T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
240.1 | Another Addict | NRLABS::TATISTCHEFF | | Tue Mar 10 1987 12:30 | 16 |
| I'm making my second attempt at quitting smoking right now. I figure
I'll quarter my normal # of cigarettes for a week, then stop. Cold
turkey didn't work last time, so I'm going to try a modified version.
I saw a study explaining the difficulty with quitting cigarettes.
The addictiveness of nicotine is not the only problem; it is the
delivery. Each time you take a drag, your body gets a little rush.
So the # of doses of nicotine a day is not simply the number of
cigarettes, but actually the number of drags.
The hardest thing is that although 1) it is disgusting, smelly,
etc, 2) I can't taste or smell as well as before, 3) I gross out
others with my smoke, and of course 4) it is certain to kill me,
I still find it hard to even _want_ to quit.
Lee
|
240.3 | Cancer sucks (your life away. Then you die) | FOLES::FOLEY | Rebel without a clue | Tue Mar 10 1987 12:34 | 13 |
|
If you want a horror story then I'll be glad to tell you what
happened to my Dad Xtine.. I'll tell you the pain that he went
thru and the pain we all went thru watching him fade away to
nothing..
If you want to hear it then lemme know..
I hope you can give them up.. I'd hate to see someone go thru
that again.. Especially a friend.
mike
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240.4 | Not scared yet? | VAXWRK::CONNOR | John Connor | Tue Mar 10 1987 14:30 | 5 |
| re .0
My mother and uncle died of emphysema being that they were both heavy
smokers. If you could have seen them dying I think you would have
been scared. One possible thing for you perhaps is to volunteer in
a hospital and watch some people dying from emphysema or lung cancer.
|
240.5 | clarification, I hope | CELICA::QUIRIY | Christine | Tue Mar 10 1987 14:31 | 50 |
|
Re: .3
Mike, thanks. I'm sorry about your father. Hearing about it isn't the sort of
thing that would help. I know people die from cancer, I have a close relative
getting used to life without a larynx, and I know it can be a long and horrible
way to go, because that's what I've heard. I'd like to see a little bit of it.
Maybe then I'd be scared enough. Whatever that means.
Re: .2
Bob, there's a conference called "No_smoking". I didn't think it would be a
friendly or supportive place to write my note -- I already know how offensive my
habit is to some and I know how harmful my second-hand smoke is. Knowing this
does nothing to encourage me to quit, it only makes me feel guilty. However, I
did go look there a minute ago, and after a scan of the first 120 notes, I found
about 10 that might be of interest to me.
As for not wanting to quit: on a "gut" level, this is true. Why should I
want to? It _feels_ good in many ways. If I vomited every time I took a drag,
I know I wouldn't be smoking for very long. If a cattle prod materialized from
out of nowhere and every time I took a drag I got a little jolt in the chest, I
probably wouldn't be smoking for very long. I've had this habit for a long time
now and it's very comforting to me. If I'm feeling anxious (which is a great
deal of the time), it relieves a little of that anxiety. If I am mad, a
cigarette seems to calm me down. If nothing else it has the soothing effect of
a ritual. Not smoking makes me feel crazy. I do not know what to do with my
hands (no rude jokes, please)! I do not like spending my waking hours thinking
of nothing else but smoking. I'd like some encouragement to carry on. I'd like
to hear from others who've been through the same thing because I think they're
the ones who can help me to help myself. The note title was a lousy one, I
admit.
I suppose what I'm looking for from other noters is their story of how hard it
was for them (I guess that means I don't want to hear from people who just
decided to quit, never had another cigarette, never missed it, etc.) -- and if
they've managed to kick the habit, what helped them to do so. I'm also looking
for people to say to me "I know you're doing a very hard thing. Good luck!" I
want encouragement and understanding. I want pats on the back. I know too many
people who have said "Well, thank god you've finally decided to quit that
stinking habit!" That doesn't help. If anything, I get the urge to light up so
I can blow smoke at them...
Sometimes I feel as though I can't live without a smoke. Pretty difficult to
comprehend, isn't it, since intellectually I know that I very probably won't
live a very long or enjoyable life with them.
Chewing gum with a vengence...
CQ
|
240.6 | Smoking isn't the only vice.. | HENRY8::BULLOCK | Jane, no heavy breathers, please | Tue Mar 10 1987 14:37 | 22 |
| If this indeed a note about addictions, I know what you are going
through. Although I have never smoked, I can empathize with you--my
addiction is FOOD. Since I exercise so much, it's easy for me to
justify over-eating. I went on the Scarsdale diet and lost 12 lbs.,
but unless I keep right with it, I gain.
