Author Topic: I'm Back. I'm Dumb.  (Read 128573 times)

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Offline dchogs

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #76 on: February 10, 2012, 02:09:00 PM »
Quote from: wastepanel
The Quitting Pendulum

If life is like a box of chocolates (you'll never know what you're gonna get), then quitting is like a pendulum. There's difficult times, and there are easy times. But eventually, you're going to end up resting in a centered position.

A pendulum is a weighted ball at the end of a string and suspended from a centered pivot point. When pulled in one direction and let go, the ball will swing freely past its center point. It will travel to the opposite side of this center point, and begin its return. Due to friction and air resistance, each period becomes shorter until the ball is eventually resting at the center.

Every quit has times in it when quitting is very simple. You don't have to put much thought into it. Nicotine is not a part of your life. You don't need to fight the urge to use because there is no urge.

But there are difficult times as well. Whether you are 10 days quit or 10,000 days quit, these times will hit you like a wrecking ball. It seems like the world is out to make you fail. It seems like nicotine delivery systems are being thrown at you 24/7. You lie awake at night thinking "Just one won't hurt...".

Imagine that your quit is seperated by this Centered Pole. The right side is the Easy Quit Side. The left side is the Difficult Quit Side. Your quit is suspended from the center.

When you initially quit, you pull your quit way over to the difficult side and let go. In fact, you can feel it building as you are doing it. The first few hours make your jaw sore and leave you wondering if you are doing the right thing. As the poison leaves your body, your body begins to rebel and throw a fit. This builds up for 3-5 days until you don't think you can stand it another minute.

But then you let go.

The quit starts falling back towards the centered point, and life is better. It's still not good, and quitting is not the easiest. It's just better.

And then it gets to the good side.

Life is great. You never knew that life is this good without nicotine. You laugh at users still lying to themselves, and feel impenitrable. Your quit is strong, and you can shrug off even the most blatant attempts of others to get you to use again.

This period is as good as the preceding bad.

But then it starts to become harder again.

The quit starts its return trip back. Quitting takes a few more thoughts. And then a few more. And then you are back at the difficult side again.

Your quit can continue on for the rest of your life if connected to this point (aka KTC). Your quit will eventually lose steam and slow down. It will hang centered between the two worlds. It is not difficult to stay quit, but it is not easy as well. A simple acknowledgement usually keeps this ball resting here.

Unfortunately, sometimes you bump the machine and the ball swings for a moment. It's not something to worry about it. It will come to rest again. This can happen during any point of your quit, but it seems to be worse once you are centered.
mmmmm, das sum goo shit, rite der!
Quit- 5/16/2011. One day at a time.
HoF- 8/23/2011; 2nd Floor- 12/1/2011; 3rd Floor- 3/10/2012; 4th Floor- 6/18/2012; 5th Floor- 9/27/2012; 6th Floor- 1/4/2013; 7th Floor- 4/14/2013; 8th Floor- 7/23/2013; 9th Floor- 10/31/2013; 10th Floor- 2/8/2014; 11th Floor- 5/19/2014; 12th Floor- 8/27/2014; 13th Floor- 12/5/14; 14th floor- 3/15/15; 15th floor- 6/23/15; 16th floor- 10/1/15; 17th floor- 1/9/16; 18th floor- 4/18/16; 19th floor- 7/26/16; 20th floor- 11/4/16; 21st floor- 2/12/17; 22nd Floor- 5/23/17; 23rd Floor- 8/31/17; 24th Floor- 12/9/17; 25th floor- 3/19/18; 26th floor- 6/27/18; 27th floor- 10/5/18; 28th floor- 1/13/19; 29th foor- 4/22/19; 30th floor- 7/31/19; 31st floor- 11/8/19; 32nd floor- 2/17/20; 33rd floor- 5/27/20; 34th floor- 9/4/20; 35th floor- 12/13/20; 36th floor- 3/23/21; 37th floor- 7/1/21; 38th floor- 10/9/21; 39th floor- 1/17/22; 40th floor- 4/27/22; 41st floor- 8/5/22; 42nd floor- 11/12/22; 43rd floor- 2/20/23; 44th floor- 6/1/23; 45th floor- 9/9/23; 46th floor- 12/18/23; 47th floor- 3/27/24; 48th floor- 7/5/24; 49th floor- 10/3/24.

