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How to Quit Smoking for Good and Overcome that Nasty Cigarette Habit

Here is how I finally quit smoking for good and overcame my cigarette habit.

First, let me remind you of what you already know: quitting smoking is hard. You know this because you’ve tried to quit smoking and you’ve failed. I have tried to quit as well, several times, using several different techniques. Now that I have finally quit, and made it stick, I want to help you to do the same. Quitting wasn’t easy for me. I can’t promise that it will be easy for you….we both know that it won’t be. But I think I can help you.

Quitting smoking
Photo by Axolo71

If you have some interest in quitting smoking (very likely, since you are reading this), then you have experienced a desire to quit smoking—a desire to be free of nicotine.

Now you might think you need a more extreme guide to quitting smoking, or you that you want to quit smoking even though you truly enjoy cigarettes. It’s also possible that you might still need to develop the motivation to quit. If, on the other hand, you have experienced a moment where you were fed up with cigarettes, sick and tired of smoking one after the other, sick of having to feed your addiction, of standing out in the cold, of being miserable. You have made a decision to start considering the possibility of quitting. You are probably still toying with the idea of quitting even though you haven’t made the official decision yet.

If and when you do decide to quit, the strength of your commitment, the strength of your resolve, and—most importantly—the memory of that decision–is of the utmost importance. Let me say that again: the memory of your decision to quit and the level of commitment involved….that is what is critical. You must commit fully. Make a strong, mental commitment to it. Concentrate on remembering this commitment, this decision of yours. Now if you are sitting there reading this, still a smoker, then you probably cannot grasp the importance of this concept. You will probably believe that this information does not apply to you, because you may very well have a strong will and a good memory. So here is the scientific breakthrough for you: nicotine withdrawal changes all of that.

Let me say that another way: nicotine withdrawal changes your brain chemistry. Literally. For some people the withdrawal symptoms are much worse than others, but the fact remains: nicotine withdrawal changes your thinking on a physical level. How will this manifest itself? What you essentially have to prepare for is the fact that—despite your strong-willed resolve to quit smoking and truly give it up for good this time—every single pore of your body, mind, and soul is going to be crying out for a cigarette when you are going through the worst of your withdrawals. You will forget—literally forget—the strength of your resolve to quit smoking. This isn’t just some subtle psychological trick, mind you—this happens on a physical level. You have to be prepared for it. You will question yourself. You will wonder about your decision to quit.

So how can you strengthen your resolve, knowing ahead of time that it is going to be seriously challenged? There are a number of ways. My best suggestion for you is to do some writing. Before you quit, write down the reasons you are quitting. Write a letter to yourself. Write about how sick and tired you are of smoking. Remind yourself not to light up, no matter what. It might feel childish to sit and write about this stuff. Do it anyway.

Remind yourself that you were of sound mind and had rational thought when you made the decision to quit smoking. It seems ridiculous, now, to remind yourself that you were sane when you decided to quit smoking…but I promise you, you will question your decision when you are in the worst of your withdrawals. That is why the reinforcement is needed, to overcome this enormous change in perception. You have to be ready when your brain starts questioning your decision.

quit smoking
Photo by MarkFlemingPhoto

There is an awful lot of money being made out there by products that are designed to help you quit smoking. Understand that the nicotine products—the patch, the gum, the lozenges—are making billions of dollars each year(that is not an exaggeration), precisely because they don’t work. Pretty much the same core population of “quitters” keep buying into the lie: that the nicotine patch or the gum can help them quit smoking. What I am telling you is this: those products do not work and actually make it harder for you to quit smoking. But what about all of those studies proving that the patch or the gum is effective in helping people to quit smoking, you say? With billions of dollars at stake each year, those studies are carefully orchestrated.

Statistically, people wearing the patch do better in the short term (while they are still on the patch) than those who are going cold turkey, but once the patch comes off—guess what? They are smoking again. Volunteer patch-wearing quitters don’t smoke and good numbers get posted for the studies, but these people generally don’t stay quit in the long term. On the other hand, most of the cold turkey quitters from the control group don’t even make it through the first day, but the ones who do make it—stay quit. Replacement strategies seek to replace the nicotine in your body, and I have never had any success with them. Alternatively, supplemental strategies (holistic approaches such as meditation, nutrition, relaxation, or exercise) can be used in conjunction with each other, and can help a smoker quit without putting more drugs into their body (such as with the Nicotine patch).

So my suggestion? Quit cold turkey. I know that sounds like a death sentence. After I had tried and failed to quit smoking so many times, even with the help of the nicotine patch, I felt that I would have no chance going cold turkey. But it worked. Unbelievably, it worked for me and I stayed quit. However, my success was not a matter of will power—I can assure you. I have tried and failed so many times before this. Here is what worked for me:

Don’t smoke no matter what.

