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bonddonraj
April 22nd, 2007, 12:48 AM
HEY FRIENDS HAVE DONE IT NOW ITS YOUR TURN...............


Quitting smoking is not easy, but it can be done. To have the best chance of quitting successfully, you need to know what you’re up against, what your options are, and where to go for help. This document will provide you with this information.

Why Is It So Hard to Quit Smoking?

Mark Twain said, "Quitting smoking is easy. I've done it a thousand times." Maybe you've tried to quit too. Why is quitting and staying quit hard for so many people? The answer is nicotine.

Nicotine

Nicotine is a drug found naturally in tobacco. It is highly addictive – as addictive as heroin or cocaine. Over time, the body becomes both physically and psychologically dependent on nicotine. Studies have shown that smokers must overcome both of these addictions to be successful at quitting and staying quit.

When smoke is inhaled, nicotine is carried deep into the lungs, where it is absorbed quickly into the bloodstream and carried throughout the body. Nicotine affects many parts of the body, including your heart and blood vessels, your hormonal system, your metabolism, and your brain. Nicotine can be found in breast milk and even in cervix mucous secretions of smokers. During pregnancy, nicotine freely crosses the placenta and has been found in amniotic fluid and the umbilical cord blood of newborn infants.

Several different factors can affect the rate of metabolism (the work of the living cell in the body) and excretion (or getting rid of the waste) related to nicotine. In general, a regular smoker will have nicotine or its by-products present in the body for about 3 to 4 days after stopping.

Nicotine produces pleasant feelings that make the smoker want to smoke more. It also acts as a kind of depressant by interfering with the flow of information between nerve cells. As the nervous system adapts to nicotine, smokers tend to increase the number of cigarettes they smoke, and therefore the amount of nicotine in their blood. After a while, the smoker develops a tolerance to the drug, which leads to an increase in smoking over time. Over time, the smoker reaches a certain nicotine level and then smokes to maintain this level of nicotine. In fact, nicotine, when inhaled in cigarette smoke, reaches the brain faster than drugs that enter the body intravenously.

Nicotine Withdrawal

When smokers try to cut back or quit, the absence of nicotine leads to withdrawal symptoms. Withdrawal is both physical and mental. Physically, the body reacts to the absence of nicotine. Psychologically, the smoker is faced with giving up a habit, which requires a major change in behavior. Both must be addressed in order for the quitting process to work.

Withdrawal symptoms can include any of the following:

dizziness (which may only last 1-2 days in the beginning)
depression
feelings of frustration and anger
irritability
sleep disturbances, including having trouble falling asleep, staying asleep and having bad dreams or even nightmares
trouble concentrating
restlessness
headache
tiredness
increased appetite
These symptoms can lead the smoker to again start smoking cigarettes again to boost blood levels of nicotine back to a level where there are no symptoms.

If a person has smoked regularly for a few weeks or longer and abruptly stops using tobacco or greatly reduces the amount smoked, withdrawal symptoms will occur. Symptoms usually start within a few hours of the last cigarette and peak about 2 to 3 days later. Withdrawal symptoms can last for a few days to several weeks. For information on coping with withdrawal, see the section, "How to Quit."

Why Quit?

Your Health

Health concerns usually top the list of reasons people give for quitting smoking. About half of all smokers who continue to smoke will end up dying from a smoking-related illness. Nearly everyone knows that smoking can cause lung cancer, but few people realize it is also a risk factor for many other kinds of cancer as well, including cancer of the mouth, voice box (larynx), throat (pharynx), esophagus, bladder, kidney, pancreas, cervix, stomach, and some leukemias. For the first time, the Surgeon General includes pneumonia in the list of diseases caused by smoking.

Smoking increases the risk of lung diseases such as emphysema and chronic bronchitis. These progressive lung diseases – grouped under the term COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) – are usually diagnosed in current or former smokers in their 60s and 70s. COPD causes chronic illness and disability and is eventually fatal.

Smokers are twice as likely to die from heart attacks as are nonsmokers. And smoking is a major risk factor for peripheral vascular disease, a narrowing of the blood vessels that carry blood to the leg and arm muscles, as well as cerebrovascular disease that can cause strokes.

Smoking also causes premature wrinkling of the skin, bad breath, bad smelling clothes and hair, and yellow fingernails and hair, yellow fingernails and an increased risk of macular degeneration, one of the most common causes of blindness in the elderly.

For women, there are unique risks. Women over 35 who smoke and use birth control pills are in a high-risk group for heart attack, stroke, and blood clots of the legs. Women who smoke are more likely to have a miscarriage or a lower birth-weight baby. Low birth-weight babies are more likely to die or to be impaired.