"He which hath no stomach to this fight let him depart. But we in it shall be remembered. We few, we happy few, we band of brothers! For he today, that sheds his blood with me, shall always be my brother." (Wm. Shakespeare). For August '11.

Who dares, wins.

Stay quit... it is life or death and that is the undeniable truth.

"To be driven by our appetites alone is slavery, while to obey a law that we have imposed on ourselves is freedom." Rosseau

Offline wastepanel

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #75 on: February 10, 2012, 01:07:00 PM »
The Quitting Pendulum

If life is like a box of chocolates (you'll never know what you're gonna get), then quitting is like a pendulum. There's difficult times, and there are easy times. But eventually, you're going to end up resting in a centered position.

A pendulum is a weighted ball at the end of a string and suspended from a centered pivot point. When pulled in one direction and let go, the ball will swing freely past its center point. It will travel to the opposite side of this center point, and begin its return. Due to friction and air resistance, each period becomes shorter until the ball is eventually resting at the center.

Every quit has times in it when quitting is very simple. You don't have to put much thought into it. Nicotine is not a part of your life. You don't need to fight the urge to use because there is no urge.

But there are difficult times as well. Whether you are 10 days quit or 10,000 days quit, these times will hit you like a wrecking ball. It seems like the world is out to make you fail. It seems like nicotine delivery systems are being thrown at you 24/7. You lie awake at night thinking "Just one won't hurt...".

Imagine that your quit is seperated by this Centered Pole. The right side is the Easy Quit Side. The left side is the Difficult Quit Side. Your quit is suspended from the center.

When you initially quit, you pull your quit way over to the difficult side and let go. In fact, you can feel it building as you are doing it. The first few hours make your jaw sore and leave you wondering if you are doing the right thing. As the poison leaves your body, your body begins to rebel and throw a fit. This builds up for 3-5 days until you don't think you can stand it another minute.

But then you let go.

The quit starts falling back towards the centered point, and life is better. It's still not good, and quitting is not the easiest. It's just better.

And then it gets to the good side.

Life is great. You never knew that life is this good without nicotine. You laugh at users still lying to themselves, and feel impenitrable. Your quit is strong, and you can shrug off even the most blatant attempts of others to get you to use again.

This period is as good as the preceding bad.

But then it starts to become harder again.

The quit starts its return trip back. Quitting takes a few more thoughts. And then a few more. And then you are back at the difficult side again.

Your quit can continue on for the rest of your life if connected to this point (aka KTC). Your quit will eventually lose steam and slow down. It will hang centered between the two worlds. It is not difficult to stay quit, but it is not easy as well. A simple acknowledgement usually keeps this ball resting here.

Unfortunately, sometimes you bump the machine and the ball swings for a moment. It's not something to worry about it. It will come to rest again. This can happen during any point of your quit, but it seems to be worse once you are centered.
In the end I Surrender, I and I alone accept that I have and always will have a Nicotene ADDICTION. It is my choice to quit, but I can't do it alone. I get to go down this path one time, I want to do it right. I recognize that my word, my integrety to you is on the line and is only as good as my actions. Caving is not an option in this plan-Eafman 7/11

I am not cured. I will quit one day at a time. I will continue to do what works. Posting roll everyday. To do otherwise would be foolish on my part. You can do this-Ready 12/11

To overcome your addiction you must comprehend what it means to fail-Razd 3/12

Theres a lot of people that come here, especially vets, that WANT to be reminded that they are addicts.-Tarpon 6/12

Just as a building starts with architectural drawings. Your daily quit begins with a promise.-Scowick 2/13

Here and now, focused on today, minute by minute, whatever it takes, I promise to all my bros and myself not to become a negative stat and stay quit!-krok 1/15

I want everyone to be quit. Even the assholes.-Probe1957 1/18

Ignoring history or erasing history fixes nothing and leads you inevitably down the same path.-69franx 04/30/2021

Offline wastepanel

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #74 on: January 24, 2012, 03:25:00 PM »
Bump because I rule.

