My friend is having trouble quitting and he would like some tips on how to stop...so could the wonderful and beautiful members of LW provide us with some insight?
EVERY piece of research done on this subject has concluded the same thing. If you wanted to stop eating donuts because they're fattening, would you start eating cake instead? No, you wouldn't. So why would you use patches WITH NICOTINE IN THEM, the very drug you are trying to quit using? That's a very, very bad idea. In fact, studies have shown that most people who try to quit using those devices end up starting again, and the highest success rate is among those who just quit cold turkey.
I would personally recommend ramping things down, though. If you smoke 20 a day it will probably be very hard for your body to dive to 0 immediately without it having some pretty bad effects. I'd try a week of smoking 15 per day, shouldn't be that hard honestly. Another week of 10 per day. A week of maybe 6-8. A week of 4-5, etc.
I smoke sometimes, but I've never become actually addicted to smoking. I might smoke 2-3 cigarettes a day, or I might not smoke any. It doesn't matter that much to me, but a cigarette now and then can be enjoyable and has very little chance of causing any significant health risks. Although, doctors and many medical sources are trained to tell you otherwise, of course, for fear that your 2-3 per day turns into 20 per day. I've never had any problems like that, though. I just don't have the addictive personality nor do I have whatever it is that makes you become addicted to nicotine, which I don't find a very addicting substance at all despite the research.
1) Get a prescription of wellbutrin. 2) Taper off of the cigarettes, while replacing the habbit with healthier ones 3) Use nicotine patches to control cravings
2) Taper off of the cigarettes, while replacing the habbit with healthier ones
3) Use nicotine patches to control cravings
I have had the patches and am on Zyban now. They both work but I like Zyban better. It's killed my cravings and got cigs outta my head.
Take up a hobby and get busy with that you will have no time to smoke. :D
I like the idea of this, but likely they have an addictive personality. When you try and just substitute something for an addiction, often times, that new hobby becomes the addiction. Sure, it may not be as dangerous, but the habit forming is still a bad thing.
Have them talk to someone very close to them, find something that means A LOT to them, a promise to a friend, doing it for someone who recently passed away, give them motivation to quit even when it gets hard. The cigarettes they have, throw them away. If he hangs out with people that smoke, at least until he quits the addiction, don't hang out with them. When you stop smoking, it isn't a habit change, its a lifestyle change. He needs motivation to stop quitting. He would stop, but quite frankly, there's nothing to keep him from doing it again. The patches, the gum, all those things help fight the urge, but they only work if you make them work. A lot of times people basically quit quitting because they get scared when things get hard, they don't like that they're shaking, throwing up, and going into severe withdrawal, they fail to see that it won't be that way forever. They need motivation to stop, not just ways to make it easier.
flush every one down the drain
Presuming you mean every one of the cigarettes
patches,gum, other stop smoking things