Based on data collected in the late 1990s, the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) estimated that adult male smokers lost an average of 13.2 years of life and female smokers lost 14.5 years of life because of smoking.

No matter what your age or how long you've smoked, quitting will help you live longer. People who stop smoking before age 50 cut their risk of dying in the next 15 years in half compared with those who continue to smoke. Ex-smokers also enjoy a higher quality of life with fewer illnesses from cold and flu viruses, better self-reported health, and reduced rates of bronchitis and pneumonia.

Ex-smokers also enjoy a higher quality of life with fewer illnesses from cold and flu viruses, better self-reported health status, and reduced rates of bronchitis and pneumonia.

For decades the Surgeon General has reported the health risks associated with smoking. Regardless of your age or smoking history, there are advantages to quitting smoking. Benefits apply whether you are healthy or you already have smoking-related diseases. In 1990, the Surgeon General concluded:

Quitting smoking has major and immediate health benefits for men and women of all ages. Benefits apply to people with and without smoking-related disease.

Former smokers live longer than continuing smokers.

Quitting smoking decreases the risk of lung cancer, other cancers, heart attack, stroke, and chronic lung disease.

Women who stop smoking before pregnancy or during the first 3 to 4 months of pregnancy reduce their risk of having a low birth weight baby to that of women who never smoked.

The health benefits of quitting smoking far exceed any risks from the less than 10 pound weight gain or any adverse psychological effects that may follow quitting.
When Smokers Quit – What Are the Benefits Over Time?

20 minutes after quitting: Your heart rate and blood pressure drops.

12 hours after quitting: The carbon monoxide level in your blood drops to normal.

2 weeks to 3 months after quitting: Your circulation improves and your lung function increases.

1 to 9 months after quitting: Coughing and shortness of breath decrease; cilia (tiny hair-like structures that move mucus out of the lungs) regain normal function in the lungs, increasing the ability to handle mucus, clean the lungs, and reduce the risk of infection.

1 year after quitting: The excess risk of coronary heart disease is half that of a smoker's.

5 years after quitting: Your stroke risk is reduced to that of a nonsmoker 5 to 15 years after quitting.

10 years after quitting: The lung cancer death rate is about half that of a continuing smoker's. The risk of cancer of the mouth, throat, esophagus, bladder, cervix, and pancreas decrease.

15 years after quitting: The risk of coronary heart disease is that of a nonsmoker's.

Visible and Immediate Rewards of Quitting
Quitting helps stop the damaging effects of tobacco on your appearance including:

Premature wrinkling of the skin
Bad breath
Stained teeth
Gum disease
Bad smelling clothes and hair
Yellow fingernails
Kicking the tobacco habit offers benefits that you'll notice immediately and some that will develop gradually over time. These rewards can improve your day-to-day life immensely.

Food tastes better.
Your sense of smell returns to normal
Ordinary activities no longer leave you out of breath (for example, climbing stairs or light housework)
The prospect of better health is a major reason for quitting, but there are others as well.

Cost

Smoking is expensive. It isn't hard to figure out how much you spend on smoking: multiply how much money you spend on tobacco every day by 365 (days per year). The amount may surprise you. Now multiply that by the number of years you have been using tobacco and that amount will probably astound you.

Multiply the cost per year by 10 (for the upcoming 10 years) and ask yourself what you would rather do with that much money.

And this doesn’t include other possible expenses, such as higher costs for health and life insurance, as well as the health care costs due to tobacco-related conditions.

Social Acceptance

Smoking is less socially acceptable now than it was in the past.

Most workplaces have some type of smoking restrictions. Some employers even prefer to hire nonsmokers. Studies show smoking employees cost businesses more to employ because they are "out sick" more frequently. Employees who are ill more often than others can raise an employer’s need for expensive temporary replacement workers. They can increase insurance costs both for other employees and for the employer, who typically pays part of the workers’ insurance premiums. Smokers in a building also typically increase the maintenance costs of keeping odors at an acceptable level, since residue from cigarette smoke clings to carpets, drapes, and other fabrics.

Landlords may choose not to rent to smokers since maintenance costs and insurance rates may rise when smokers occupy buildings.

Friends may ask you not to smoke in their houses or cars. Public buildings, concerts, and even sporting events are largely smoke-free. And more and more communities are restricting smoking in all public places, including restaurants and bars. Like it or not, finding a place to smoke can be a hassle.

Smokers may find their opportunities for dating or romantic involvement, including marriage, are largely limited to other smokers, who make up only about 1/4th of the population.

