"You may not be able to get a free stop smoking patch or any free stop smoking product."

Managing Cigarette Cravings

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"Another good thing about attending a stop smoking clinic is that you will spend some time in a cigarette free environment and away from your life routines."

"These recently tested and FDA-approved vaccines and drugs are part of a reasonable therapy for those smokers that cannot find another way to help quit smoking."

"Apparently the smoker preserves his daily routine but he actually quits his vice little by little without even realizing it."

Quit Smoking Article Excerpts

Stop Smoking Programs That Help

"By using Zyban you may be able to finally quit smoking."

Quit Smoking Lozenges

"For many people who smoke long after it was cool to do so, the first question they ask is how to stop smoking."

Quit Smoking Support

"The next quit smoking tip is pretty much connected with the previous one."

Stop Smoking With Hypnosis

"Instead of relying solely on personal diaries in which daily nicotine needs are recorded, researchers conducted tests to measure carbon monoxide in the persons exhaled breath."

 

Managing Cigarette Cravings

Stop Smoking with Hypnosis: The Surprising Results of this Technique.

Quit Smoking Facts:

  • 20 minutes after quitting smoking your heart rate drops.
  • Even brief exposure can trigger respiratory symptoms, including cough, phlegm, wheezing, and breathlessness.
  • 10 years after quitting smoking your lung cancer death rate is about half that of a smokers and your risk of cancers of the mouth, throat, esophagus, bladder, kidney, and pancreas decreases.

Managing Cigarette Cravings


Remember: The urge to smoke will come and go. Try to wait it out. Or look at the plan you made last week. You wrote down steps to take at a time like this. Try them! You can also try these tips:

* Keep other things around instead of cigarettes. Try carrots, pickles, sunflower seeds, apples, celery, raisins, or sugarfree gum.

* Wash your hands or the dishes when you want a cigarette very badly. Or take a shower.

* Learn to relax quickly by taking deep breaths.
o Take 10 slow, deep breaths and hold the last one.
o Then breathe out slowly.
o Relax all of your muscles.
o Picture a soothing, pleasant scene.
o Just get away from it all for a moment.
o Think only about that peaceful image and nothing else.


* Light incense or a candle instead of a cigarette.

* Where you are and what is going on can make you crave a cigarette. A change of scene can really help. Go outside, or go to a different room. You can also try changing what you are doing.

* No matter what, don't think, "Just one won't hurt." It will hurt. It will undo your work so far.

* Remember: Trying something to beat the urge is always better than trying nothing.

Find New Things To Do

Starting today you may want to create some new habits. Here are some things you might try:

* Swimming, jogging, playing tennis, bike riding, or shooting baskets. It's hard to smoke and do these things at the same time. How about walking your dog?

* Keep your hands busy. Do crossword puzzles or needlework. Paint. Do woodworking, gardening, or household chores. You can also write a letter or paint your nails.

* Enjoy having a clean tasting mouth. Brush your teeth often and use mouthwash.

* Take a stretch when you're tempted to reach for a cigarette.

Set aside time for the activities that satisfy you and mean the most to you. There are natural breaks even during a busy day. After dinner, first thing in the morning, or just before bed are good examples. You'll also need plenty of rest while you get used to your smoke-free lifestyle.

Remember the Instant Rewards of Quitting

Your body begins to heal within 20 minutes after your last cigarette. The poison gas and nicotine start to leave your body. Your pulse rate goes back to normal. The oxygen in your blood rises to a normal level.

Within a few days you may notice other things:

* Your senses of taste and smell are better.
* You can breathe easier.
* Your "smoker's hack" starts to go away. (You may keep coughing for a while, though.)

The nicotine leaves your body within three days. Your body starts to repair itself. At first, you may feel worse instead of better. Withdrawal feelings can be hard. But they are a sign that your body is healing.

Finallythe Long-term Rewards of Quitting

Tobacco use in the United States causes more than 450,000 deaths each year. Of those deaths, 170,000 are from cancer.

After you've quit, you've added healthy, full days to each year of your life. You've greatly lowered your risk of death from lung cancer and other diseases including:

* Stroke
* Heart disease
* Chronic bronchitis
* Emphysema
* At least 13 other kinds of cancer

You've also cut back on dangerous second-hand smoke for your loved ones. Finally, by quitting smoking, you're setting a good example. You're showing young people that a life without cigarettes is a longer, healthier, happier life.

Quit Smoking Facts

  • People who smoke are 10 to 20 times more likely to get lung cancer or die from lung cancer than people who do not smoke.
  • In 2005, 30-day rates had dropped to 9 percent for 8th-graders, 15 percent for 10th-graders, and 23 percent for 12th-graders.
  • Cigarette smoke contains more than 4,000 chemical compounds.
  • Persons who already have asthma or other respiratory conditions are at especially high risk for being affected by secondhand smoke, and should take special precautions to avoid secondhand smoke exposure.

Quit Smoking News

Once a Mainstay of Magazines, Cigarette Makers Drop Print Ads
R. J. Reynolds said that starting next year it would stop running cigarette ads in consumer magazines and newspapers for brands like Camel, Winston and Pall Mall.
Antismoking Activist Calls Rolling Stone Insert ?One Great Big Cigarette Ad?
An insert in the Nov. 15 issue of Rolling Stone magazine sponsored by Camel cigarettes is under fire for allegedly blurring the line between advertising and editorial content.
The Pursuit of Justice, or Money?
In some cases, litigation can look more like a racket for income redistribution than a search for fairness.
Supreme Court Weighs Maine?s Tobacco Law
The latest battleground in the federalism wars at the Supreme Court is an unlikely one: the state of Maine, which is trying to prevent under-age consumers from buying cigarettes over the Internet.
Cause and Effect: Images of Lung Damage From Secondhand Smoke
Researchers say that for the first time, they have been able to get an image of lungs apparently damaged by secondhand tobacco smoke.

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