Don’t use any nicotine products—the patch, the gum, the lozenges, the inhalers, etc.

Don’t overdo the sweets and sugars. Chew sugar-free gum. (NOT nicotine gum). Chew toothpicks.

Eat smaller portions of food, but do it more frequently throughout the day. Don’t binge on food! Concentrate on purposely eating much slower than usual.

Drink juice.

Moderately reduce your caffeine intake, especially if you are a coffee drinker.

Here is what really clinched it for me though: I took a few days off of work for the beginning of my quit. On the first day off, I quit smoking at night before going to bed. I woke up the next day and started flushing my system by drinking massive amounts of cranberry juice. I drank the stuff all day long. By night time I was getting into some more serious cravings. Instead of going to sleep though, I stayed up all night long, flushing my system out further and becoming extra tired. At nine o’clock the next morning I was still awake, dead tired, and entering the worst of my withdrawals. See the timing there? I was extra, extra tired when I was approaching the worst part of my physical withdrawal. I believe this was the key to my success—because at this point, I was able to lie down and sleep for about 24 hours straight—right through the peak of my body’s withdrawals. I literally stayed asleep for over 20 hours. When I finally got up, I could tell that the cravings where subsiding. I was through the worst of it. By a long shot, I was through the worst of it. Every day after that, it got a little easier each day. At the end of day five I was telling people that I was surprised at how easy this was turning out to be.

How to Quit Smoking
Photo by GlobalGreen

The exact details and characteristics of nicotine withdrawal will vary a bit from person to person. But there are some averages that you should know about. Your body starts changing the moment you quit. At 72 hours, your bloodstream is completely free from nicotine and your withdrawal symptoms should be peaking. My withdrawal symptoms peaked closer to 48 hours because I was flushing my system so heavily with cranberry juice (not necessarily recommended, although drinking moderate amounts of juice is definitely a good thing). So expect days two, three, and four of your quit to be especially rough.

Remember, the best way to quit smoking is to sleep through the tough part.

As far as cravings go, by the end of week two, you are pretty much out of the woods. Just two weeks, and you will be in a position where you are no longer craving cigarettes. When your withdrawal peaks on day 3, you will probably think about wanting to smoke about once every ten seconds. I remember reading a bunch of tips on how to get through a cigarette craving during these times. How ridiculous. All of day 3 will be one big massive craving. (That is why I honestly recommend sleeping through it). However, at the end of the first week, you can expect to go for five or ten minutes without having the thought of a cigarette. And by the end of two weeks, you will go entire hours without thinking of smoking, and the occasional urge will be nothing more than a mere nuisance. After two months, you will go for a whole day without thinking about a cigarette. A whole day!

Consider that for a moment. You can be nicotine free, enjoying all the benefits of not smoking, all the money saved, all the rewards of a life lived in a healthier manner. You will think of cigarettes less and less as time goes on, and eventually you will have entire days, weeks, months—where you don’t even think about smoking. Not once! You will be free from nicotine. Nobody really needs a reason to quit smoking anymore—not smoking is its own reward. It means tens of thousands of dollars saved, an extra fifteen to twenty years of lifespan, and freedom from the constant feedings that now dominate your life. Make a decision, right now, for a new and better life.

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{ 61 comments… read them below or add one }

Patrick February 22, 2010 at 7:12 pm

Way to go, Dave. Sounds like you have made the leap into becoming an ex-smoker. Keep it up, never go back…..

ujjwal saha February 25, 2010 at 9:17 am

thanks….long live…

Meka H. June 21, 2010 at 10:29 am

this is some very helpful information. today is my second day of not smoking and Im starting to get the withdrawel symptoms. but after reading this, I will definately hang in there.

Common_Tator August 9, 2010 at 3:58 am

I had my last cigarette 8 days ago … after 42 years of smoking. I was not a 2 or 3 pack a day smoker. Initially I smoked about a pack a day. After 20 years of smoking I reduced my cigarettes to 12 to 15 per day; always thinking I would gradually reduce the number of cigarettes and then quit. Thirteen of fourteen years ago I quit for a month but it didn’t last as my girlfriend was a smoker. Now I am tired of coughing, shortness of breath, and the need to be a closet smoker. I purchased two large (190 piece) Nicorette packages with the intent to substitute the gum for the cigarette. I also knew full well that nicotine was the addictive agent and Nicorette, while better for my lungs than smoking, was simply a process where one behavior (smoking) is replaced by another (chewing). I smoked my last cigarette on July 31 and did not have any others in the house. When I awoke on August 1 I decided to avoid the Nicorette and only use it as a last resort if I was determined to go buy a pack of cigarettes. I still have not used the gum and am not going to buy any cigarettes. Bottom line: You have to want to stop smoking, you have to be fully committed to stopping smoking, and you have to have will power. In my case I decided I had two choices: Get busy living, or get busy dying. I chose to get busy living. It has only been 8 days but I know I am done with cigarettes. The severe cravings began to diminish after 4 or 5 days and now the occasional craving is related to the habit (after meal, reading the paper, bored, etc.). I am done. Period. End of Story.

