, a good conversation.

You have a great quit going LGH, I am glad to have gotten to know you a bit. I am sorry to pick on just one word, but I just thought I would encourage you to develop some good old fashioned HATE. Hate for a poison that made you a slave for so long. Hate for a poison that has stolen every single one of my grandparents, and countless other family members. I trust that you have lost loved ones too. I am glad that your parents had the wisdom to quit. And now look at you. You have done the same, and you had the courage to bring your brother along with you. Love your new found freedom, hate the poison. Do not romanticize your addiction. Nicotine is so unworthy of your fond memories.

Never again for any reason, LHG. Damn proud to be quit with you. Keep up the great work. Stay active on the site, your words help many.