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Question by What’s the Point?: What are good ways to quit smoking cigarettes?
I want to quit smoking cigarrettes so bad but its so hard. How do I quit? What is some good advice?
Would be a great idea John, only I can’t smoke weed since I’m on probation

Best answer:

Answer by Cass
You can get a prescription for chantix. Its about 0 per month, but you probably spend that in cigarettes anyway. My dad was on this and it worked really well.

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Question by sweetJ: How long does it take to stop feeling stressed when you quit smoking?
I quit smoking 4 days ago…i started to exercise and will continue to everyday…it helps alot when you want to quit smoking…the thing is that i feel very stressed and sensitive with everything…i get really nervous and shout at nothing…i did smoke one cigarrette today and half yesterday…but before i was smoking one pack of cigs a day….so i feel much better and i’m starting to feel discusted by cigs…the one i smoked today made me feel dizzy, smelling aweful….i’ve been smoking for 7 years though…i’m i doing it the correct way? When will i stop feeling nervous and stressed? Does it matter that i smoke 1 cig when i feel really anxious?

Best answer:

Answer by gallagher g
HI PAMELA
############################################################################
Breaking the Habit
“Giving up smoking is the easiest thing in the world,” Mark Twain said. “I know because I’ve done it thousands of times.” Twain was being facetious, but his point was on target. The average smoker tries to quit 10.8 times over a period of 18.6 years before finally breaking the habit permanently, according to a 1998 U.S. study by the Hazelden Foundation, an addiction-treatment organization. Those dismal stats are testament to a powerful habit that is not merely nicotine dependence, but “a whole set of small behaviors such as hand-to-mouth gestures and characteristic times of the day when you don’t feel comfortable unless you are smoking,” says Simon Chapman, a public-health professor at the University of Sydney. To quit, he says, “people have got to unlearn all those behaviors.”

Getting Help
Plenty is available, in the form of books (Allen Carr’s Easy Way to Stop Smoking is a popular guide), local seminars and self-help groups in a growing number of Asian cities, and websites (try quitnet.com). Most offer step-by-step strategies for quitting and staying quit.

Trial by Turkey
We all know the boor who insists that abstinence is just a matter of willpower. But the success rate for those who go cold turkey is as low as 5%—and according to the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse, only 7% of people who quit without aids or outside support stay clean for more than a year.

Alternative Therapies
Given that most quitters need a boost, what works and what doesn’t? A 2003 report in the Dutch medical weekly Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde tried to sort fact from fiction by pooling piles of studies on smoking cessation compiled by the Cochrane Library, which collects global health-care information. Among the findings: acupuncture works no better than a placebo, and results for hypnotherapy were inconclusive.

Drugs and Hugs
Stop-smoking aids are a multibillion-dollar market. But so far, only three types have been proved to help, according to the World Health Organization. The first is nicotine replacement therapy (NRT): using a patch, gum, lozenge, nasal spray or inhaler to deliver nicotine to the brain in declining doses over a two- to three-month period. The second is the use of antidepressant pills such as bupropion and nortriptyline (studies suggest that people who are prone to depression are also inclined to smoke). The 2003 Dutch medical-weekly report concluded that NRT or antidepressants more than doubled 12-month abstinence rates. Thirdly, counseling, ranging from coaching over the phone to full-blown psychoanalysis, has been shown to be beneficial, whether used alone or in tandem with medication.

Staying Quit
It takes about 15 smoke-free years before mortality rates of ex-smokers roughly match those of lifelong nonsmokers. But palpable health effects show up almost immediately: blood pressure is lowered within 20 minutes of the last puff, and lung function increases by up to 30% after about three months. If you need more motivation to stay off cigarettes, regular exercise can reinforce the benefits, and stress-reduction techniques such as yoga can help you cope with cravings.

A Silver Bullet
Isn’t there an easier way? British drug company Xenova and U.S.-based Nabi Biopharmaceuticals are testing nicotine “vaccines” that may block the chemical’s ability to create pleasurable feelings in the brain. But even if the treatments prove successful, the companies say it will take at least four years before the vaccines reach the market. If you’ve been smoking for a long time already, what makes you so sure you’ll live that long?

Breaking the Habit
“Giving up smoking is the easiest thing in the world,” Mark Twain said. “I know because I’ve done it thousands of times.” Twain was being facetious, but his point was on target. The average smoker tries to quit 10.8 times over a period of 18.6 years before finally breaking the habit permanently, according to a 1998 U.S. study by the Hazelden Foundation, an addiction-treatment organization. Those dismal stats are testament to a powerful habit that is not merely nicotine dependence, but “a whole set of small behaviors such as hand-to-mouth gestures and characteristic times of the day when you don’t feel comfortable unless you are smoking,” says Simon Chapman, a public-health professor at the University of Sydney. To quit, he says, “people have got to unlearn all those behaviors.”

