MAY 26, 2010
Quitting has made me more reflective. Eighty something days in, I have been thinking about what it means to be quit forever. Sure, I post roll daily and that means I am quit for today.
I quit dipping on or about February 21, 2005, and I joined Matt van WyckÂ’s original site. I posted for more than six months, and then I stopped. About six months after that, I resumed dipping. I was at about Day 400 or so. I chose to dip again in 2006 thinking it would help me through a sad and trying time in my life. It did not change a thing.
I remember thinking during late 2005 and early 2006 about having this “beat”. Yet, like many people who have several hundred days of nicotine free living in the bag, I was feeling craves and still feeling the fog.
I vividly remember the day I caved saying to myself I am screwed, the cravings will never go away if they are not gone at day 400, and my lot in life was to dip, damn the consequences.
Getting from March 1 to May 26 was challenging. But the real challenge for me is going to be a year or two from now when I hit a funk or have a craving. For me, I have had to make a fundamental change in the way I think about this and approach my nicotine free life.
1. I am an addict. For 22 years, I used a poisonous chemical compound to medicate myself for some reason. My body chemistry has permanently changed. That means I cannot ever use this chemical again, and that means that I should expect cravings to some extent (more likely than not decreasing in intensity as time passes) for the rest of my life.
2. For now and the foreseeable future, I need to be involved with a group of like minded individuals.
3. I need to resolve daily not to use nicotine.
4. I must control my thoughts and at all costs avoid dangerous thinking (i.e., what would “one dip” be like?)
5. This one works for me, but it may not for others. I need to quit focusing on days quit and instead, just focus on the here and now. I will not use nicotine today and have been nicotine free since March 1, 2010.
And for those reading who have hit day 70, 80, or 90 and have hit a wall of funk and fog? Number one, that is normal and number two, it goes away.