Welcome aboard bud. I started my quit on April 1st too. These guys have been nothing but supportive this hole time. Stay strong because quitting is not for pussies but you should have no problem with it your a soldier enough said. You got this
Mr AtoZ, welcome. I also quit April 1, two years ago. I want to start by thanking you for your service and commend you for your decision. I've not only been quit for awhile I have kids older than you so I have some 'fatherly' advise; I certainly regret 40+ years of trying to kill myself with nicotine. The slow death nicotine offers isn't what one thinks of when thinking of suicide. Take the word of a long term addict, starting with slavery which you know of, we pay to relinquish our freedom. Then for me because of embarrassment and shame I hid my addiction and lied to those I care the most about. Next came terrible oral hygiene, receding gums, multiple periodontal problems which lead to tooth loss and exorbitant dental bills (Which continue today). I've witnessed the painful death of oral cancer (the story of my friend Roe is in my intro). Why share this? I know that unless a addict is truly ready to quit none of this means anything. If you are truly ready and committed maybe you will gain another level of motivation from my warning. If you aren't 100% ready you will more than likely be sucked back into submission by your addiction and experience many of bullshit effects like I did.
Your level of commitment will be tested over the coming days. If you skip roll a day and justify it, in any way you will begin a road to failure. If you find yourself fighting against constructive critisizm or tough love from fellow quitters history shows your addiction maintains some control and has a better chance of winning. Quitting can't depend on luck. Odds of success with luck are the same as winning the lottery. We quit one day at a time with pure determination.
Andy and any other newbies I commit my support to you in any way I can if you show that you are 100% committed.