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If you've ever been interested in quitting smoking before, you've doubtless seen lists like these:
- About 20 minutes after putting out your last cigarette, your blood pressure and pulse return to normal.
- After 12 hours, your carbon monoxide levels will have dropped and your blood oxygen returned to normal.
- After 72 hours, your lung's alveoli are beginning to repair themselves.
- After about two weeks, your risk of heart attack starts dropping.
- Down the line, you'll see your risk of stroke reduce, your cancer risk go down, your blood circulation improve, your smokers' cough go away, and so on.
Such lists are certainly helpful, especially if one of your prime motivations for quitting smoking is health. In order to have a really good shot at quitting, and staying quit forever, though, you need to have a good understanding of how the withdrawal process works as well. After you stop smoking, right as your body is getting to work repairing itself, the reward centers of your brain will scream for nicotine.

Know this though. The first 24 hours are likely to be the toughest. The nicotine levels in your body will go down by nearly 94 percent within the first eight hours, and if you were to get tested for nicotine 72 hours after smoking your last cigarette, your test would come back clear. By that time, 90 percent of nicotine metabolites, the stuff nicotine breaks down into in the body, will be gone as well.
Once you pass that three-day mark, you've all but won the physical battle against your nicotine addiction. Your mental battle, however, may be far from over. Just like alcoholics remain alcoholics even when they quit drinking, ex-smokers can be said to be nicotine addicts (though not smokers) forever. As you have increasing numbers of quit days under your belt, watch out — you may have moments of weakness, or you may trick yourself. In order to stay quit, you'll have to figure out how to handle those moments in advance.
Stop Smoking And Stay Quit: How?
The key to a successful quit is no secret. The smoker has to want to quit more than they want to remain a smoker. That's all. A little preparation sure helps though, and as a quitter myself, I advise you to consider these steps:
- Our addicted brains have to trick themselves into thinking smoking isn't that bad for the body, or at least to avoid thinking about the health consequences of smoking. As soon as you are seriously beginning to consider quitting, start reading up on the true damage smoking is doing to your body. Watch creepy stop-smoking ads. Read the stories of people who ended up with lung cancer because of smoking. Allow your conscious brain to become scared of smoking. Very scared.
- Read the experiences of former smokers. Internalize the very true fact that quitting is indeed possible, for everyone, even you.
- Know that though aids such as Chantix and nicotine patches are available, everyone has to go cold turkey in the end. Strongly consider just getting it over with. Set a quit date, and truly commit to it.
- Consider taking that first post-smoking week off work. Fully expect to feel terrible. You're detoxing, you're recovering from a particularly nasty illness. Give yourself permission to commit to nothing but "today, I will not smoke" that first week.
- Think about joining an online community for quitters. Not only will they understand how you feel and give you tips on how to get through your withdrawal, the shame of admitting you've relapsed can stop you from relapsing.
When you feel a craving, realize that the craving will go away whether you smoke or not. The only difference is that by saying no to cigarettes, you'll soon remain free of that craving, whereas if you smoke, it will be back with a vengeance, again and again. Do whatever you have to to get through those cravings, which, by the way, don't tend to last longer than three minutes. Deep breathing, using a straw to pretend to smoke, sucking a lollipop, or chugging down a nice big glass of water or orange juice, can all help you.
After a week or so, you'll inevitably begin to see the light at the end of the tunnel. "Oh, that wasn't so bad! I can do this!" Watch out, here! Challenging times are still ahead. Next time you go to a funeral, or a wedding, or meet an old smoking buddy, or have a stressful time at work, that craving will hit again.
Your brain, still polluted by addict thinking, might well say: "You've done it, you've quit, so now you're able to smoke just the odd one here and there." Don't kid yourself. One cigarette is all the cigarettes. Or, as people in the quit community I joined like to say: "You're one puff away from a pack a day." Just say no.
Not one puff. One cigarette is all the cigarettes. Don't light up, and stay quit. I promise that it will get easier, and soon too, as long as you keep following that rule.
- With thanks to t
- Photo courtesy of livingwithgiants: www.flickr.com/photos/livingwithgiants/4650214301/
- Photo courtesy of grodt1987: www.flickr.com/photos/35470384@N02/4751188109/
- Photo courtesy of livingwithgiants: www.flickr.com/photos/livingwithgiants/4650214301/