(Also, have a new person over on whackthepack. Showing off what e-rage can accomplish.)
In the end I Surrender, I and I alone accept that I have and always will have a Nicotene ADDICTION. It is my choice to quit, but I can't do it alone. I get to go down this path one time, I want to do it right. I recognize that my word, my integrety to you is on the line and is only as good as my actions. Caving is not an option in this plan-Eafman 7/11

I am not cured. I will quit one day at a time. I will continue to do what works. Posting roll everyday. To do otherwise would be foolish on my part. You can do this-Ready 12/11

To overcome your addiction you must comprehend what it means to fail-Razd 3/12

Theres a lot of people that come here, especially vets, that WANT to be reminded that they are addicts.-Tarpon 6/12

Just as a building starts with architectural drawings. Your daily quit begins with a promise.-Scowick 2/13

Here and now, focused on today, minute by minute, whatever it takes, I promise to all my bros and myself not to become a negative stat and stay quit!-krok 1/15

I want everyone to be quit. Even the assholes.-Probe1957 1/18

Ignoring history or erasing history fixes nothing and leads you inevitably down the same path.-69franx 04/30/2021

Offline wastepanel

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #73 on: January 05, 2012, 10:01:00 AM »
So you really thought you were doing this alone???

Screw you.

Screw you for making me believe that you could keep your word.

Screw you for making me believe in you.

I had your back anytime you asked for it. There's been multiple times I've recieved texts at 12:30 at night and responded almost immediately even though I'm 90% asleep. There's been multiple times I've told my kids to wait just a second while I finished a text or a message to you to help you keep your word. I can't even count how many times I've held you up as an example to new quitters and/or your quit brothers.

But, no....you got to go and pull this shit.

Screw you.

Don't give me this BS about how hard it is. I freaking know how hard it is. I live it every freaking day. There is no excuse. Using means that all those words you wrote are bullshit, including these ones:
Quote
Just want to send out a Big Thank You for what you have done for my quit. I would have caved long ago if it wasnt for some of the things you have done.
Thanks again
My quit is stronger because I invested my valuable time into your lying ass. Glad to see it was worth it. What do you think these lies do to my quit? I've known it was coming, and it makes me crave every time I think about it. I thought about stopping at the gas station the other day, and submitting to this desire.

But then I remembered that I'm not a bitch ass punk that goes back on his word. I thought about all the people that count on me. All those people that hold me up as their success story would feel like I do. All those quit brothers I've quit with that I would walk through walls for would shut the door on me. All those new quitters I've mentored would know I was a fake.

You fucking cracked the door for the nic bitch.

I slammed it shut again.

Thanks asshole.

There is no "It's better to have tried to quit than never to have quit at all" mentality here. This is the KTC. Shit, or get off the pot.

Did you really think you were doing this alone? I'm still here, you selfish turd.
In the end I Surrender, I and I alone accept that I have and always will have a Nicotene ADDICTION. It is my choice to quit, but I can't do it alone. I get to go down this path one time, I want to do it right. I recognize that my word, my integrety to you is on the line and is only as good as my actions. Caving is not an option in this plan-Eafman 7/11

I am not cured. I will quit one day at a time. I will continue to do what works. Posting roll everyday. To do otherwise would be foolish on my part. You can do this-Ready 12/11

To overcome your addiction you must comprehend what it means to fail-Razd 3/12

Theres a lot of people that come here, especially vets, that WANT to be reminded that they are addicts.-Tarpon 6/12