Kalina August 18, 2010 at 12:36 pm

Great article! I smoked for over 20 years and quit cold turkey 5+ years ago. Nicotine gum doesn’t work, it’s expensive and it’s very raspy and nasty tasting. Just focus your mind, like laser sharp, dig way in and don’t take “I can’t” for an option. Know you can do this. Olympians focus on their goal and see themselves on that winner’s platform wearing a medal before they compete because it works. You do the same. See your goal Imagine yourself when you’re no longer a tobacco slave! Imagine the surprise of those who know you and the positive responses you’ll get. Millions of people just like you quit forever. Like me they were just typical smokers, no better than you are. It’s your turn. Like anything else you’ve got to want it. Read about the cessation benefits timeline daily. It’s never, ever too late to quit to do a world of good and to decrease your risks of cancer, etc. I joined a fitness center. It kept me from gaining weight, helped me make new healthier friends, got me out of old routines, keeps me in a smoke free environment after work, keeps me focused on good health and gave me something else to feel super good about. I rewarded myself with a trip to my dentist to whiten my teeth, too, knowing I wouldn’t want to stain them again. Keep yourself distracted for the first 3 days or so. If you smoke in the car or on the phone, avoid the phone and car for a few days. You’ll be anxious, but it does pass pretty quick in the grand scheme of things. I kept telling myself “Cancer misery lasts much longer than a couple of days!” Do deep breathing excersizes and keep your eyes on the prize. This is your life we’re talking about! Truly, it’s not as bad as you’d expect, and it is so totally worth it. I now save the same $ I would’ve spent on cigs for vacation spending $, or jewelry or whatever I want. You’re no wimp, you CAN do the lousy 3 day hurdle and get it over with. Good luck everyone!

Patrick August 18, 2010 at 3:11 pm

@ Kalina – excellent suggestions there! I totally agree with all of your ideas, they are most helpful tips. Thank you so much for sharing them with everyone!

Brandy August 22, 2010 at 10:08 pm

I’m on my 12th hour being cigarette free! It’s only my 12th hour, but I’m doing this. I will quit smoking!
1 ppd x5 yrs, and I have asthma. I’m also a nurse. It’s just not doing it for me anymore Patrick.
Thanks for the website, and the encouragement. For preparing me for that one-big-craving-day!
I’m finally ready.
And I’m proud of all of you for doing it too! God Bless us.

Patrick August 22, 2010 at 10:11 pm

Good luck Brandy!

You will be so much happier when you are finally free from that nasty habit!

Valerie September 12, 2010 at 6:03 pm

I am in the last few hours of day 3 of quitting. It is exactly correct that you think about a cigarette every 10 seconds. I am drinking water like crazy and I cooked all day! I made healthy stuff though – low calorie soup, spinach quiche, mashed potatoes with roasted garlic added! I usually smoke while on the phone and I have avoided the phone for the past 3 days. I have not told anyone, but my husband, what I doing right now for fear that if I fail, they will not take me serious the next time I try. I did quit before and it lasted 22 MONTHS! Don’t know why I went back.

I do know it does get easier, I am just at the point now where my mind is making me question my decision to quit again.
Off to get another 20 ounces of water and keep busy!! Wish me luck! I am trying to exhaust myself to sleep though some of this!

Patrick September 12, 2010 at 8:41 pm

@ Valerie – I think you will make it, and I think you are also through the worst of it. If you can fall asleep tonight then tomorrow you will wake up a true ex-smoker again.

Hang on to your precious freedom this time!

Jasmin September 27, 2010 at 7:17 pm

Thank you! I am on day three, and I am happy to see that someone else followed my ideas! I haven’t been working because I was feeling ill with the flu, and I happened to run out of cigarettes the same day. With all of these factors, I said… screw it, I’m done smoking. So, I’m stuck in the pattern of peak withdrawal… and I’m desperately looking for the “typical timeline” when I came across your site. So true… I should NOT be looking for ways to kill the cravings when I’m craving. That is ridiculous. Your article was useful and amusing. Very relatable. Thanks. :)

Hamish October 19, 2010 at 7:04 pm

This was really awsome help, thanks. Im on day 2 now, I broke on the first day and had 2, but then chucked the packet in disgust. Not sure how that will effect when I peak, but today has been easier than yesterday, and I havent had one all day, so not sure if this is day one or two. I count it as two. But either way im feeling confident still.

