T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1579.1 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Mon Nov 18 1991 02:47 | 15 |
| Christine, you will only successfully give up smoking when you,
yourself want to. All other aids are merely props, whether they be
nicotine loaded chewing gum or a hypnotist. If you really want to give
up smoking just never light another cigarette ever again.
It is a very hard and difficult thing to do. But there are no short
cuts or painless methods. You have to decide who rules your body, you
or a small white cylinder of tobacco.
I tried just about every so called cure with very little effect.
Finally I went cold turkey, no gradual weaning off, no sweets or any
other food substitute. It hurt and I was moody for about 3 weeks but it
was successful. Oh and it was also free.
Jamie.
|
1579.2 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | Isis,Astarte,Diana,Hecate,Demeter,Kali,Inanna | Mon Nov 18 1991 06:54 | 13 |
| Christine, I agree with .1 You'll give up when you are truly ready to.
I smoked up to 2 packs a day from the time I was 7 to when I was 36. I
just woke up one day and said "NO MORE". I stopped cold turkey. This
may not be the way for you, and in fact, I tried it once before and
stopped for 2 years and then stupidly started again. I had an excuse,
but it was just that, an excuse. I know your writings from womannotes
and I know you to be a strong individual. If you really want to, you'll
channel that strength into quiting the ol' demon tobacco. You have my
support and I know it's tough. You can do it if YOU really want to.
Good luck, my prayers, and hugs to you in this,
PJ
|
1579.3 | Autosuggestion, breakfast of champions. :-) | DWOVAX::STARK | A life of cautious abandon | Mon Nov 18 1991 10:41 | 18 |
| More on theory. Sorry no references for your geographical location.
There's an aphorism in some circles that "all hypnosis is
self-hypnosis."
I think that aspect of this treatment modality speaks to what
PJ and Jamie have recommended. I've known people who have been
helped by hypnotists (and hypnotherapists) in this kind of habit
modification, so I certainly won't try to dissuade you. If if you do
find a good hypnotist or hypnotherapist of your liking, you might get
them to help you learn effective autosuggestion (self-suggestion) as
well as helping with smoking. This makes the
time you spend with them worth more than just the habit modification,
whether you quit smoking as a result or not.
kind regards and good luck,
todd
|
1579.4 | yet another book discovery | TNPUBS::PAINTER | let there be music | Mon Nov 18 1991 10:49 | 18 |
|
Christine,
This is a bit of a change from the hypnotist and cold turkey approachs,
however you may wish to purchase a copy of "Perfect Health" by Deepak
Chopra, M.D. I read a lot of it over the weekend and I've already begun
to put the information in the book into practice in my own life. It's
a bestseller and available in paperback, so if you're in a bookstore
anytime soon, flip through it and see what you think. Check the index
for 'smoking' - there might be a section in there on this. My copy is
at home at the moment.
Dr. Chopra was also was a smoker until he stumbled upon Ayurveda, an
ancient system of medicine from India, his original homeland. He is a
Western-trained physician who is now approaching patients using this
different system of how the body, mind and spirit work together.
Cindy
|
1579.5 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Mon Nov 18 1991 10:54 | 4 |
| Another good read is the statistics of the number of people who die
each year from smoking induced lung and heart diseases.
Jamie.
|
1579.6 | Well... | TNPUBS::PAINTER | let there be music | Mon Nov 18 1991 11:03 | 9 |
|
I think you should read "Perfect Health" too, Jamie. I'm quite
serious about this.
Your point about lung and heart diseases is correct and well taken,
however using fear as a catalyst to change one's behavior patterns
is not a very healthy approach to the situation.
Cindy
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1579.7 | DEC Sponsored Programs | FSOA::HLEINONEN | | Mon Nov 18 1991 11:32 | 19 |
|
Though I'm not a smoker (and never have) three of my
co-workers had success through the Digital sponsored
hypnosis program. I beleive the Beder Institue offered
a class just prior to the "No Smoking" policy going
into effect.
Check with Health Services at your facilty - I believe
DEC still sponsors several programs and no charge to
you.
I agree that you have to be ready to do this though -
hypnosis or not - you must be ready to stop - the
suggestion merely serves to strengthen your resolve.
GOOD LUCK! You've taken the first step!
Heidi
|
1579.8 | | ROYALT::NIKOLOFF | a touch without a feel | Mon Nov 18 1991 11:36 | 16 |
|
>> hypnosis program. I beleive the Beder Institue offered
>> a class just prior to the "No Smoking" policy going
Yep! I took the DEC 'no smoking' program. Mr Beder is excellent!
It's been over a year now.
Good luck to you... also I believe what ever it takes....it's worth
it - DO it for YOU!
8-)
Mikki
|
1579.9 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Mon Nov 18 1991 19:21 | 15 |
| As Todd said, "All hypnosis is self-hypnosis." What a good hypnotist
can do is give you the tools and techniques to help yourself, along with
some support, so that quitting is far less painful than simple "cold
turkey."