Just as a building starts with architectural drawings. Your daily quit begins with a promise.-Scowick 2/13

Here and now, focused on today, minute by minute, whatever it takes, I promise to all my bros and myself not to become a negative stat and stay quit!-krok 1/15

I want everyone to be quit. Even the assholes.-Probe1957 1/18

Ignoring history or erasing history fixes nothing and leads you inevitably down the same path.-69franx 04/30/2021

Offline wastepanel

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #72 on: January 02, 2012, 01:00:00 PM »
20s funk message

Hello January quitters.

I see that some of you have hit 20 days in your quit. Congratulations.

There is a major funk that is coming up shortly. It starts usually in the late teens. It does not make you crave nicotine. It's the opposite. It makes you think you are invincible and completely quit.

Take a look at the other months' spreadsheets. We lose many a fine quitter in the 20s. In fact, we lose more quitters in the 20s than any other time (except for the first week). I myself was almost a victim.

My thoughts on the funk are this:

The first week is complete hell. We all agree there. But, upon completion of the first week, we start to feel more comfortable with being quit. We get a sense of accomplishment for breaking that physical addiction, and our quits are fueled by adreneline.

Around day 20 (maybe later, maybe sooner), the adreneline starts to run out. Our brains want to tell us that we are quit, and we don't need to think about being quit all the time. We want normalcy, rather than having to feel committed to a website and anonymous strangers. We don't want to think that we used to stick cat turds in our mouths all the time, let alone that we are addicts. Even if we've embraced the label "addict" early in the quit, we wonder if we truly are at this time. We start to think that this roll call posting is silly business, because we are quit already. We begin hating all the bullshit on this site, and start thinking that the site is more drama than what it is worth.

This is the start to the planned cave.

Your addicted brain is letting the nic bitch have the microphone in your head and she is the one talking. She will tell you that she is gone, and that you don't need to post roll anymore. She'll tell you every lie under the sun to get you to stop giving your word everyday.

Some of you will decide she is right. You will leave. And you might not even cave right away, but you will. The nic bitch is a tricky whore, and she can sleep until you are the weakest.

Be very careful here. There is a lot of bullshit on this site, and it's meant to be a distraction for you. If it becomes too much, simply post roll and ignore it. Lean on your brothers. They are having these same thoughts, and the best thing you can do is to make sure that everybody keeps posting.



I stopped posting roll after 150 days in 2006. I caved in 2009 because I forgot I was an addict. The nic bitch had taken that time to break down every tool I learned here, and made me forget. She dug her claws in, and I manned up again 111 days ago today. I should be around 1,900 days quit, and instead all I can claim is that I stopped for like 1,000 days and then again for 111.

EVERYDAY

Post roll.
Stay quit.
Repeat.
In the end I Surrender, I and I alone accept that I have and always will have a Nicotene ADDICTION. It is my choice to quit, but I can't do it alone. I get to go down this path one time, I want to do it right. I recognize that my word, my integrety to you is on the line and is only as good as my actions. Caving is not an option in this plan-Eafman 7/11

I am not cured. I will quit one day at a time. I will continue to do what works. Posting roll everyday. To do otherwise would be foolish on my part. You can do this-Ready 12/11

To overcome your addiction you must comprehend what it means to fail-Razd 3/12

Theres a lot of people that come here, especially vets, that WANT to be reminded that they are addicts.-Tarpon 6/12

Just as a building starts with architectural drawings. Your daily quit begins with a promise.-Scowick 2/13

Here and now, focused on today, minute by minute, whatever it takes, I promise to all my bros and myself not to become a negative stat and stay quit!-krok 1/15

I want everyone to be quit. Even the assholes.-Probe1957 1/18

Ignoring history or erasing history fixes nothing and leads you inevitably down the same path.-69franx 04/30/2021

Offline stjohnsloop

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #71 on: December 31, 2011, 12:50:00 AM »
Quote from: wastepanel
So, this is 6 months quit...