Health of Others

Smoking not only harms your health but the health of those around you. Exposure to secondhand smoke (also called environmental tobacco smoke or passive smoking) includes exhaled smoke as well as smoke from burning cigarettes.

Studies have shown that secondhand smoke causes thousands of deaths each year from lung cancer and heart disease in healthy nonsmokers.

Smoking by mothers is linked to a higher risk of their babies developing asthma in childhood, especially if the mother smokes while pregnant. It is also associated with sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) and low-birth weight infants. Babies and children raised in a household where there is smoking have more ear infections, colds, bronchitis, and other respiratory problems than children from nonsmoking families. Secondhand smoke can also cause eye irritation, headaches, nausea, and dizziness.

Setting an Example

If you have children, you probably want to set a good example for them. When asked, nearly all smokers say they don't want their children to smoke, but children whose parents smoke are more likely to start smoking themselves. You can become a good role model for them by quitting now.

Help Is Available

With the wide range of counseling services, self-help materials, and medicines available today, smokers have more tools than ever to help them quit successfully.

Remember, tobacco addiction has both a psychological and a physical component. For most people, the best way to quit will be some combination of medicine, a method to change personal habits, and emotional support. The following sections describe these tools and how they may be helpful for you.

In This Section:

What About Nicotine Replacement Therapy?
Types of Nicotine Substitutes
Which Is Right for You?
Other Methods of Quitting
Telephone-based Help to Stop Smoking
Support
A Word About Success Rates
Special Concerns
Where Can I Go for Help



Help With Psychological Addiction

Some people are able to quit on their own, without the help of others or the use of medicines. But for many smokers, it can be hard to break the social and emotional ties to smoking while getting over nicotine withdrawal symptoms at the same time. Fortunately, there are many sources of support out there – both formal and informal.

Telephone-based Help to Stop Smoking

Most states run some type of free telephone-based program, such as the American Cancer Society’s Quitline® tobacco cessation program that links callers with trained counselors. These specialists help plan a quit method that fits each person's unique smoking pattern. People who use telephone counseling stop smoking at twice the rate of those who don't get this type of help. With guidance from a counselor, quitters can avoid common mistakes that may self-destruct a quit attempt.

Telephone counseling is also more convenient for many people than some other support programs. It doesn't require transportation or childcare, and it's available nights and weekends. Counselors may recommend a combination of methods including medicines, local classes, self-help brochures, and/or a network of family and friends.

Smokers can get help finding a Quitline® phone counseling program in their area by calling ACS at 1-800-ACS-2345 or 1-800-227-2345.

Support of Family, Friends, and Quit Programs

Many former smokers say a support network of family and friends was very important during their quit attempt. Other people who may offer support and encouragement are coworkers, your family doctor, and members of support groups for quitters. You can check with your employer, health insurance company, or local hospital to find support groups or call the ACS at 1-800-ACS-2345.

What to Look for in a Stop-Smoking Program

Stop smoking programs are designed to help smokers recognize and cope with problems that come up during quitting and to provide support and encouragement in staying quit. Studies have shown that the best programs will include either individual or group counseling. There is a strong association between the intensity of counseling and the success rate. In general, the more intense the program, the greater the likelihood of success.

For example, intensity may be increased by having more or longer sessions or by increasing the number of weeks over which the sessions are given. So, when considering a program, look for one that has the following:

Session length – at least 20 to 30 minutes per session
Number of sessions – at least 4 to 7 sessions
Number of weeks – at least 2 weeks
Be certain the leader of the group has training in smoking cessation.

Some communities have a Nicotine Anonymous group that holds regular meetings. This group applies the principles of Alcoholics Anonymous to the addiction of smoking. This may include admitting you are powerless over your addiction to nicotine and having a sponsor to talk with when you are tempted to smoke. There is no fee to attend.

Often your local American Cancer Society, American Lung Association, or your local health department will sponsor quit smoking classes. Call 1-800-ACS-2345 for more information.

There are some programs to watch out for as well. Not all programs are ethical. You should be concerned about programs that do the following:

Promise instant, easy success with no effort on your part.

Use injections or pills, especially "secret" ingredients (nicotine replacement is covered elsewhere).

Charge a very high fee. Check with the Better Business Bureau if you have doubts.

Are not willing to provide references from people who have taken the class.

Help With Physical Addiction: Nicotine Replacement Therapy and Other Medicines

Nicotine Replacement Therapy

As mentioned earlier, the nicotine in cigarettes leads to actual physical dependence, which can cause unpleasant symptoms when a person tries to quit. Nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) provides nicotine – in the form of gums, patches, sprays, inhalers or lozenges – without the other harmful chemicals in tobacco. It can help relieve some of these symptoms so that you can concentrate more on the psychological aspects of quitting.