Cindy, I have to disagree with you here. A look at the negatives can
be a powerful motivator. Whereas pretending the negatives don't exist
can lead one off into the 'la la land' of self delusion.
I, personally, find that some balance between negatives and positives
can be most useful. Especially for accomplishing something quite
difficult. Personally, I use whatever motivator it takes to get me
over the high hurdles!
Mary
|
1579.10 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Tue Nov 19 1991 01:50 | 9 |
| Of course you could visit some large hospital and ask them to let you
see a patient who is in the last stages of lung cancer. I know that
this made one friend of mine never smoke another cigarette.
I go along with Mary here, negative experiences do teach you just as
effectively as positive ones. If something hurts you then you are
reluctant to repeat it.
Jamie.
|
1579.11 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Tue Nov 19 1991 10:30 | 14 |
| Fear and horror are not great motivators for me. They tend to just
make me despair. I think people who attempt to motivate through
fear eventually cause more harm than good.
What did work for me as far as quitting smoking was paying attention to
my feelings. I told myself that cigarettes were no longer an option
so what else did I want? Often, I found that when I was reaching for
a cigarette what I wanted was a break. Sometimes, I used cigarettes
as a way of suppressing anger; when smoking was not an option, I
realized what I wanted was to express some anger. For almost
every cigarette that I had been used to smoking there was a
need for something that wasn't nicotine.
Sue
|
1579.12 | the carrot and the stick... | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Tue Nov 19 1991 17:45 | 33 |
| Sue,
I think it depends on the individual and the situation. Fear and
horror lead me to despair when they are fear and horror of things that
I can't do anything about. On the other hand, if its something that
I can change, and especially that I want to change, they get me through
the worst cravings. Mostly carrot, but without the stick there the
carrot isn't always quite enough.
I find that when I learn how much potential pain there is with certain
behaviors, that can be a great starter to changing that behavior. And
later, when the self-destructive behavior is "calling to me,"
remembering the horror can give me the will power to get through it.
For example, I had tried unsuccessfully to turn vegetarian several
times in the past -- never lasted more than 6 months to a year. Then I
learned the horrors of factory farming. I developed a very strong
resolve at that point to turn and stay vegetarian, and am working now
toward turning vegan.
The positive sides of it provide my main, day-to-day motivator -- my
improving health, decreased damage to the environment, etc. But on
those occasions when I haven't planned well and Tobins is giving me an
even worse choice than the usual 2 overcooked mushy veggies and rice
;-), and I'm feeling half starved and they have something truly
mouthwatering (at least, to my memory), then dragging out the image of
chickens with beaks hacked off and feet literally have grown to the
wire floors of their tiny cages, or cattle crying out in pain and
thrashing in desparation as they hang, fully conscious, suspended
upside down by a chain wrapped around a snapped cannon bone, does the
trick.
Mary
|
1579.13 | Bleah ! | COMICS::BELL | The haunted, hunted kind | Wed Nov 20 1991 04:19 | 5 |
|
Thank you Mary ... I really needed your last paragraph first thing in the
morning ... still, at least I read it over coffee rather than lunch ...
Frank
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1579.14 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Homo sapiens non urinat in ventum. | Wed Nov 20 1991 08:02 | 12 |
| Any would be vegetarians who wish some of the same incentive that Mary
had please contact me. I have in machine readable form the English
translation of the specification for a factory that you put live
chickens in at one end and get chicken fillets out the other.
Harry translated it from Dutch to English and despite the fact that he
is a pathologist to trade, he turned some funny colours when he did so.
As it would offend many I will not drop it in here but I'm willing to
Email it.
Jamie.
|
1579.15 | what's that in my tobacco that's cracklin'...;') | ROYALT::NIKOLOFF | a touch without a feel | Wed Nov 20 1991 09:41 | 19 |
|
Well, if I remember right.... Mr. Beder does some explaining that
sounds pretty terrible. Like when they roll a cigarette, there can
be cockroaches in the tobacco, and all sorts of creatures because
the tobacco farms don't care, there are any agencies looking over
thier shoulders.
That did it for me.....yuck!.. not to mention the harm it does to
our bodies.
So there will be some of that in his lecture.
** Hi Mary M.
8-)
Mikki
|
1579.16 | What's wrong with smoking cockroaches ? | DWOVAX::STARK | A life of cautious abandon | Wed Nov 20 1991 11:12 | 3 |
| I thought the ones with the cockroaches were extra ?
Oh, maybe that was the bananna skins. Sorry.
|
1579.17 | | ROYALT::NIKOLOFF | a touch without a feel | Wed Nov 20 1991 12:17 | 12 |
|
re.-1
Nothing, Toddy, I did it for 20 years...
;')
Mikki_who's_been_smoke_free_for_over_a_year...8-)
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1579.18 | pointer | TNPUBS::PAINTER | let there be music | Wed Nov 20 1991 12:21 | 4 |
|
See note 1583.3.
Cindy
|