I really thought CNC, Moe, and myself were clear that being a retread is not all the fun and games people make it out to be. We screamed how important it is to post roll everyday. We've practiced it for close to 200 days now. Yet, the basterds keep falling off roll one by one.

It pisses me off because I fell off the posting wagon early in 2007. I stopped posting around 150 days in that stoppage. I didn't cave right away. I was "quit"!

In the next 850 plus days, my brain began ridding itself of my addict thoughts. It started with the nicotine cravings and ended with the tools I learned that kept me quit. The greatest lie ever is an addict convincing himself he's cured.

I never planned caved. I got drunk, and I asked to bum one off of my friend. It was that simple. No warning lights went off. I hadn't even thought about the site in quite a while. I said "That sounds good" and I was off. I didn't feel bad afterwards either. It was gross, and I spit it out fairly quickly.

I did not think about it again for about a week. Unfortunately, I started a timer in my body that was going to lead to it returning to a dependent state.

The next week, the nic bitch was in my ear.

Scott....you're the man. You used to chew all the time. Not anymore. Hell, you chewed last week with no cravings or thoughts of it until now. It's true. You can't get re-addicted with just one. In fact...I bet you could chew with your friends now. Just don't buy a can...

So I did.

Everytime I saw my friends, I was chewing again. Until they got pissed over all the bumming I was doing...

Scott...It's not fair these guys have to give up their hard earned money all the time. Would you be happy if they kept coming over and drinking your beer? Just buy a can and toss it afterwards. Kara will never know...

So I did.

I bought a can for $4.50 everytime I went out with my friends (or I was drinking and my wife wasn't around). I would have 3-4 chews a night on these occasions (1 night a week) for the next month or so. At first, I'd toss the can the moment I got in the car. Gradually, it was as I was pulling into my neighborhood.

Until one day...

Scott...Are you really going to waste that? You have a good $3.00 worth of chew. You can keep it in your car and just get out when you're going out with your friends. That's just being thrifty, man. You're strong, and it's not like you're re-addicted....

So I did.

I put the can in the glove compartment and would forget about it until I was going out (until tax season started though). Tax season sucks. You give up 3 good months of your life and everybody in it. I was working much more, and my stress level was through the roof. One night, as I was coming home from work at 1:30 am, my can beckoned me.

Scott...I can relax you. You still reach for me out of habit when you get stuck on a tax return. I've always been there to help you out, and I'm willing to do it again. As long as you're not chewing at home, you're fine. That's how you can stay control of me, ok?

So I did.

By March of 2010, I was back to chewing as much as I could. I didn't see my wife that often, and would sneak downstairs to "work on taxes". When I did see her, we were in bed, waking up from the bed, or eating a meal.

I was chewing all day long, but I wasn't re-addicted. Nope...I was in control.

Yet I had started chewing at home because I wanted to.

I didn't care anymore. I liked chewing. It relaxed me. It made me a better worker. It took the edge off. And I was dreading April 15 because it meant I was going to have to be home more and I could not go an entire evening without chewing.

My wife had just cleaned the kitchen floor. I had been putting in chews over the garbage can to assure there was no sprinkles on the floor. I missed that day. She grabbed a napkin, and started picking it up. She looked at it, and asked me if I had anything I wanted to tell her. I told her I started chewing again. It felt great to be free.

She was pissed.

I didn't care. I now had an excuse to chew all day long, everyday. No fucking hiding it. No pretending that I'm quit. Just cancer weed all day long.

It took me from October 25, 2009 to March 2010 for this process to complete. It wasn't overnight. It was a series of compromises I made with myself. I never craved initially. I never thought about the negative consequences or the board. It was a sneaky process, but deep down I knew. I knew the path I was on.

I am 184 days quit today. I have yet to miss a roll call.