How Nicotine Replacement Works

Nicotine substitutes treat the difficult withdrawal symptoms and cravings that 70% to 90% of smokers say is their only reason for not giving up cigarettes. By using a nicotine substitute, a smoker's withdrawal symptoms are reduced.

While a large number of smokers are able to quit smoking without nicotine replacement, most of those who attempt quitting are not successful on the first try. In fact, smokers usually need several attempts – sometimes as many as 8 to 10 – before they are able to quit for good.

Lack of success is often related to the onset of withdrawal symptoms. And most relapses occur within the first 3 months of quitting. So don't be discouraged if you start smoking again. Just begin again trying to quit and make your attempt more successful by adding another method or technique to help you quit. By reducing these symptoms with the use of nicotine replacement therapy and a support technique, smokers who want to quit have a better chance of being successful.

Getting the Most From Nicotine Replacement


Nicotine replacement therapy only deals with the physical aspects of addiction. It is not intended to be the only method used to help you quit smoking. It should be combined with other smoking cessation methods that address the psychological component of smoking, such as a stop smoking program. Studies have shown that approach - pairing NRT with a program that helps to change behavior – can double your chances of successfully quitting.

The US Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Clinical Practice Guideline on Smoking Cessation in 2000 recommended NRT for all smokers except pregnant women and people with heart or circulatory diseases. However,recent data suggests that nictotine replacement (specifically the nicotine patch) can be used safely even in people with cardiovascular disease who smoke under a doctor's careful monitoring. These studies have found the benefits of quitting smoking exceed the risks of nicotine replacement therapy in patients with cardiovascular disease. In all situations, the benefits of smoking cessation must outweigh the potential health risks. Smokers who are pregnant should also talk with their doctor before using over-the-counter nicotine replacement.

The most effective time to start NRT is at the beginning of an attempt to quit. Many smokers ask if it is possible to start a program of nicotine replacement while you are still smoking. There is some research being done with smokers using NRT while still smoking, but the results are still too early to say for certain if this is dangerous to your health. The most important consideration is to make sure that you are not overdosing on nicotine, which can have effects on your cardiovascular system. It is safest to be under a doctor's care if you wish to try smoking and using HRT while you are tapering down your cigarette use.

Often smokers first try to quit on their own, then decide to try NRT. This method does not give you the greatest chance of success, but do not let this discourage you. There are still many options available for quitting smoking successfully.

When May I Begin Using NRT?

You may start using nicotine replacement products as soon as you throw away that last cigarette. You do not need to wait a specific period of time to put on the patch or start using the method you have chosen. You should double check this information with the instructions on your chosen method of nicotine replacement, but in general there in no need to wait on beginning your nicotine replacement product.

Some NRT products make their recommendations based on whether you consider yourself a light, regular or heavy smoker. How are these categories determined?

There is no formal category in any textbook or group that specifically states what determines a light, average or heavy smoker. You will find different definitions for this information. In general a light smoker would be considered somewhere in the range of smoking fewer than 10 cigarettes per day. A heavy smoker would be considered a pack a day smoker. Sometimes a doctor will write on a chart a term called "pack year." A pack year is defined as smoking 20 cigarettes per day for 1 year. That is considered 1 pack year.


Types of Nicotine Substitutes


Five types of nicotine replacement therapy have been approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Nicotine patches (transdermal nicotine systems): Patches provide a measured dose of nicotine through the skin. As the nicotine doses are lowered by switching patches over a course of weeks, the tobacco user is weaned off nicotine. Patches can be purchased both with and without a prescription. Several types and different strengths are available. Package inserts describe how to use the product as well as special considerations and possible side effects.

The 16-hour patch works well for light-to-average tobacco users. It is less likely to cause side effects like skin irritation, racing heartbeat, sleep problems, and headache. But it does not deliver nicotine during the night, so it is not helpful for early morning withdrawal symptoms.

The 24-hour patch provides a steady dose of nicotine, avoiding peaks and troughs. It helps with early morning withdrawal. However, there may be more side effects such as disrupted sleep patterns and skin irritation.
Depending on body size, most tobacco users should start using a full-strength patch (15-22 mg of nicotine) daily for 4 weeks, and then use a weaker patch (5-14 mg of nicotine) for another 4 weeks. The patch should be applied in the morning to a clean, dry area of the skin without much hair. It should be placed below the neck and above the waist - for example, on the arm. The FDA recommends using the patch for a total of 3 to 5 months. However, some studies have shown that using it for 8 weeks or less is just as effective as using it for longer.

