Hey
@Thefranks5 I never really had major mouth or throat pain so I'm afraid I can't give you much advise on that front. I believe Smokey Mt responded earlier. I remember that he had some of those issues.
Anxiety, on the other hand, I can relate to. Like you I never had anxiety or depression but I watched my wife suffer from time to time. N ow I know what it means to be anxious. At 345 days I'm still getting attacks on the mornings I have to work; these attacks, however, are less debilitating than they used to be and seem to be wavering a bit...just a bit but it's something.
I can also relate to feeling like shit for hours...days at a time. My whole world revolved around nicotine (like many here) and I did not hide my addiction so I did it ALL the time. For the first ~300 days, I felt a major void in my life and was reminded about my addiction by everything I did. This made my life practically unbearable for the first 100 days but has gotten incrementally better since.
Bottom line: the more space and time you put between you and nicotine, the easier this is going to get for you. It may be almost unnoticeable day to day but as you stack those days things will get easier. A couple vets have said it below: ODAAT. This concept was the most important factor in getting me through all those tough days. Do not allow yourself to think about tomorrow, next week, next year, etc. If you are scheduled to go to the dentist today, go and make the best of it. Come what may. Try not to obsess about things until you have to. Exercise, sleep, do anything that will keep your mind off of it until you can close your eyes for the night. WUPP and repeat. Not easy but simple.
Lastly, make connections. As tough as things are, life will probably get tougher (if even for a short period of time) at some point. You WILL have that Fuck It Crave...eventually. I've had several of these...even found myself sitting in the C-store lot a couple times in a mental world war with myself. However, I make my promise early every day and have ~15 KTC contacts in my phone just waiting for when I falter. I simple SOS text to anyone of them and I know I'll get the advise that I need. Prior to this quit I did not have this safety net and I failed every time...usually within 3 weeks. This is what makes KTC different.
Sorry for the diatribe. I had many thoughts reading through your intro and I think I only made it through a couple of them. Keep blogging this out here in intros and in your group. Writing about these things and getting feedback is more valuable to me and my quit than I could describe.
My digits are in your box.
Holding that line with you my brother, shoulder to shoulder.
~HAG