That was my promise to myself when I returned. I forgot everything last time because I stopped posting roll. I stopped reminding myself how bad I was beforehand, and I stopped soiling nicotine's name. I forgot.

I will never forget again because I don't want to fucking do this again. There's way too good of a life that exists outside of a physically addicted state. I can run around with my boys. I don't have to explain what "Skoal Straight" is to a 7 year old. I don't have sneak a chew in before coaching his tee ball team. I don't have to pre-plan to kiss my wife. My temperature doesn't go up to 175 degrees the moment I am done eating. I don't wake up with that shit on my face. My shower doesn't clog because I 've spit a wad into the drain. Clients don't give me wierd looks when they realize I am, in fact, sporting a fatty in a meeting.

I give 30 seconds each morning for that freedom. There are no compromises on that. A cave is a compromise wrapped in lies. The rules are simple:

(1) Post roll.
(2) Stay quit.
(3) Repeat.

Please tell me where there is room to compromise in there. If you skip step 1, then are you supposed to skip it all the time since step 3 is "repeat"? How long until you start skipping step 2? 850 days?

Best.Return On Investment.Ever.
word

Offline AgLawyer

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #70 on: December 30, 2011, 12:05:00 AM »
Good words. And yeah, can't beat the return on investment. Only able to quit WITH this site so leaving is asinine.

Offline dchogs

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #69 on: December 29, 2011, 04:42:00 PM »
Quote from: 30yrAddict
Quote from: Romandog
Quote from: Phil4
That is one helluva post.  Thanks for sharing, WP.
Agreed.. Outstanding post.

And keep Trapjaw.. Good reminder of what we would all look like, and may still have to deal with.

Quit with you.

Romandog - Day 256
Post is where it belongs...in the words of wisdom. Nicely done!
should be required reading for all new HoF'ers.

nice work, WP!
Quit- 5/16/2011. One day at a time.
HoF- 8/23/2011; 2nd Floor- 12/1/2011; 3rd Floor- 3/10/2012; 4th Floor- 6/18/2012; 5th Floor- 9/27/2012; 6th Floor- 1/4/2013; 7th Floor- 4/14/2013; 8th Floor- 7/23/2013; 9th Floor- 10/31/2013; 10th Floor- 2/8/2014; 11th Floor- 5/19/2014; 12th Floor- 8/27/2014; 13th Floor- 12/5/14; 14th floor- 3/15/15; 15th floor- 6/23/15; 16th floor- 10/1/15; 17th floor- 1/9/16; 18th floor- 4/18/16; 19th floor- 7/26/16; 20th floor- 11/4/16; 21st floor- 2/12/17; 22nd Floor- 5/23/17; 23rd Floor- 8/31/17; 24th Floor- 12/9/17; 25th floor- 3/19/18; 26th floor- 6/27/18; 27th floor- 10/5/18; 28th floor- 1/13/19; 29th foor- 4/22/19; 30th floor- 7/31/19; 31st floor- 11/8/19; 32nd floor- 2/17/20; 33rd floor- 5/27/20; 34th floor- 9/4/20; 35th floor- 12/13/20; 36th floor- 3/23/21; 37th floor- 7/1/21; 38th floor- 10/9/21; 39th floor- 1/17/22; 40th floor- 4/27/22; 41st floor- 8/5/22; 42nd floor- 11/12/22; 43rd floor- 2/20/23; 44th floor- 6/1/23; 45th floor- 9/9/23; 46th floor- 12/18/23; 47th floor- 3/27/24; 48th floor- 7/5/24; 49th floor- 10/3/24.

"He which hath no stomach to this fight let him depart. But we in it shall be remembered. We few, we happy few, we band of brothers! For he today, that sheds his blood with me, shall always be my brother." (Wm. Shakespeare). For August '11.

Who dares, wins.

Stay quit... it is life or death and that is the undeniable truth.

