Author Topic: I will be free  (Read 1053 times)

0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.

Offline rc-grizzly

  • Quitter
  • **
  • Posts: 498
  • Interests: family, fishing, camping
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: I will be free
« Reply #3 on: September 25, 2009, 05:25:00 PM »
Jaybercrow, congrats on your decision to quit. Good luck. Also, if you need to talk, PM me and I'll contact and send my number.

Offline Gump

  • Quitter
  • **
  • Posts: 2,710
    • framedartexpert.com
  • Interests: my daughterquittingwinningbusinessrock climbingbodybuildingguitarscubasnowboardingtheaterlive bandsdead bandspretty much anything in naturenot having nature invite itself into my househelping other people to quit nicotineAtlanta Picture Framer
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: I will be free
« Reply #2 on: September 25, 2009, 07:22:00 AM »
Welcome, Jaybercrow. You're right about the next couple of weeks being intense. Everyone has some withdrawal, and it manifests in different ways. Common ones of course are fog (lack of concentration, unclear thinking), screwed up sleep, nervousness and irritability. There are definitely others that some people have. BUT they DO go away after awhile.

In my first couple of days after quitting, I was having REALLY screwed up sleep, death dreams, waking up sweating every 45 minutes or so. That was gone by day 5. The fog continued for a while longer, but I'm pretty sure that's gone now too. I was dipping a can a day, and now at day 25 in my quit, I still spontaneously think about it once in a while, but haven't craved it in a long time.

And you're spot on right about there never being a "right" time to quit, you just do it, no matter what else is going on. I have friends I've made on here with physical problems (unrelated to tobacco), relationship problems, financial problems, etc. It would be so easy to say "Now's not the right time to quit", but there's always something we could use for an excuse, and we ALL did for years.

Just know, every one of us on here (and there's hundreds of us active, and thousands are members) knows exactly what you're going through, in a way impossible for your closest loved ones. Stick with us, promise us you'll stay quit every day, and we'll do the same for you. If you need a number to call, send me a PM and I'll gladly send you mine.

Tim/Gump
"Stupid is as stupid does"

Quit nicotine 9/1/09

Framed Art Expert

Offline jaybercrow

  • Quitter
  • **
  • Posts: 243
  • Likes Given: 0
I will be free
« on: September 25, 2009, 06:20:00 AM »
I quit yesterday. It's 6 AM and I'm getting ready to spend the day in my car. The battle will be intense but what I gain as a result of ending this addiction is well worth it.

I gain:
1. Trust in myself and my ability to no longer be a slave to anything I put in my body.
2. A greater likelihood of NOT developing cancer or gum disease or anything else that I would regret for the rest of my (potentially shortened) life.
3. $6 a day (X365 days = $2,195). That buys a whole lot of other stuff worth buying.
4. Peace of mind for my soon-to-be wife (43 days) and my three teenage daughters.

I recognize that deep down I am also "losing" something. Red Man has been a constant when times were very tough and has (in my mind) always provided a sense of calm when I needed life to slow down. More times than I'd care to admit, it has rushed to the front of my thoughts during a meal and has been the way I began and ended my day. Over the past five years there have days when the only thing I looked forward to was that end of the day chew.

But I'm done. I'm done saying to myself every time I buy a pack that this is my last one. I'm done plotting and planning my quit only to come up with some stupid reason why it isn't a good time. Next two weeks will be tough and that's okay. I'd rather experience the symptoms of withdrawal than go through what else might be lurking around the next corner.

Jaybercrow