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slides: 10 Tips to Finally Quit Smoking

Thursday, February 19, 2015

 

January always brings with it fresh hopes that this year you will be a better person.  You will finally get healthy — this is the year you quit smoking.  Then January begins slipping away, and most of you either never got your resolutions off the ground, or already went back to your same old habits.  No matter.  If what you want is to make a change for good, you don’t need to wait until next January to try again. 

See Slides Below: 10 Tips to Finally Quit Smoking

On Feb 11 commissioner Amanda Fritz will present a Smoke and Tobacco Free Parks initiative to the Portland City Council.  It will expand the current PP&R policies to include a smoking ban in all Portland City parks, recreation areas and natural areas.  It will also extend the ban to include all forms of smoking, including e-cigarettes, vaporizers, marijuana, chew and smokeless tobacco.  All signs are pointing to the fact that now is the time for you to finally quit.    

But you’ve probably tried already, right?  Once, twice, five times?  Maybe you’ve already tried and failed this year.  If you want to quit, it doesn’t matter whether you still love smoking or you hate it; the addiction is hard to break, and you don’t want to set yourself up for one more failure.  

Quitting smoking is tough.  That is an understatement, but there really is not a better way to put it.  For some of you the battle will be harder than it is for others.  Throughout the process you have to walk the line between being gentle with yourself and allowing yourself to rationalize just one cigarette.  Keep a constant reminder of your reasons for quitting, use your supports, and trust that it will get easier. 

Here are the 10 best things you can do to increase your chances of success:

Erin Brockmeyer, LAc, is owner and acupuncturist at Solstice Natural Health in downtown Portland.  She creates custom health plans for patients to help them tackle their most complicated health concerns, including infertility, prenatal care, fibromyalgia, thyroid conditions and chronic and acute pain conditions.  Visit her website for more information and to download her free e-book 5 Simple Ways to Improve Your Health Today.

 

Related Slideshow: 10 Tips to Finally Quit Smoking

Here are 10 tips to help you quit smoking. 

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Pick a Date

Pick a quit date and put it on your calendar in ink— this is the starting point to making your plan.  Pretty much all of the experts agree that picking a date is the most important first step.  The key is to pick a date that is no more than one month away — if it is too far out, you will either lose your will or rationalize your way into an extension, and if it is too soon i.e. the nefarious tomorrow, you will only fail for lack of planning.  Everything that follows should be set up to make that quit date a success.

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Honesty

Be honest with yourself.  Admit that you are an addict.  Own up to the seriousness and the entirety of your addiction.  If you are lying to yourself about how strong your addiction is, you won’t properly prepare yourself for quitting.  Instead you’ll set yourself up for failure.  Pay attention to how much you truly smoke — write it down, and prepare yourself to move on.

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Triggers

Write down your triggers.  One of the keys to successful quitting is to be thoroughly prepared for the things that set you off.  Do you always smoke when you drink?  Every time you have a stressful encounter with your partner do you smoke to calm down?  By cataloging the things that get you jonesing for a cigarette, you will be able to systematically prepare other options for handling those situations.

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Plan Ahead

Plan for your triggers.  When the urge strikes and is overwhelming, what will you do instead of bumming or buying cigarettes?  Take up knitting so you have something to do with your hands.  Keep carrot sticks with you so you have something to munch on.  Munch on sunflower seeds.  Have a friend you can call.  Take a walk. Make sure you always have something on hand that you can use to distract you until the urge passes (and trust that it will pass).   

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Watch the Clock

In the week leading up to your quit date, begin to break your habit by smoking by the clock instead of by situation.  Most smokers smoke during or after certain events: the first cigarette when you wake up, a cigarette on the drive to work, a cigarette after lunch, another before the conference call and so on.  For this week parcel out your cigarettes according to the clock.  For instance, allow yourself one cigarette every two hours beginning at 6:00 am.  Stick to this within 5 minutes on either side.  If you wake up at 6:06, you missed your first cigarette and have to wait until 8:00.  If you miss your noon cigarette you must wait until 2:00 and so on.  It is the habit of smoking, the mental association between your tasks and stressors and smoking that is the hardest to break.  Doing this gives you a head start.  

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Get Support

Get support. For some of you that may mean talking to your doctor about medication or using the patch.  For others that may mean using acupuncture and herbs.  For some of you it will mean all of the above.  Both methods have much higher success rates at producing quitters than if you quit on your own.  There are also support groups and hotlines that offer instant help when you need it most.  Here are a few places to start:

 

Call your doctor or find an acupuncturist so they can help you with your plan.

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Avoid Your Other Vices

Avoid alcohol, smoking pot and other situations that you associate with smoking for 4-6 weeks while the quitting is the most difficult.  This is a huge bummer, but it beats hanging out with smokers and willing

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Throw Away the Past

The night before you quit get rid of your cigarettes, ash trays and lighters.  You need to make it at least moderately difficult to smoke.  Quit carrying the cash you use to buy cigarettes.  Avoid the store you stop at for a candy bar and cigarettes.  Basically, put up as many obstacles as you can to smoking.

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Avoid Certain People

Avoid the people who trigger you (as much as possible).  If they are friends they will understand, and if they are jerks you should avoid them anyway.

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Treat Yourself

Give yourself rewards for quitting.  The most obvious is to take the money you would have spent on cigarettes and buy yourself a weekly or monthly celebratory treat.  Somedays this might be the only thing that keeps you going.

 
 

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