"To be driven by our appetites alone is slavery, while to obey a law that we have imposed on ourselves is freedom." Rosseau

Offline 30yraddict

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #68 on: December 29, 2011, 04:10:00 PM »
Quote from: Romandog
Quote from: Phil4
That is one helluva post.  Thanks for sharing, WP.
Agreed.. Outstanding post.

And keep Trapjaw.. Good reminder of what we would all look like, and may still have to deal with.

Quit with you.

Romandog - Day 256
Post is where it belongs...in the words of wisdom. Nicely done!

Offline Romandog

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #67 on: December 29, 2011, 02:16:00 PM »
Quote from: Phil4
That is one helluva post. Thanks for sharing, WP.
Agreed.. Outstanding post.

And keep Trapjaw.. Good reminder of what we would all look like, and may still have to deal with.

Quit with you.

Romandog - Day 256
July 2011 Tornadoes of Quit
Since April 18, 2011, 08:42:00 AM

Offline Phil4

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #66 on: December 29, 2011, 01:28:00 PM »
That is one helluva post. Thanks for sharing, WP.
Quit 07/14/11
HOF 10/21/11
2nd 01/30/12
3rd 05/08/12

Offline RAZD611

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #65 on: December 29, 2011, 11:52:00 AM »
Quote from: Steve1357
Quote from: wastepanel
Quote from: jost2brown
Quote from: gmann
Thanks for that post.
X2
Even vets need inspiration to stay the course guys.

Thanks for being badass quitters.
Thanks for sharing...

November 2011 has not been below the line for a whole month, yet we have lost more then a third of our hall of famers. It just does not make sense. Stories like wastepanels is enough to scare me into posting daily. 60 seconds a day is all it takes to remind myself that I am an addict and that I can never have just one.
WP, that is truely inspiring. It also has solidified why I am and must be here everyday.

Thanks,
Razd
Never Again For Any Reason

Hurt Feelings Report
https://ibb.co/NCwvw7t

Offline steve1357

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #64 on: December 29, 2011, 11:02:00 AM »
Quote from: wastepanel
Quote from: jost2brown
Quote from: gmann
Thanks for that post.
X2
Even vets need inspiration to stay the course guys.

Thanks for being badass quitters.
Thanks for sharing...

November 2011 has not been below the line for a whole month, yet we have lost more then a third of our hall of famers. It just does not make sense. Stories like wastepanels is enough to scare me into posting daily. 60 seconds a day is all it takes to remind myself that I am an addict and that I can never have just one.

Offline Kdip

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #63 on: December 29, 2011, 10:55:00 AM »
Nice words of wisdom Waste!!! You now fully recognize that you have to work daily at staying away from that slut!!!

Offline wastepanel

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Re: I'm back
« Reply #62 on: December 29, 2011, 10:50:00 AM »
Quote from: jost2brown
Quote from: gmann
Thanks for that post.
X2
Even vets need inspiration to stay the course guys.

Thanks for being badass quitters.
In the end I Surrender, I and I alone accept that I have and always will have a Nicotene ADDICTION. It is my choice to quit, but I can't do it alone. I get to go down this path one time, I want to do it right. I recognize that my word, my integrety to you is on the line and is only as good as my actions. Caving is not an option in this plan-Eafman 7/11

I am not cured. I will quit one day at a time. I will continue to do what works. Posting roll everyday. To do otherwise would be foolish on my part. You can do this-Ready 12/11

To overcome your addiction you must comprehend what it means to fail-Razd 3/12

Theres a lot of people that come here, especially vets, that WANT to be reminded that they are addicts.-Tarpon 6/12

Just as a building starts with architectural drawings. Your daily quit begins with a promise.-Scowick 2/13

Here and now, focused on today, minute by minute, whatever it takes, I promise to all my bros and myself not to become a negative stat and stay quit!-krok 1/15

I want everyone to be quit. Even the assholes.-Probe1957 1/18

Ignoring history or erasing history fixes nothing and leads you inevitably down the same path.-69franx 04/30/2021