Author Topic: December 10th, 2014  (Read 1411 times)

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Offline g.mf

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Re: December 10th, 2014
« Reply #9 on: December 17, 2014, 04:20:00 PM »
Quote from: slug.go
No hard line for you to cross any more. It will just get better as the numbers click by. Your system is nicotine free but your addict brain now has to re-wire itself now and that time, how long varies by individual. Just reward yourself for your accomplishment every day, something little, but meaningful, like putting your name up there with the other bad ass quitters in March. Remember, ODAAT, amigo.
For sure, the numbers make it worse while (so does the not-cancer thing too, but still). Little rewards, yes: snacks galore. Still cheaper than a can, taste a lot better too.

Offline slug.go

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Re: December 10th, 2014
« Reply #8 on: December 17, 2014, 04:13:00 PM »
No hard line for you to cross any more. It will just get better as the numbers click by. Your system is nicotine free but your addict brain now has to re-wire itself now and that time, how long varies by individual. Just reward yourself for your accomplishment every day, something little, but meaningful, like putting your name up there with the other bad ass quitters in March. Remember, ODAAT, amigo.
Quit since 1/23/14

Offline g.mf

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Re: December 10th, 2014
« Reply #7 on: December 17, 2014, 04:05:00 PM »
Using my intro as a rant space, because I don't want to spam Roll Thread and I get shit out better if I write/type it.

'zombie' fuck

I thought I was going to be more excited about my 1 week. That's a lot of quit, especially consider that my daily "usage" since my last attempted quit has since doubled. Two cans a day, sometimes another half if I worked late, basically just swimming in nic to get from the time I wake up to when I go to bed. I don't know if it really helped me function any better than I do now without it, I think it was a crutch. It was my escape for when work got stressful or when the bitch snuck up on me out of nowhere. Fifteen minutes of just relaxation, play some game on my phone, and get back on the grind. I knew what it was doing to my body, but maybe in those moment, I didn't really realize it. It was the crutch to my anxiety and I'm worried what I'll do when I can fall back on nic when shit hits the fan. *Knock on wood* no issues yet, but they're bound to come. I don't want it back in my life, but I worry what it's going to do when it matters, when my work's on the line, etc.

I think I'm indifferent about 1 week because the cravings are worse. Weirdly, I didn't have them really in the first few days, probably because my system was flushing out the nic and everything else I consumed (I was physically sick up until Day 5; cold sweats, irritability out the ass, dry heaves/vomiting for a good portion of the days, etc), but that's since passed and while I'm glad for that, it's constantly on my mind. I can't grasp it though; why is this stuff on my brain all the time? Addiction, moron. That's why. I'm drinking 3-4 coffees a day now in the office, full size with two espresso shots to ween me off the buzz. But how long is it going to take to get over this? Candoit says the mental games are next, which I'm ready for, but I think maybe I didn't expect it to be this bad. Wrong fucking assumption.

Day 7 - No pain, no gain.

Offline NimRod

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Re: December 10th, 2014
« Reply #6 on: December 11, 2014, 01:13:00 PM »
g.mf.

We got the same date. 12/10/14.

C'mon, we can do this.

Offline Idaho Spuds

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Re: December 10th, 2014
« Reply #5 on: December 11, 2014, 12:47:00 PM »
Sometimes you have to come to a breaking point to truly quit. It sounds like you have reached that point, where you despise chew and nicotine.
Imagine if you stuck with your last quit, lesser fear of cancer, better teeth and gums and no more mouth sores, don't forget that.
Own up to your fail and prove to yourself that you aren't going to be control by cancer in a can.

Offline Thumblewort

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Re: December 10th, 2014
« Reply #4 on: December 10, 2014, 03:41:00 PM »
Quote from: g.mf
Quote from: Thumblewort
First of all, glad you are back.
1. What month were you, and what was your user name?
2. What really happened besides saying "fuck it", because 24 days of quit is a lot of quit just to shrug your shoulders at.
3. How are you going to use this site differently this time? Did you have the phone numbers of other quitters?

These questions are for you and your benefit. Quitting is HARD, but the FREEDOM is worth it 100-fold. I look forward to your answers.
1. I'd have to look at past e-mails and narrow it down. I thought I had it locked down based on an ID that I use for everything, but that was back when I was in college and a lot of stuff have been moved around and consolidated. I think the account was linked to my school e-mail and I can't recover that; I may give it a better shot when I'm off work.
2. I was still in school and things just got overwhelming; I had a good system with working out and avoiding the cravings and something like an exam just overloaded my stress level and I fell back on what I knew would fix it and get me through those exams; nic. Things just fell back into habit and I forgot about quit. Dumb fucking move on my part.
3. I wasn't full committed last time, thought that I could just do it on my own. Obviously that didn't worked so I'm following the protocol this time; be more involved with my classes, help other people while I'm helping myself.
At this point we need a mod to dig and get your original info, but I'd suggest posting roll in March 2015 to get on the board, and also posting these answers to your new group.