Side effects are related to:

The dose of nicotine
The brand of patch
Your individual skin characteristics (such as the person’s tendency to have a skin reaction to the patch)
How long you use the patch
How it is applied
Some possible side effects of the nicotine patch include:

Skin irritation – redness and itching
Dizziness
Racing heartbeat
Sleep problems or unusual dreams
Headache
Nausea
Vomiting
Muscle aches and stiffness
What to do about side effects:

Try a different brand of patch if skin irritation occurs.
Reduce the amount of nicotine by using a lower dose patch.
Sleep problems may be temporary and pass within 3 or 4 days. If not (and you're using a 24-hour patch), try switching to a 16-hour patch.
Stop using the patch and try a different form of nicotine replacement.
Nicotine gum (nicotine polacrilex): Nicotine gum is a fast-acting form of replacement that acts through the mucous membrane of the mouth. It can be bought over-the-counter without a prescription. It comes in 2 mg and 4 mg strengths.

For best results, follow the instructions of the package insert. Chew the gum slowly until you note a peppery taste. Then, "park" it against the cheek, chewing it and parking it off and on for about 20 to 30 minutes. Food and drink can affect how well the nicotine is absorbed. You should avoid acidic foods and drinks such as coffee, juices, and soft drinks for at least 15 minutes before and during gum use.

If you smoke a pack or more per day, smoke within 30 minutes of rising, or have trouble not smoking in restricted areas, you may need to start with the higher dose (4 mg). No more than 20 pieces should be used in one day. Nicotine gum is usually recommended for 1 to 3 months, with the maximum being 6 months. Tapering the amount of gum chewed may help you stop using it.

If you have sensitive skin, you may prefer the gum to the patch. Another advantage of nicotine gum is that it allows you to control the nicotine doses. The gum can be chewed as needed or on a fixed schedule during the day. The most recent data have shown that scheduled dosing is more effective. A schedule of 1 to 2 pieces per hour is common. On the other hand, with an as-needed schedule, you can chew more gum during a craving.

Some possible side effects of the gum:

Bad taste
Throat irritation
Mouth sores
Hiccups
Nausea
Jaw discomfort
Racing heartbeat
Symptoms related to the stomach and jaw are usually caused by improper use of the gum, such as swallowing nicotine or chewing too rapidly. The gum can also cause damage to dentures and dental prostheses.

Long-term dependence is one possible disadvantage of nicotine gum. In fact, research has shown that 15% to 20% of gum users who successfully quit smoking continue using the gum for a year or longer. Although the maximum recommended length of use is 6 months, continuing to use the gum is likely to be safer than going back to smoking. But since there is little research on the health effects of long-term nicotine gum use, most health care providers still recommend limiting its use to 6 months.

Nicotine nasal spray: The nasal spray delivers nicotine quickly to the bloodstream as it is absorbed through the nose. It is available only by prescription.

The nasal spray immediately relieves withdrawal symptoms and offers you a sense of control over nicotine cravings. Because it is easy to use, smokers report great satisfaction. However, the FDA cautions that since this product contains nicotine, it can be addictive. It recommends the spray be prescribed for 3-month periods and should not be used for longer than 6 months.

The most common side effects last about 1 to 2 weeks and can include the following:

Nasal irritation
Runny nose
Watery eyes
Sneezing
Throat irritation
Coughing
There is also the danger of using more than is needed. If you have asthma, allergies, nasal polyps, or sinus problems, your doctor may suggest another form of nicotine replacement.

Nicotine inhalers: Introduced in 1998, inhalers are available only by prescription. The nicotine inhaler is a plastic tube with a nicotine cartridge inside. When you puff on the inhaler, the cartridge provides a nicotine vapor. Unlike other inhalers, which deliver most of the medication to the lungs, the nicotine inhaler delivers most of the nicotine vapor to the mouth. In terms of similar behavior, nicotine inhalers are the closest thing to smoking a cigarette, which some smokers find helpful.

The recommended dose is between 6 and 16 cartridges a day, for up to 6 months.

The most common side effects, especially when first using the inhaler, include:

Coughing
Throat irritation
Upset stomach
At this time, inhalers are the most expensive of the forms of NRT available.

Nicotine lozenges: These are the newest form of NRT on the market. The FDA recently approved the first nicotine-containing lozenge as an over-the-counter aid in smoking cessation. As with nicotine gum, the Commit lozenge is available in 2 strengths: 2 mg and 4 mg. Smokers determine which dose is appropriate based on how long after waking up they normally have their first cigarette.