Marilou Ferguson November 10, 2010 at 5:26 pm

I have tried to quit several times always with patches,
or inhalers, it didn’t work for me.

This is my 5th day and I am feeling pretty good.

My third day I did take a couple puffs of a nicotine inhaler but that was it.

I do find I get very tired and sleep more than usual but that’s ok.

The thoughts of smoking are getting less and less.

Thanks for your tips very useful.

Patrick November 23, 2010 at 11:28 pm

Keep going with it Marilou. Avoid that inhaler like the plague. I think you are nine tenths of the way there. Stay strong in the coming days and you will lick this thing for good!

Paul December 5, 2010 at 5:15 pm

Fingers are shaking just trying to write this. Quit at 10pm Friday and its 4pm Sunday and cravings are hitting really bad. Been drinking a mixture of cranberry/sugar/water to help flush my system out. I just keep focusing on my wife and two little girls and that Im ding this for all of us. Im 37 and starting smoking a pack a day at 14. Feels like everywhere I turn I need to smoke…feels like everything went hand in hand with smoking. Lord please give me the strength to overcome this once and for all.

Patrick December 5, 2010 at 5:19 pm

@ Paul – You are further through it then you think, do not let ANY nicotine into your body, keep flushing it hard with fluids, cranberry, etc.

This way it gets it over with FAST, like ripping off a band aid. You are almost there!

David Kedron December 6, 2010 at 8:43 am

Hey Patrick, I love your articles – you have really put a lot of effort into your website, and the way you write really connects.

Right now, I am on Day 5, smoked for only 3 years, and was at about half a pack a day. Definitely not extreme like a lot of other people posting here, but boy, on Day 1-3 I was going insane. I had started smoking while in the military, and right now I’m unemployed – so it was convenient to stop right now while I’m not doing anything.

Unfortunately I actually started doing most of my research after I had gone cold-turkey, so I’ve actually been learning a lot more and it has helped me to stay away from going back.

There is one thing that I’m rather interested on – there is a lot covering Day 1-3, and your first weeks and such, but what happens mentally after 6 MO ? It seems a lot of people will be quit, and then after a rather long time (6 MO+) they will go back, what is going on here that I should be aware of?

Patrick December 6, 2010 at 1:52 pm

@ David – At the six month and later point, I think you need to consider holistic health and the possibility of incorporating regular, vigorous exercise.

Most people do not want to hear that as a solution because it takes real work. But my belief (and my experience) is that if you exercise on a regular basis (and push yourself a bit when you do it!) then you will always have protection from a nicotine relapse. But you have to push yourself a bit to get into a routine of regular, vigorous exercise. Just my 2 cents.

Ali December 17, 2010 at 5:21 am

Hello all,

I just want to wish you all good luck with the quitting process. Although I am not following this method, I think it should be good for those who are trying.

I haven’t touched a cigarette for 4 days now, and I am not planning on doing so. Used to smoke more than a pack/day for about 15 years.

Ellen December 21, 2010 at 7:59 pm

I’m 68 and smoked since age 17–51 years–about 2 1/2 packs a day, more since I’d gotten old and sleep less.

Today is my 10th day of cold-turkey quitting. As you might imagine, after so long and so much, my response to quitting is fairly atypical.

I waited in vain for the vaunted 72-hour mark and any sign that the cravings were easing. If anything they seemed to increase and grow more acute over the next two days. Day 10, for no logical reason, has been especially hard cravings-wise. It seems like two steps forward, three back.

Having said that, there have been some notable steps forward, no few of them owing to this site and a few others I’ve discovered.

This site validates my own experience in that it discusses the demerits of nicotine-replacement therapies. Heaven knows I tried them all over the years. My efforts to quit go back to the 70′s and aversion shock-therapy. Imagine paying big bucks to be electrocuted out of your nicotine addiction to no avail.

Something that absolutely helps and this site verifies…knocking back fluids like there’s no tomorrow.

For what it’s worth, here’s a point of view you won’t hear much from.

Never give up. Never.

There are some things in common but it’s different for everybody. Not fitting the current govt. story du jour doesn’t mean failing.

False: Plan the day, only way.

True: S’cuse me? Whaddayah mean I quit? I just got up to let the dog out.

