Ive been clean for 51 days. As of lately i have been through some stressful situations. I am a freshmen in college and i am about to fail a class. I am also a shy person and this has led to a slump with the girls. My mind is playing games with me. I have slowly convinced myself that dip is not that bad. ive been having major cravings as a result this stress.
I am strong enough to control them though. The other day i almost caved and would have if my friend had not been with me. I went up to the walmart tobacco counter and asked for fake dip, they did not have any and as a result i was embarrased. It almost seems unmanly to buy a tobacco product at the tobacco counter. I am never going to buy anything from or at t. hat counter again. It was incredibly tempting and had i not looked at my friends face i would have bought a can.
The advice i have for fellow quitters is not to use the tobacco counter at walmart.
I dipped for about five months straight. I often used a can a day. I quit because i was fearing for my life. I got some weird bumps on the inside of my mouth and that caused me to think that i had oral cancer.
first let me welcome you to the site "
aboveit"
this will happen quite often...that little Nicky bitch gets inside your head and tells you she's not gonna hurt you, gonna make you feel all better. Well don't you listen too the nic bitch. she is literally going to kill you.
hang out in here for awhile and get some of this brotherhood behind you so you can walk away from that shit.
Harmful health effects include:
oral (mouth) cancer
pancreatic cancer
addiction to nicotine
leukoplakia (white sores in the mouth that can lead to cancer)
receding gums (gums slowly shrink away from around the teeth)
bone loss around the roots of the teeth
abrasion (scratching and wearing down) of teeth
staining of teeth
bad breath
==================================================
Don't use tobacco. This means none, not even a pinch!
Get rid of all snuff or chew and related products.
Keep active – try walking, exercising, or doing other activities or hobbies.
Keep oral substitutes handy.
Drink lots of water and juices.
Begin using nicotine replacement if that is your choice.
Call a cessation support line, attend a tobacco cessation class, or start following a self-help plan.
Avoid situations where the urge to dip or chew is strong.
Reduce or avoid alcohol.
Think about changing your routine. Sit in a different chair at home, drive a new way to work, or choose foods and drinks that make tobacco taste bad.
and for crying out loud...post roll in here everyday and get some quit buddies!