The lozenge manufacturer recommends using it as part of a 12-week program. The recommended dose is one lozenge every 1-2 hours for 6 weeks, then one lozenge every 2-4 hours for weeks 7 to 9, and finally, one lozenge every 4-8 hours for weeks 10 to 12. In addition, the manufacturer recommends the following:

Stop all tobacco use when beginning therapy with the lozenge.

Do not eat or drink for 15 minutes before using the lozenge. (Some beverages can reduce the effectiveness of the lozenge).

Suck on the lozenge until it dissolves. Do not bite or chew it like a hard candy, and do not swallow it.

Do not use more than 5 lozenges in 6 hours, or more than 20 lozenges total per day.

Stop using the lozenge after 12 weeks. If you still feel you need to use the lozenge, talk to your doctor.

Do not use the lozenge if you continue to smoke, chew tobacco, use snuff or any other product containing nicotine (e.g., nicotine patch or gum).
Possible side effects of the nicotine lozenge include:

Trouble sleeping
Nausea
Hiccups
Coughing
Heartburn
Headache
Flatulence (gas)
Which Type of Nicotine Replacement May Be Right for You?

There’s no evidence that any type of nicotine replacement therapy is significantly better than any other. When choosing which type of nicotine replacement you will use, think about which method will best fit your lifestyle and pattern of smoking. Do you want/need something to chew or occupy your hands? Or are you looking for once-a-day convenience?

Some important points to consider:

Nicotine gums, lozenges, and inhalers are oral substitutes that allow you to control your dosage to help keep cravings under better control.

Nicotine nasal spray works very quickly when you need it.

Nicotine inhalers allow you to mimic the use of cigarettes by puffing and holding the inhaler.

Nicotine patches are convenient and only have to be applied once a day.

Both inhalers and nasal sprays require a doctor’s prescription.

Some people may not be able to use patches, inhalers, or nasal sprays due to allergies or other conditions.
Combination of the patch and other nicotine replacement products: Using the nicotine patch along with shorter-acting products such as the gum, lozenge, nasal spray, or inhaler is another method of nicotine replacement therapy. The idea is to provide a steady dose of nicotine with the patch and to use one of the shorter-acting products when strong cravings arise.

The few studies that have been done on combination NRT have found that it may be slightly better than a single product, but more research is needed to prove this and to find safe and effective doses. The combined use of nicotine replacement products has not yet been approved by the FDA. If you are considering using more than one nicotine replacement product, be sure to discuss this with your doctor first.



High-Dose Nicotine Replacement Therapy

One of the newer concepts in nicotine replacement therapy is to give smokers a higher dose specifically titrated to the amount of nicotine that they have been using. Sometimes this method has required larger doses of nicotine than have been used traditionally in the past. High-dose nicotine replacement therapy with patches has been studied with patients receiving from 35 mg to 63 mg of nictotine at a time. The research suggests that patients' withdrawal symptoms disappear with these higher doses and their cravings decrease without any adverse cardiovascular side effects. Patient were carefully monitored in these studies to make sure they were doing well and were not becoming ill or having any problems. This is still a new procedure that should be considered only with a doctor's guidance and supervision.

Bupropion (Zyban)

Bupropion (Zyban) is a prescription antidepressant in an extended-release form that reduces symptoms of nicotine withdrawal. It does not contain nicotine. This drug affects chemicals in the brain that are related to nicotine craving. It can be used alone or together with nicotine replacement. The usual dosage is one or two 150 mg tablets per day.

This medication should not be taken if you have a history of seizures, anorexia, heavy alcohol use, or head trauma.

Some doctors may recommend combination drug therapy for heavily addicted smokers, such as using bupropion along with a nicotine replacement patch and/or a short acting from of nicotine replacement (such as gum or lozenges).

Varenicline (Chantix)

Varenicline (Chantix) is a newer medicine developed specifically to help people stop smoking. It works by interfering with nicotine receptors in the brain, which has two effects. It lessens the pleasurable physical effects a person gets from smoking, as well as reducing the symptoms of nicotine withdrawal.

Several studies have shown varenicline can more than double the chances of quitting smoking. Some studies have also found it may be more effective than bupropion, at least in the short term.

Reported side effects of varenicline have included headaches, nausea, vomiting, trouble sleeping, unusual dreams, flatulence (gas), and changes in taste. Although these side effects can occur, in general, Varenicline is well-tolerated. Since Varenicline is a new drug, research has not been done to determine if it is safe to use along with nicotine replacement products.




Other Methods of Quitting

Other tools may also help some people, although there is no strong evidence they can improve your chances of quitting.