Like you, I try scare-tactics from time to time. (The scariest
is looking at myself in an old bathing suit when I've gained too
much weight!) I wish there were an easy way for both of us, but
I guess (from my own experience) vigilance is an answer (how dull).
Re: smokers, I've watched my mom and a good friend give it up "cold
turkey"--they made it, and to this day don't smoke. I won't kid
you--they suffered (we ALL suffered!), but took the "one day at
a time" approach.
I wish you luck with your efforts, and I think that by running you
are setting yourself up for success---you may be replacing the bad
habit with a good one.
Best of luck,
Jane
|
240.7 | Chocolate Almond w/light Cream | PSYCHE::DECAROLIS | | Tue Mar 10 1987 14:43 | 12 |
|
How about coffee? Ever tried to give this up? If you are like
me, turbo charged metabolism, coffee can be fatal. (well, not
really).
Many people are addicted to coffee, I know I am. Someday
they'll make something that tastes like the real thing....
minus the caffeine.
Jeanne
|
240.8 | smoking cessation | FANTUM::MARCOTTE | | Tue Mar 10 1987 15:20 | 21 |
| re: .0
I can understand the problem, and can also sympathise wih you over
the desire to stop smoking. I had my last (i hope) cigarette 5 months
ago. I just never realised how addicted to the little suckers i
was. Fortunately I had a lot of support from friends.....one in
particular.
Anyway...Dec runs a smoking cessation clinic every once in awhile,
that is where i went to get "un-hooked". There are no gross pictures,
no black lungs...except the ones that you bring. The person running
it just gets everyone to talk about their habit...HONESTLY. There
is no bullshit...you either want to stop or you don't. They give
you the method, show you how to use the method, and prove to you
it works. I would check with helth services in your area, to find
out when the next program will be. Remember though, even if you
go thru the program, and continue to smoke...it will never be the
same...smoking that is. It does something to you...i can't describe
it and neither can some friends who continue to smoke...but i have
a feeling......it's GUILT.
|
240.9 | sex? masturbation? | VIDEO::OSMAN | and silos to fill before I feep, and silos to fill before I feep | Tue Mar 10 1987 16:38 | 12 |
| There are other addictions that people are more afraid to admit to.
For instance, some people are addicted to sex. Some are addicted
to masturbation.
This, of course, brings up the whole question about what's an addiction
versus what's just a "hobby" or a "pastime".
I think an addiction is generally associated with the item under question
depriving one of other aspects of their life.
/Eric
|
240.10 | group help works | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Tue Mar 10 1987 21:23 | 6 |
| re .8
I also went to the Digital sponsored smoke out clinic. I liked
their approach and would recommend it to other people who want
to quit.
Bonnie
|
240.11 | It's lonely in the smoke... | WATNEY::SPARROW | You want me to do what?? | Thu Mar 12 1987 14:56 | 28 |
| I work with 30 non-smokers. The peer pressure to quit is tremendous.
My manager got me an atomic smoke filter, I'm isolated from my
technical resources. It sure gets lonely...
I quit for a week last month and couldn't work, talk think or function.
I had a conferance with my manager and he offered to pay for a quit
smoking treatment program. We got 3 brochures from three hospitals
that have different programs. I don't want the scare tactics, I
assisted on autopsies in the military so there isn't much that grosses
me out. I figure its the monitoring of the habit, slowly breaking
it and replacing it with something non-addictive. Cold turkey does
work for some people, but I learned from one clinic that an addictive
personality has a harder time because the comfort zone is being
violated. A replacement needs to be found, I didn't realize how
hard that would be to find! My first seminar is on the 30th of
March. I would be willing to share what I find out if anyone is
interested.
BTW I checked out no_smoking and would rather not be preached to
about the advantages, I do know them. I want a method that works,
I didn't see any in there. As for myself quiting.....I will.
Maybe there should be a support group for all of us who are trying
but I don't think cold turkey quitters should be allowed, or
non-smokers who preach hell and damnation. I wouldn't mind a group
of people who offer encouragement to people who are *currently*
trying to quit because they are too.
any takers??? send me mail...
vivian
|
240.12 | face it, don't play around | COOKIE::ZANE | Shattering Reality | Fri Mar 20 1987 13:11 | 30 |
|
Right now, your feelings for continuing to smoke are stronger than your
reasons for quitting. You already have all the reasons you need to
quit, and if you don't, there are lots of people who will be happy to
give you more. Your "scare tactics" seem to be an attempt to address
these feelings, but they fail because you respond with the reasons you
already know, but not your feelings, so you wind up in an endless circle.
