Author Topic: Was it REALLY 25 Years  (Read 3202 times)

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Offline LA Kevin

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Re: Was it REALLY 25 Years
« Reply #13 on: January 04, 2015, 05:39:00 PM »
Feeling great today. Went for a long run and got back, guzzled some water and gatorade, and flipped on the NFL Playoffs. Man, after a workout with sports on tv was prime dipping time for me but not today! Feeling too good.

Offline Stat

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Re: Was it REALLY 25 Years
« Reply #12 on: January 03, 2015, 06:32:00 PM »
You have made it through the worst individual days, congratulations! But for me weeks 2 and 3 were difficult because of the ongoing aspect -- it felt like a marathon at times. Advice that helped me include: exercise regularly; eat easily digestible comfort food (oatmeal; vegetables; potatoes; etc); and keep gum and seeds handy. I even found fake dip at Walmart, and that helped with some of the cravings, especially during quiet evenings at the office and during long drives.

The daily posting and occasional text messages with other members helps me. If you need a contact, don't hesitate to send a PM.

Offline LA Kevin

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Re: Was it REALLY 25 Years
« Reply #11 on: January 03, 2015, 11:47:00 AM »
Quote from: Dagranger
Kevin great job posting roll. Make that part of your morning routine. From reading your intro you definitely have what it takes to quit. Usually for a lot of us it's the realization that we are addicts. By that I mean quitting dip isn't a New Years Resolution/ quit for lent type of decision. This is not like dieting. This drug that we are addicted to is as addictive as any narcotic shy of heroin. So quitting takes a firm understanding on what you are up against. You seem to have that understanding. Not to get to ahead of myself, but remember it when you are further down the road...10 days, 20 days, 100 days. Because all of us will always be addicts to dip. Great start Kevin, keep posting your thoughts here. I will be interested in what you have to say.
Thanks everyone for your comments. I'm on to Day 6 here and it's getting just a tiny bit easier. The past few mornings I've woken up about 6:00 and really needing some nicotine. I resisted, went to grab some coffee, took a walk, etc. But today I woke up and the the craving wasn't there like it had been. It was there but it was weaker and it was shorter. Just kind of told myself no and then forgot about it. Great feeling to start the day.

Offline Dagranger

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Re: Was it REALLY 25 Years
« Reply #10 on: January 03, 2015, 07:36:00 AM »
Kevin great job posting roll. Make that part of your morning routine. From reading your intro you definitely have what it takes to quit. Usually for a lot of us it's the realization that we are addicts. By that I mean quitting dip isn't a New Years Resolution/ quit for lent type of decision. This is not like dieting. This drug that we are addicted to is as addictive as any narcotic shy of heroin. So quitting takes a firm understanding on what you are up against. You seem to have that understanding. Not to get to ahead of myself, but remember it when you are further down the road...10 days, 20 days, 100 days. Because all of us will always be addicts to dip. Great start Kevin, keep posting your thoughts here. I will be interested in what you have to say.

Offline Tuco

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Re: Was it REALLY 25 Years
« Reply #9 on: January 02, 2015, 10:30:00 PM »
Great intro, Kevin. The part about our addictions wanting us all alone is so unbelievably on point. It's just another piece of the huge web of lies that we spin in order to keep using.

I'm encouraged that you see the issue for what it truly is - an addiction - and that you know or at least have a good sense of what you're in for here.

We are never cured. We will never beat our addiction. We just make a choice each day to control it so that it no longer controls us.

Please, dive in headfirst here. Put every last iota of your being into your Quit. Put your head down and plow through the worst of the craves, fog, and nic rage. Pick your brothers up along the way when they need it, because I can absolutely guarantee that you will need them there, standing tall and ready to catch you one day.

Offline Harbinger17

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Re: Was it REALLY 25 Years
« Reply #8 on: January 02, 2015, 10:05:00 PM »
I hate that POS addict inside me as well Kevin and I want to rip him out and kick his ass with you. Day 2 for me lets do this. Glad to quit with you.

Offline redtrain14

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Re: Was it REALLY 25 Years
« Reply #7 on: January 02, 2015, 09:32:00 PM »
Good to see you made it here, Kevin.

Offline Frazzled

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Re: Was it REALLY 25 Years
« Reply #6 on: January 02, 2015, 07:36:00 PM »
Kevin, it looks like you've posted roll - almost got it right. There are instructions on the top of the roll post that will help you out.

Your story rings true with me as well, and with many of us here. We were liars, cheats, and bastards. We did everything wrong, but thought it was so right.