Getting Help
Plenty is available, in the form of books (Allen Carr’s Easy Way to Stop Smoking is a popular guide), local seminars and self-help groups in a growing number of Asian cities, and websites (try quitnet.com). Most offer step-by-step strategies for quitting and staying quit.

Trial by Turkey
We all know the boor who insists that abstinence is just a matter of willpower. But the success rate for those who go cold turkey is as low as 5%—and according to the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse, only 7% of people who quit without aids or outside support stay clean for more than a year.

Alternative Therapies
Given that most quitters need a boost, what works and what doesn’t? A 2003 report in the Dutch medical weekly Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde tried to sort fact from fiction by pooling piles of studies on smoking cessation compiled by the Cochrane Library, which collects global health-care information. Among the findings: acupuncture works no better than a placebo, and results for hypnotherapy were inconclusive.

Drugs and Hugs
Stop-smoking aids are a multibillion-dollar market. But so far, only three types have been proved to help, according to the World Health Organization. The first is nicotine replacement therapy (NRT): using a patch, gum, lozenge, nasal spray or inhaler to deliver nicotine to the brain in declining doses over a two- to three-month period. The second is the use of antidepressant pills such as bupropion and nortriptyline (studies suggest that people who are prone to depression are also inclined to smoke). The 2003 Dutch medical-weekly report concluded that NRT or antidepressants more than doubled 12-month abstinence rates. Thirdly, counseling, ranging from coaching over the phone to full-blown psychoanalysis, has been shown to be beneficial, whether used alone or in tandem with medication.

Staying Quit
It takes about 15 smoke-free years before mortality rates of ex-smokers roughly match those of lifelong nonsmokers. But palpable health effects show up almost immediately: blood pressure is lowered within 20 minutes of the last puff, and lung function increases by up to 30% after about three months. If you need more motivation to stay off cigarettes, regular exercise can reinforce the benefits, and stress-reduction techniques such as yoga can help you cope with cravings.

A Silver Bullet
Isn’t there an easier way? British drug company Xenova and U.S.-based Nabi Biopharmaceuticals are testing nicotine “vaccines” that may block the chemical’s ability to create pleasurable feelings in the brain. But even if the treatments prove successful, the companies say it will take at least four years before the vaccines reach the market. If you’ve been smoking for a long time already, what makes you so sure you’ll live that long?

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Question by blueberry-yum-yum!: Can someone advise me about how to quit smoking marijuana?
I smoke daily and have always enjoyed it. But I feel guilty for spending so much money and living life with a buzz. It feels like I always need to be high just to get through the day and I never lived this way before I started smoking years ago. All of my friends smoke weed and it would be hard to be around them when they do it. I am also scared I will be terribly bored or won’t know what to do with my time. (learned habit, i know)
How can I go about quitting smoking weed? What are some benefits to quitting? Some encouragement to quit? or some ideas to hang out with friends or stay sober?

Best answer:

Answer by fredseguino
Switch to crack. That will make you forget all about weed trust me.

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Question by angel35570: What is the best product to help you quit smoking?
me and my husband want to quit smoking. What is the best product to use b/c we have smoked for several years?

Best answer:

Answer by gravefinder
WOW – Here’s my chance to REALLY share some personal experience information at Yahoo Answers . . . THANX for the memory. . .

CREDENTIALS = 40 year smoker; 3 time ‘quitter’; clean now for 19 months

Successful quitting requires – first and foremost –
An ABSOLUTE DESIRE to BE a non-smoker, FOREVER MORE. . . without THAT, you are wasting your time and energy in attempting to be tobacco/nicotine free.

My first attempt – (10 yr smoker) – shear will power due to pregnancy – succeeded for 7 months – resumed cigarettes at onset of labor

My second attempt – (28 yr smoker) – pneumonia leading to use of nicorette – succeeded for 4 months – rapid weight gain prompted return to smoking

My 3rd attempt – (40 yr smoker) – cost became prohibitive and a new life parter does not smoke – I began unlimited nicorette use for 7 months – then came acceptance of self with rapid weight gain over the past year, after total detox from nicotine

That’s a very brief synopsis of my ‘quitting’ experience — leading full circle (back) to my opening statement . . .

The BEST PRODUCT to help you quit smoking IS -

DESIRE TO SUCCEED regardless of the “AFTER” EFFECTS

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Question by : What are some good ways to get my wife to quit smoking?
She has to quit; she keeps smoking my cigarettes and it is costing me a fortune, as well as ticking me off. I hate nothing more than reaching for my pack and finding it empty.

Best answer:

Answer by Elliot B
Ah you quit??? no? ok help her quit by buying her a pack putting a trash can over her head and making her smoke the whole pack all at once! done

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