Get in touch with your own feelings on the matter. Understand both
sides. Why do you like to smoke? What does it do for you? Is there
anything else you can do that will give you the same feelings? Then, on
the other side, why do you want to quit? Would the feeling after quitting
be "better" than the feeling you have about smoking?
One more thing: these are *your* feelings and they don't have to be
justified to anyone else. But sometimes knowing what your feelings
are can help you make a decision of what you *want* to do. When you
want to do something and you know the pros and cons of your decision,
it makes it that much easier to do it.
Terza
P.S.- I wouldn't ignore that feeling of a "slow suicide." That's serious.
That would say to me that my system is ringing the alarm and I'd
better do something about it. Definitely scary, but true.
|
240.13 | | ERIS::CALLAS | So many ratholes, so little time | Fri Mar 20 1987 16:51 | 39 |
| I apologize in advance for the flaming I'm about to do, but I think
someone should say something.
I'm getting a little tired of the, "all you have to do is give it up"
attitude that most people seem to have about smoking and other forms
of addiction.
Addiction is a medical condition. It is *not* a matter of will power.
If you are addicted to something, be it nicotine, alcohol, or morphine
(heroin is simply a derivative of morphine), it means that there are
biological reasons why you can't give it up.
Asking someone to understand their feelings about smoking (assuming, of
course, that this person is addicted and doesn't merely have a habit)
is a little like asking them to understand their feelings about oxygen.
You don't get the luxury of having feelings about something you're
addicted to.
I'm sorry if this is scary, but it is. No one likes talking about the
loss of control and an apparent loss of free will. This is why we like
to pretend that giving up smoking is simply a matter of will power.
Current medical evidence says that of 100 smokers, 85 will be able to
quit with the proper assistance, support from loved ones, and large
quantities of coffee stirrers. The other 15 are addicted. Sounds pretty
good, eh? Well, of 100 heroin addicts, 95 will be able to quit with the
proper assistance. This means that for every person who is really and
truly addicted to heroin, there are three addicted to nicotine (per
capita, anyway). Another way to look at this is that nicotine is three
times as addictive as heroin.
If you've tried to stop smoking and can't, stop kicking yourself. Go
see your doctor. *Insist* on getting some sort of nicotine replacement.
If your doctor balks, listen closely, but carefully. I'm not a doctor,
and I'm not up on the latest on addiction therapy. There may be new
techniques that mere laymen know nothing about. But stop kicking
yourself, don't let people give you guilt trips, and get medical help.
Jon
|
240.14 | No, it's not easy | COOKIE::ZANE | Shattering Reality | Mon Mar 23 1987 01:28 | 71 |
| Re: .13
> I'm getting a little tired of the, "all you have to do is give it up"
> attitude that most people seem to have about smoking and other forms
> of addiction.
Excuse me, but I don't believe anyone is saying that all you have to do
is give it up. At least, I hope not. And, if anyone is implying that
it's easy, they are just fooling themselves and not helping the person
asking for help.
> Addiction is a medical condition. It is *not* a matter of will power.
> If you are addicted to something, be it nicotine, alcohol, or morphine
> (heroin is simply a derivative of morphine), it means that there are
> biological reasons why you can't give it up.>
I don't disagree with any of the statements you made here. But, I,
personally, don't believe biological reasons can ever be the *cause* of
addiction, although they may be a significant part of the vicious cycle.
> Asking someone to understand their feelings about smoking (assuming, of
> course, that this person is addicted and doesn't merely have a habit)
> is a little like asking them to understand their feelings about oxygen.
> You don't get the luxury of having feelings about something you're
> addicted to.
But that's exactly my point. You don't have the necessity, not luxury,
of understanding your own feelings about an activity you willing engaged
in, even though you may not be biologically capable of just giving it
up right at this very moment.
> I'm sorry if this is scary, but it is. No one likes talking about the
> loss of control and an apparent loss of free will. This is why we like
> to pretend that giving up smoking is simply a matter of will power.
It *is* scary. That is why "scare-tactics" will never work. None of
them come even close to the fear and knowledge that you've given up
a portion of control over your own free will.
> Another way to look at this is that nicotine is three times as
> addictive as heroin.
I strongly disagree with your logic here. The statistics you quoted
simply say there are three times as many people addicted to nicotine
as there are addicted to heroin, not that nicotine is three times as
addictive as heroin. But don't let statistics, whatever they may be,
keep you from seeking help for a condition you want to change. The
key phrase here is "want to change." Want to change does not imply the
automatic ability to fix it. If that were true, there wouldn't be an
addiction in the first place.