Oh, and I didn’t know about sweets! THAT explains a lot.

Good luck to all and bless us every one. At my age there’s not much hope.

But from where I’m reading, you youngsters seem like heroes all.

So, where were you in the 50s???

Jaime February 14, 2011 at 11:13 am

I just want to say that sleep is a great way to get through the cravings. I am on day 7 of my cold turkey quit.The nicotine is out of my system, but I still crave the endorphines cigs create from time to time, more in the evenings. I have cut down on my caffine and am drinking herbal tea and hot lemon/honey water. I bring that in the car with me as well in stead of lighting up. Being it is day 7 and I still would LOVE a cig…my mantra I keep repeating is give it a least one month and then decide. Not worth starting the detox all over again, it you can get to a month and be okay without a cig. I hoping for you all of you and me!!!

Rachel March 3, 2011 at 7:29 am

I have smoked for 16 years starting with social smoking for the first couple years. I have quit using Zyban and patches before but that lasted only 6 months. When I had my two babies, I quit immediately I discovered I was pregnant. There was no question in my mind that it would hurt the baby. Stupidly enough, I would dream all through pregnancy of the day I could sit down with a pack of ciggies and a bottle of wine. I noticed though that every time I started smoking again, the number of cigarettes I smoked a day increased. I concluded that I would only stop when I wanted to, when I stopped “enjoying” smokes, when I would be doing it for me.

Last Saturday just before 4:00 pm as I reached for another cigarette, three questions popped up in my head. Why the heck am I still doing this to myself? How can I let this one thing control my life? How can I be an addict? I got up and threw away all packs of cigarettes, lighters and matches in my house. I am coming to the end of day 4 and just found your website. I didn’t know about cranberry juice or that I should sleep. I have been struggling to get up and do my work but now understand that I need to take it easy. I have been eating candy like crazy and chewing gum and toothpicks. Yesterday was a really bad day for me – for some reason I feel like throwing up all the time and yesterday was the worst. I can’t sleep at night and haven’t had any decent sleep since I stopped.

Quiting cold turkey is good for one thing – you will never be in doubt that nicotine had taken over your life!!! Willpower and determination are the keys. Most importantly, one must come to the decision for themselves.

Thank you Patrick for the encouragement and a good strategy to stay quit!!

Becky March 26, 2011 at 9:54 am

I’m now on day 8 without a cigarette. I decided cold turkey was the way for me to go. This article hit the nail on the head for me. I have smoked a pack a day for 35 years and really didn’t think there was any way for me to give it up. A week ago I picked up my pack of cigarettes and threw them in the trash. I also had a partial carton in the freezer that I had my husband get rid of. Whatever you do, if you are really serious about quiting, GET RID OF ALL CIGARETTES in your housse, car, work or anywhere else that you would have easy access to them. Like alot of others out there, I have tried quiting before with no luck but I am feeling very confident this time that I will be SUCCESSFUL!! Good luck to all!
P.S. Thanks Ellen…. Your right. NEVER GIVE UP. NEVER!!!

Jen April 7, 2011 at 12:01 pm

Thank you for your article and for all the posted replies. It helps to hear the experiences of others.

Today is Day 5 of a cold turkey quit. *Deep breath* Feeling pretty good about the whole thing. I too have been drinking tons of water so that I feel full and do not gain weight while quitting. I didn’t think about the added benefit of flushing out the nicotine.

Anyway.. just wanted to wish you all luck!

Marie April 15, 2011 at 5:44 am

Great reading here, thanks to everyone. I’m at the end of my third day cold-turkey… been smoking since I was 15, 42 now, help that’s 27 years smoking!!! Ive had many many attempts to stop, and cold turkey is definitely the only way to go – why put more nicotine into your system with nicotine-replacement products? Doesn’t make sense… just make the firm decision to stop and then get it out of your system as quick as possible. This is my time – my 7year old son with tears in his eyes asking me to stop cause he hates to see my smoking and doesnt want me to die, he even asked to watch Alan Carr’s Stop Smoking dvd with me to make sure I watched it all – wonderful son, I won’t let him down!!! So, I’m drinking pure cranberry and pomegranate juices (potent detoxers), heaps of red bush tea, and peppermint tea… and also took a couple of days of work so I can sleep whenever I feel like it, and Im sleeping quite a bit. My philosophy is I can do whatever I want to for the first three or four days, well everything except taking in nicotine in any form! And it’s easy!!! I just tell myself “This is easy to do”… and I also remind myself a lot that IM HAPPY, lol, so I stay calm and dont get grumpy at anyone. So yeah, very happy to be breathing clean air for the rest of my days :)

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