Now is the Time to Quit
Smoking
Smoking Reduces Your
Life Span
We can only hope that the baby boomer generation will be the
last one who grew up in a culture where smoking was cool and
acceptable. The health passion of baby boomers that comes
out of their dislike of anything that accelerates the aging
process is one of the reasons the anti smoking movement has
gained strength in the last decade. The reasons for
quitting smoke are well known to anyone who has paid attention
to the issue at all.
• Smoking reduces the life span. For the baby
boomer generation, living a long and healthy life is a way of
staying young. Smoking not only shortens the life span
but it is a plague to your health in every era of life.
• Smoking destroys quality of life. Simple
pleasures like breathing and enjoying a fine meal are damaged
because smoking dominates the lungs and taste buds. The
pleasures that make life worthwhile are rendered neutral by
smoking.
• Smoking hurts the innocent. Secondary smoke
hurts the ones you love and it plants in children the desire to
smoke in their adult lives.
• Smoking brings on dire diseases such as cancer and
lung disease. These diseases are deadly and they can make
life in your retirement years miserable.
• Smoking makes you ugly. This may be the worst
crime there is to a baby boomer. Smoking causes wrinkles
and dries the skin making you look decades older than you
really are.
The good news is that even for baby boomers who may have
been smoking for decades, it’s always possible to quit.
Sometimes it’s easy to decide you can never beat this
addiction. You may have tried the patches and pills and
even hypnotism and the desire for the nicotine poison lingers
on. But it is possible to do it. There are some
steps to getting it done which will take a while but they are
proven to work.
• Get plenty of support. Get your family on your
side and educate them on your program. If you commit to
them you are going to do it, they can love that habit out of
your system.
• Catalog your smoking. Make a precise journal of
exactly how many cigarettes you have every day, when you have
them and even who you are with when you have them.
• Stabilize your usage. Now select the 10 or 20
times each day you will have a cigarette and only let yourself
have one at those allotted times. Do this for about 2
weeks. If you want a cigarette at another time, just
promise yourself you will wait for it.
• Starting with week one of the quit smoking campaign,
eliminate one cigarette from your routine. Pick the
easiest time not to have one. Pick the time that is least
social so you feel less pressure to go ahead and light
up. So where you may have smoked 20 cigarettes a day
before, now you smoke 19 a day. Do that for 2
weeks. If you want a cigarette during that eliminated
time, just promise yourself you can have one at the next
allowed smoke break.
• Eliminate one cigarette from your schedule every do
weeks. 18 cigarettes a day for 2 weeks, then 17, then 16
and on and on. Keep notes. Go from easiest time to
quit to hardest.
• With each successful phase, have a little celebration
with your friends and family.
• Finally you will down to one a day. You will
have scaled your dependency down to this one tiny smoke
break. You will come to that moment when you say, “Oh
what’s the point of having the one?” Then you can crumple
up your last pack and throw it way.
The great thing about this approach is its free and you just
slowly reduce your dependence by promising yourself that
cigarette at the next allowed smoke time. Stay with the
same brand so your level of nicotine remains constant.
And by staying at each level for a couple of weeks, you give
your body a chance to slowly get used to each reduced level
until you have weaned yourself off of the dreaded weed
entirely. And when you throw that final pack away, its
time for a big party. Congratulate yourself because you have
quit smoking and just added years of fun and happiness and joy
with your family to your life.
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