Well broke my promise to myself not to drink any beer. Have had 4 cans of carlsberg so far.
Haven’t had a fag though, Haven’t even been tempted nor have I used my nicorette inhalator.
Quite impressed tbh, last time I had a beer I well wanted a smoke.
Maybe I’ve cracked it this time round (I hope lol). 🙂
@GiantMidget 384145 wrote:
Well broke my promise to myself not to drink any beer. Have had 4 cans of carlsberg so far.
Haven’t had a fag though, Haven’t even been tempted nor have I used my nicorette inhalator.
Quite impressed tbh, last time I had a beer I well wanted a smoke.
Maybe I’ve cracked it this time round (I hope lol). 🙂
nice one mate, you find the inhalor good then? going to the docs on thursday to see about giving up myself. Beer is always the killer though.
not smoked cigarettes for quite a while –
however the test for me will be festies…..
I have more of an urge to smoke crack than i do cigarettes, i do not wish to do either.
@1984 384146 wrote:
nice one mate, you find the inhalor good then? going to the docs on thursday to see about giving up myself. Beer is always the killer though.
Yes mate, the inhalator is probably the best stopping smoking aid I have come across so far.
Next time you have a bit of money get a 43 pack off amazon, with free delivery it’ll cost 16 pound fifty. If you use a cartridge a day it’ll last you a month and 13 days obviously lol.
I ain’t used mine in a week, still got 10 cartridges left. which is for emergencies only now.
6 packs cost around 6-7 pounds which is good to test but I’d go for the bigger pack.
Try it mate with a bit of willpower and determination you’ll prefer using that to having a fag. Little tip though, don’t drink any beer for a month. It’ll help. :love:
@GiantMidget 384242 wrote:
Yes mate, the inhalator is probably the best stopping smoking aid I have come across so far.
Next time you have a bit of money get a 43 pack off amazon, with free delivery it’ll cost 16 pound fifty. If you use a cartridge a day it’ll last you a month and 13 days obviously lol.
I ain’t used mine in a week, still got 10 cartridges left. which is for emergencies only now.
6 packs cost around 6-7 pounds which is good to test but I’d go for the bigger pack.
Try it mate with a bit of willpower and determination you’ll prefer using that to having a fag. Little tip though, don’t drink any beer for a month. It’ll help. :love:
nice one mate might do that, sick to death of fucking up my lungs!
@1984 384288 wrote:
nice one mate might do that, sick to death of fucking up my lungs!
I know what you mean. For the last year I’ve tried desperately to stop, it’s a lot of effort and has taken loads of attempts. I hate it when non smoking people go “Oh just quit” as though it’s easy to do, Non smokers imo have no idea how hard it is to quit.
Also listening to old people hacking and coughing when smoking a fag proper freaks me out. I have no wish to be like that when I am older! :crazy_diz
@GiantMidget 384242 wrote:
Yes mate, the inhalator is probably the best stopping smoking aid I have come across so far.
Next time you have a bit of money get a 43 pack off amazon, with free delivery it’ll cost 16 pound fifty. If you use a cartridge a day it’ll last you a month and 13 days obviously lol.
I ain’t used mine in a week, still got 10 cartridges left. which is for emergencies only now.
6 packs cost around 6-7 pounds which is good to test but I’d go for the bigger pack.
Try it mate with a bit of willpower and determination you’ll prefer using that to having a fag. Little tip though, don’t drink any beer for a month. It’ll help. :love:
i used to smoke for years since i was about 16, i read the big book and ive not smoked for about 4years now. seriously read the book its also a lot cheaper than those inhalator things. just found one for 0.28p on amazon!
Allen Carr's Easy Way to Stop Smoking: Amazon.co.uk: Allen Carr: Books
Product Description
Allen Carr’s hundred-cigarettes-a-day addiction drove him to despair, but after countless attempts to quit he discovered what the world had been waiting for – the easy way to stop smoking. Now recognised as the world’s leading expert on helping smokers to quit, Allen Carr’s informative, no scare tactics methods and techniques are a revelation for those desperate to kick the habit.