In any case, I apologize if it seemed that my reply was trying to lay
a guilt trip or imply that it was at all simple. In reading back over
it, I realized that it was easy to give up could have been implied.
What I was trying to say was that by getting in touch with your feelings
about it, you would be better able to determine whether you really wanted
to change it, not that knowing your feelings would give you the means to
change it with. See the difference? In other words, knowing your feelings
would bring you one step closer to determining a solution, not give you the
solution.
Thanks for the opportunity to clarify my response.
Terza
|
240.15 | q day coming up..... | WATNEY::SPARROW | You want me to do what?? | Mon Mar 23 1987 12:02 | 12 |
| Thanks Jon,
Also, I have had some return mail, and we *are* starting a support
group for gonna quits. If there are any other takers, let me know
and I will send out the distribution. I start the class on the
30th, and will be sending out what I find out after that.
vivian
btw, good thoughts from others are welcome, we *are* gonna quit,
without massive destruction in our wake.............
|
240.16 | A right for clean air in the office! | JUNIOR::TASSONE | Wayside Inn, My favorite | Tue Mar 24 1987 14:17 | 40 |
| Was I glad to ever read these notes. I am happy for all of you
that "want to change" a bad habit. I'm lucky. I never got caught
up in habits (drugs, alcohol, caffeine, nicotine) but there's one
thing that I am trying to make people in my office area realize.
While smokers feel the "right to" support their habit (by smoking
in public buildings), non-smokers have a "right to" clean air.
So, we ask management, how can this happen "at the same time".
It can't. That is why I am becoming very instrumental in getting
this building (personnel) aware that the percentage of smokers here
is higher than the national average. When I spoke with personnel,
I'll have you know that Digital (the Company) is planning something
very radical for Fiscal Year 88 as far as smoking is concerned.
I take it from this manager that Digital will be "helping" the smoker
to break his/her habit by designating smoking areas and offering
health advice packages and aids in quitting. I really hope that
this program gets in place for 1) the smoker will learn to deal
with the reasons he/she "needs" smoking in their lives and how to
combat this and 2) I am medically affected by transient smoke in
my environment (allerigic rhinitis) and working here is unbearable.
In a report titled Action on Smoking in Health, it states Smoking
is the number one national health problem that is curable. It also
stated that transient smoke inhaled by non-smokers CAUSES lung cancer.
My grandmother died of lung cancer and SHE DIDN'T EVEN SMOKE. My
boyfriends' mother's aunt was told by doctors time after time that
she had better quit smoking. Guess what? It was her HUSBAND that
smoked, NOT HER.
I can't live without clean air in my working environment. Smoke
filled air WILL KILL ME if the problem isn't cleaned up. I could
leave the company and become a hermit but that won't make the problem
go away.
I know this might sound flame-high but I am sort of angry because
I don't work with many considerate people. They know I am allergic
and get nosebleeds but they continue to fume around me. It isn't
fair and I plan working with the Digital Doctor to do something
about it.
flame-off Good luck in breaking a breakable habit.
|
240.17 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Mar 24 1987 14:29 | 6 |
| Re: .16
About 2/3 of our floor in ZK is now designated non-smoking. There
is a conference room reserved for smokers. It can be done today
- you need not wait.
Steve
|
240.18 | Just "airing" my feelings... | JUNIOR::TASSONE | Wayside Inn, My favorite | Tue Mar 24 1987 15:50 | 16 |
| Steve, I wish it were that simple but I've gotten no where with
management. All they do is move me around in cubicles that are
worse off than the previous one. I really don't know what else
to do so I escalated it to Personnel because I felt that "they"
can help me.
I'm patiently waiting but in the meantime, I take my prescriptions
(4 x daily) and take breathers outside about 3 times a day. BTW,
this building has very poor circulation and I'm not alone in my
complaints.
I know there is a smokers notes somewhere. Can anyone tell me the
nodename and I will add it to my conferences and discuss this issue
in greater detail in there.
Thanks.....
|
240.19 | | HYDRA::ECKERT | Jerry Eckert | Tue Mar 24 1987 16:22 | 3 |
| The conference is REGENT::NO_SMOKING.
KP7, etc.
|
240.20 | | JUNIOR::TASSONE | Wayside Inn, My favorite | Tue Mar 24 1987 16:58 | 1 |
| Thanks, Jerry.
|