Atropine and scopolamine combination therapy: Some smoking cessation clinics offer a program using shots of the anticholinergic drugs atropine and scopolamine to help reduce nicotine withdrawal symptoms. These drugs are more commonly prescribed for other reasons, such as digestive system problems, motion sickness, or Parkinson’s disease.

The treatment usually involves shots given in the clinic on one day, followed by a few weeks of pills and wearing patches behind the ear. It may include other drugs to help with side effects as well.

Possible side effects of this treatment can include dizziness, constipation, dry mouth, an altered sense of taste and smell, problems urinating, and blurry vision. People who are pregnant or have a history of heart problems, glaucoma, or uncontrolled high blood pressure are not allowed to participate in these programs.

Some clinics claim high success rates, but there is no published scientific research to back up these claims. Both atropine and scopolamine are FDA approved for other uses, but they have not been formally studied or approved for help in quitting smoking. Before considering such a program, you may want to ask the clinic about long-term success rates (up to a year). Because these medicines are directed only at the physical aspect of quitting, you may also want to ask if the program includes counseling or other methods aimed at the psychological aspects of quitting.


Hypnosis might be useful for some people. Ask your doctor if he or she can recommend a good hypnotist if you are interested in this.

Acupuncture has been used for quitting smoking, but there is little evidence to support its effectiveness. Acupuncture, when it is done, is typically done on the ears on particular ear sites. Although there is a very weak suggestion that acupuncture might lower the desire for smoking, there still is no solid evidence that it is truly effective as a smoking cessation tool (see ACS document on Acupuncture.) For a list of local physician acupuncturists, contact the American Academy of Medical Acupuncture at 1-800-521-2262.

Low level laser therapy, also called cold laser therapy, is a related technique. Cold lasers are sometimes used for acupuncture, with laser beams to stimulate the body's acupoints rather than needles. The treatment is supposed to relax the smoker and release endorphins (naturally-occurring pain relief substances) in the body to simulate the effects of nicotine in the brain, or balance the body’s energy to relieve the addiction. Despite claims of success by some cold laser therapy providers, there is no scientific evidence that shows this is an effective method of helping people stop smoking (see ACS document on Cold Laser Therapy.)

Filters that reduce tar and nicotine in cigarettes are generally not effective since studies show that smokers who use filters actually tend to smoke more.

Smoking deterrents such as over-the-counter products that change the taste of tobacco, "stop smoking diets" that curb nicotine cravings, and combinations of vitamins have little scientific evidence to support their claims.

The same is true of “homeopathic” aids and herbal supplements. Because they are marketed as dietary supplements (as opposed to drugs), they don’t need FDA approval to be sold. The manufacturers don’t have to prove they’re effective, or even safe. Be sure to look closely at the product label of any product claiming it can help you stop smoking. No dietary supplement has been proven effective in helping people quit smoking. Some of these supplements have no nicotine in them, but have multiple combinations of herbal preparations. They too have no proven track record of helping people to stop smoking.


Other Nicotine/Tobacco Products, Not Reviewed or Approved by the FDA

Tobacco lozenges and pouches: Lozenges containing tobacco, (Ariva, Interval) and small, tobacco-containing pouches (Revel, Exalt) are being marketed as alternative ways for smokers to get nicotine in places where smoking is not permitted, rather than as quit smoking aids. The FDA has ruled that these are types of smokeless tobacco, not smoking cessation aids; therefore, the FDA does not have authority over them. There is no evidence that these products can help a person quit smoking.

Nicotine lollipops and lip balms: In the past, some pharmacies made a product called a "nicotine lollipop". These lollipops often contained a product called nicotine salicylate with a sugar sweetener. Nicotine salicylate is not approved for pharmacy use by the FDA. The FDA has warned several pharmacies to stop selling nicotine lollipops and lip balm on the Internet, calling the products "illegal." The FDA also said "the candy-like products present a risk of accidental use by children."

Other similar smoking cessation products may not use nicotine salicylate, and therefore may be legal. However, they still pose a risk for children if they are not sufficiently labeled and stored safely.

Nicotine water and nicotine wafers: These products have been sold in recent years as ways to get nicotine in places where smoking is not permitted. They are not marketed as aids to quitting smoking, but questions about their safety and legality have been raised.



A Word About Quitting Success Rates

Before you start using nicotine replacement or sign up for a stop smoking class or program, you may wonder what its success rate is. That's a hard question to answer for several reasons. First, not all programs define success in the same way. Does success mean that a person is not smoking at the end of the program? After 3 months, 6 months, or 1 year? If a program you're considering claims a certain success rate, ask for more details on how success is defined and what kind of follow-up is done to verify the rate.