About the Author
Allen Carr was an accountant and smoked 100 cigarettes a day until he gave up and wrote this bestselling book. He has built a hugely successful network of stop-smoking clinics across the world and is the author of The Only Way to Stop Smoking, How to Stop Your Child Smoking, The Easy Way to Enjoy Flying and The Easy Way to Lose Weight. In 2004 Allen published his bestselling autobiography Packing It In (Michael Joseph). He lives in Spain.
he’s dead now though… 🙁
Philosophy
Carr teaches that, contrary to their perception, smokers do not receive a boost from smoking a cigarette: smoking only relieves the withdrawal symptoms from the previous cigarette, which in turn creates more withdrawal symptoms once it is finished. In this way the drug addiction perpetuates itself. He asserted that the “relief” smokers feel on lighting a cigarette, the feeling of being “back to normal”, is the feeling experienced by non-smokers all the time. So that smokers, when they light a cigarette are really trying to achieve a state that non-smokers enjoy their whole lives. He further asserted that withdrawal symptoms are actually created by doubt and fear in the mind of the ex-smoker, and therefore that stopping smoking is not as traumatic as is commonly assumed, if that doubt and fear can be removed.
At Allen Carr Clinics during quit smoking sessions, smokers are allowed to continue smoking while their doubts and fears are removed, with the aim of encouraging and developing the mindset of a non-smoker before the final cigarette is even extinguished. A further reason for allowing smokers to smoke while undergoing counseling, is that Carr believed it was more difficult to convince a smoker to quit, until they understood the mechanism of “the nicotine trap”. This is because their attention is diminished while they continue to believe it is traumatic and extremely difficult to quit and maintain the belief that they are dependent on nicotine.
Another assertion, unique to Carr’s method is that willpower is not required to quit smoking. This is because it takes no willpower to stop doing something that an individual has no desire to do, which is the realization smokers come to once their doubt and fear about stopping has gone. When this is combined with the understanding that the actual physical withdrawal from nicotine is so inconsequential as to be minor and therefore almost insignificant, it enables smokers to finally break free. Smokers using willpower who do not come to these realizations, allow the mental “withdrawal” or anguish to overpower them, resulting in physical manifestations (e.g. sweaty palms, panic feelings, irritation, flushes etc.). It is precisely because many smokers believe these symptoms are caused by lack of nicotine (i.e. physical withdrawal) and not by their psychological dependency and feeling of deprivation, that they are not successful at quitting.
His contention was that fear of “giving up” is what causes the majority of smokers to continue smoking, therefore necessitating the smoker’s perpetuation of the illusion of genuine enjoyment, as a moral justification of the inherent absurdity of smoking in the face of overwhelming medical and scientific evidence of its dangers.
Carr was very specific and analytical in his use of language. Thus he rarely referred to “giving up smoking” (preferring “stopping smoking”) as the very words “giving up” hint at the suggestion that a smoker would be sacrificing something that was worth having; instead of freeing themselves. Such analyses were a cornerstone to his approach to overcoming the “nicotine trap” which was both subtle and pervasive.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allen_Carr
still what ever way works for you. :love:
Unreported World travels to Malawi to reveal that children as young as three are being illegally employed to produce tobacco, much of it destined to be consumed by British smokers.
Malawi’s children suffer health problems from handling tobacco and some are trapped in bonded labour arrangements, leaving them unable to escape. Little seems to be being done to protect their health and wellbeing.
In Mchinji district, reporter Jenny Kleeman and producer Julie Noon find a group of 15 to 20 children sorting tobacco by the roadside. Emilida and her three children – including her three-year-old son – have been working there since dawn. She tells Kleeman the four of them will get about 80 pence for a day’s work. The air is thick with tobacco dust and Emilida says it makes the family feel unwell.
A family of seven harvesting tobacco tell Kleeman they work every day from dawn to dusk. The children’s hands are covered in a sticky brown residue and they say they suffer from severe headaches: a symptom of green tobacco sickness, or nicotine poisoning, where high doses of nicotine are absorbed through the skin. In other tobacco-growing countries like the US farmers are advised to wear protective clothing, but there is no sign of it anywhere the team visits.
Unreported World – Series 2010 – Episode 4 – Tobacco’s Child Workers – Channel 4
:hopeless:
Got battered last night, had loads of beer and boogly woogly.
Had a couple of near misses but pleased to say I didn’t smoke the entire night. raaa
@GiantMidget 384508 wrote:
Got battered last night, had loads of beer and boogly woogly.
Had a couple of near misses but pleased to say I didn’t smoke the entire night. raaa
:wave::sign0021::wave:
@GiantMidget 384508 wrote:
Got battered last night, had loads of beer and boogly woogly.
Had a couple of near misses but pleased to say I didn’t smoke the entire night. raaa
fair play dude. raaa
the weekend i smoked wayyy too much, ganja & roll ups. didn’t sleep saturday just kept going thanks to a smattering of base in my drink. not good, now my bloody chest is all crippled and spastic. i was out of breath running down stairs to answer the fuckin door…bun this. no more tobacco…
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