Keep coming back day after day, and you ill begin to feel that sense of freedom really coming on. Keep your word once you post roll, then rinse and repeat in the morning. It's simple, but it can be hard. We're here to help. PM me if you need a number.
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Offline soxfnnlansing

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Re: Was it REALLY 25 Years
« Reply #5 on: January 02, 2015, 06:43:00 PM »
Quote from: Vinmoore83
Your 3rd paragraph hits home so much it gives me chills. a lot of guys are going to come by here and give you a lot of inspiration and a lot of instruction. Listen to them they've been at it for a long time I'm myself and only at 46 days. were all addicts here. We've all been there and have went or are going through it. Pm me if you need a #. Its all about support here.
Everything Kevin wrote could have came from my experiences. We are the only ones that can help each other get through the day.
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Here in THIS house, we Kill the Can. If it's not a top priority, go to one of the bitch sites where they "hurt the can" or "call the can names." - Pre

This is so much more that just throwing your name on a list, it is placing your word or promise that you will not use nicotine and it should be done everyday. - MCarmo44

I need this place, because i am an addict. I cannot forget that...if i do i will forget how to quit. - Schaef418

Offline jabr

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Re: Was it REALLY 25 Years
« Reply #4 on: January 02, 2015, 06:19:00 PM »
Strong Intro, Kevin. We had a discussion about it in November '14 group late last year. You'd be surprised how many guys on here quit at 40 +/- a few years. I quit in August. Turned 40 in November. 25 years.

This site will get you where you want to go if you use it and embrace the tools available. The program is pretty simple: Post roll everyday promising your quit group and the rest of the members you won't dip. Then don't dip. Same thing tomorrow.

Offline Vinmoore83

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Re: Was it REALLY 25 Years
« Reply #3 on: January 02, 2015, 06:14:00 PM »
Your 3rd paragraph hits home so much it gives me chills. a lot of guys are going to come by here and give you a lot of inspiration and a lot of instruction. Listen to them they've been at it for a long time I'm myself and only at 46 days. were all addicts here. We've all been there and have went or are going through it. Pm me if you need a #. Its all about support here.

Offline soxfnnlansing

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Re: Was it REALLY 25 Years
« Reply #2 on: January 02, 2015, 06:09:00 PM »
LAKevin, what you have wrote is what we all know all too well. You are in the right place. What we do here is pledge our abstinence from nicotine on a daily basis.

Read all the newbie info pages, check out the HOF speeches, Words of Wisdom, and all the good stuff KTC has to offer. You need to make your way over to April 2015 group and post roll. If you do so today, you would put day 5 as your quit day. Just read everything. If you have questions, your intro is the place to ask it. There is also a live chat room. There is a link on the right side of the page. There is usually people in there.

Whatever you think about your quit, you are amongst friends here. There is nothing we won't understand when it comes to what your feeling or dealing with. I came here after Labor Day and been quit for 123 days. Welcome to KTC. Mike (soxfnn)
HOF Speech

Here in THIS house, we Kill the Can. If it's not a top priority, go to one of the bitch sites where they "hurt the can" or "call the can names." - Pre

This is so much more that just throwing your name on a list, it is placing your word or promise that you will not use nicotine and it should be done everyday. - MCarmo44

I need this place, because i am an addict. I cannot forget that...if i do i will forget how to quit. - Schaef418

Offline LA Kevin

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Was it REALLY 25 Years
« on: January 02, 2015, 05:57:00 PM »
I started this garbage when I was 15. I remember it like it was yesterday - Hawken. I don't know if they even make it anymore. Anyway, I moved quickly to Skoal and have been there ever since. I always told myself I'm not going to be doing this when I'm a middle-aged man. But I just turned 40 and have been doing it ever since. Made a few serious attempts to stop over the years - got to 90 days once.

I know it sounds crazy but it just hit me the other day that I've been doing this crap for 25 years. That's a quarter of a century and it's like 5 times as long as some people who have gotten oral cancer have dipped. I'm a relatively smart guy but I never subtracted 15 from 40 (in this context) until very recently. The last time I remember doing that calculation, it was like 15 years since I started.

What pisses me off is what liars we become when we're addicted to this stuff. Hiding stuff all over the place. Coming up with excuses to run errands for my fiance because I needed to get out of the house in the comfort and SOLITUDE of my car. I have a friend who is a recovering alcoholic and I've been to AA meetings with him and I've heard people say that your addictions want you alone. It's because they are evil like the devil. They don't want you to have friends, they don't want you close to family members, they don't want you happy. They want you dependent on them. What's weird is that I never really considered nicotine an addiction. I think I rationalized it by saying that it's not ruining my life like alcohol is ruining lives or like cocaine or other hard street drugs are ruining people's lives. I have a job. I'm responsible. I'm functioning. But in reality I haven't been functioning. I've been getting through what I needed to get through to get to my next dip. I've done a bunch of stuff half-assed over the years (work, relationships, etc) because I just needed to get out of there (whatever "there" was).

But I'm going to quit this time. I'm determined. I took out my last dip around 11:00 am PST on Sunday December 28, 2014. So, I'm more than 5 full days into my recovery. Wish me luck.