You can only be quit if you are 100% honest with yourself, so while it may seem like a drag to be posting this stuff, it's for your own good, and some tough love ( it's coming my friend) is worth the price to be quit. Bear down, quit, and you won't be 45 year old with dental bills and bad teeth - like me.
Some of my fondest and clearest memories are peeing in places that aren't bathrooms.

Offline g.mf

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Re: December 10th, 2014
« Reply #3 on: December 10, 2014, 03:05:00 PM »
Quote from: Thumblewort
First of all, glad you are back.
1. What month were you, and what was your user name?
2. What really happened besides saying "fuck it", because 24 days of quit is a lot of quit just to shrug your shoulders at.
3. How are you going to use this site differently this time? Did you have the phone numbers of other quitters?

These questions are for you and your benefit. Quitting is HARD, but the FREEDOM is worth it 100-fold. I look forward to your answers.
1. I'd have to look at past e-mails and narrow it down. I thought I had it locked down based on an ID that I use for everything, but that was back when I was in college and a lot of stuff have been moved around and consolidated. I think the account was linked to my school e-mail and I can't recover that; I may give it a better shot when I'm off work.
2. I was still in school and things just got overwhelming; I had a good system with working out and avoiding the cravings and something like an exam just overloaded my stress level and I fell back on what I knew would fix it and get me through those exams; nic. Things just fell back into habit and I forgot about quit. Dumb fucking move on my part.
3. I wasn't full committed last time, thought that I could just do it on my own. Obviously that didn't worked so I'm following the protocol this time; be more involved with my classes, help other people while I'm helping myself.

Offline Thumblewort

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Re: December 10th, 2014
« Reply #2 on: December 10, 2014, 02:57:00 PM »
First of all, glad you are back.
1. What month were you, and what was your user name?
2. What really happened besides saying "fuck it", because 24 days of quit is a lot of quit just to shrug your shoulders at.
3. How are you going to use this site differently this time? Did you have the phone numbers of other quitters?

These questions are for you and your benefit. Quitting is HARD, but the FREEDOM is worth it 100-fold. I look forward to your answers.
Some of my fondest and clearest memories are peeing in places that aren't bathrooms.

Offline g.mf

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December 10th, 2014
« on: December 10, 2014, 02:38:00 PM »
I wake up every morning with the same exact thought from the moment I gain consciousness and drag myself out of bed: "Where is my dip?" Half-awake and stumbling around, I look through drawers, back-track my steps from the night before, and find my most recent can or one with something still in it. I pop the lid and see if there's enough to curb me over; usually around a quarter of a can. If there's not enough, I sigh and still put it in my mouth, feeling ripped off. And from there, the day starts. I go to work, I put in my hours, and usually around mid-morning I have another craving. I leave to go to the bathroom and I have a can stuck behind the seat covers in the stall I always use and I dip. Rinse and repeat in another two hours, until I blow through that can and I get another during my lunch. I end up getting home late, and doing the same thing. It's a habit that just doesn't want to break.

If I break it, it sends me into a tailspin. My daily function is slowed and mundane, the fog is so thick that I cannot focus without some kind of pick-me-up, like an energy drink or a lot of coffee. And nothing else matters until I can get that next pinch, so everything falls into place again.

But today was different. Going through the motions, I realized that this isn't a way to live. There was no benefit of this habit, it was just making me less of a person. My gums are receded and they bleed constantly, my teeth are stained and grotesque. The nic takes away my appetite and I have become awfully thin; lanky would be a compliment. I'm spending more on dip per week than I am spending on food (average price where I am is around $8 for Grizzly) and I'm just sick of being a slave to this stuff. I want so much more in my life, I want to feel like I'm living and not being totted around on a leash by the can. My significant other despises my habit and she looks at me differently. I'm sick of having a minor anxiety attack every time I find a different sore in my mouth, and they're getting more painful and whiter than the average cut or canker sore.

So that's why today's date is the topic of discussion. It's time to break the cycle, it's time to stop being this poison's bitch once and for all. I've made a valient effort to find all of my cans and dispose of them and start from scratch. No "last pinch", that's just a tease. It's entirely willpower from here on out.

This isn't my first time here (I couldn't figure out my old login, so I apologize for creating a new one) and I stuck around until about Day 24-25 before I caved and just said fuck it. Dumb move, because that was almost a year and a half ago. Fake dip doesn't do it for me, sunflower seeds were a fruitless effort, so I'm open to ideas for how to get past the fixation.

I apologize for a wave of negativity, but I'm happy to be back here.