The truth is, quit smoking programs, like other programs that treat addictions, often have a fairly low success rate. But that does not mean they are not worthwhile or that you should be discouraged. Your own success in quitting is what really counts, and that is under your control.

About 5% to 16% of people are able to quit smoking for at least 6 months without any medicine to help with withdrawal. Several articles in medical journals have reported that between about 25% and about 33% of smokers who use medicines can remain smoke-free for over 6 months. There is early evidence that combining some medicines may be more effective than using them alone.

Behavioral and supportive therapies may increase success rates even further. Check the package insert of any product you are using to see if the manufacturer provides free telephone-based counseling.


How to Quit

Smokers often say, "Don't tell me why to quit, tell me how." There is no one right way to quit, but there are some key elements in quitting smoking successfully. These 4 factors are crucial:

Making the decision to quit
Setting a quit date and choosing a quit plan
Dealing with withdrawal
Staying quit (maintenance)

Making the Decision to Quit


The decision to quit tobacco use is one that only you can make. Others may want you to quit, but the real commitment must come from you.

Researchers have looked into how and why people stop tobacco use. They have some ideas, or models, of how this happens.

The Health Belief Model says that you will be more likely to stop tobacco use if you:

believe that you could get a tobacco-related disease and this worries you
believe that you can make an honest attempt at quitting
believe that the benefits of quitting outweigh the benefits of continuing tobacco use
know of someone who has had health problems as a result of their tobacco use
Does any of these apply to you?

The Stages of Change Model identifies the stages that you go through when you make a change in behavior. Here are the stages as they apply to quitting tobacco use:

Pre-contemplation: At this stage, the tobacco user is not thinking seriously about quitting right now.

Contemplation: The tobacco user is actively thinking about quitting but is not quite ready to make a serious attempt yet. This person may say, "Yes, I'm ready to quit, but the stress at work is too much, or I don't want to gain weight, or I'm not sure if I can do it."

Preparation: Tobacco users in the preparation stage seriously intend to quit in the next month and often have tried to quit in the past 12 months. They usually have a plan.

Action: This is the first 6 months when the user is actively quitting.

Maintenance: This is the period of 6 months to 5 years after quitting when the ex-user is aware of the danger of relapse and take steps to avoid it.

Where do you fit in this model? If you are thinking about quitting, setting a date and deciding on a plan will move you into the preparation stage, the best place to start.

Setting a Quit Date and Deciding on a Plan

Once you've made a decision to quit, you're ready to pick a quit date. This is a very important step. Pick a specific day within the next month as your "Quit Day." Picking a date too far in the future allows you time to rationalize and change your mind. But do give yourself enough time to prepare and come up with a plan. You might choose a date that has a special meaning like a birthday or anniversary, or the date of the Great American Smokeout (third Thursday in November each year). Or you may want to simply pick a random date. Circle the date on your calendar. Make a strong, personal commitment to quit on that day.

There is no one right way to quit. Most tobacco users prefer to quit "cold turkey" – that is, abruptly and totally. They use tobacco until their Quit Day and then stop all at once, or they may cut down on tobacco for a week or 2 before their Quit Day. Another way involves cutting down on the number of times tobacco is used each day. With this method, you gradually reduce the amount of nicotine in your body. While it sounds logical to cut down in order to quit gradually, in practice this method is difficult.

Quitting tobacco is a lot like losing weight; it takes a strong commitment over a long period of time. Users may wish there was a magic bullet – a pill or method that would make quitting painless and easy. But that is not the case. Nicotine substitutes can help reduce withdrawal symptoms, but they are most effective when used as part of a stop tobacco use plan that addresses both the physical and psychological components of quitting.

Here are some steps to help you prepare for your Quit Day:

Pick the date and mark it on your calendar.

Tell friends and family about your Quit Day.

Get rid of all the cigarettes and ashtrays in your home, car and place of work.

Stock up on oral substitutes – sugarless gum, carrot sticks, and/or hard candy.

Decide on a plan. Will you use NRT or other medications? Will you attend a class? If so, sign up now.

Practice saying, "No thank you, I don't smoke."

Set up a support system. This could be a group class, Nicotine Anonymous, or a friend or family member who has successfully quit and is willing to help you. Ask them not to smoke around you or leave cigarettes out where you can see them.

Think back to your past attempts to quit. Try to analyze what worked and what did not work for you.
Successful quitting is a matter of planning and commitment, not luck. Decide now on your own plan. Some possibilities include using the nicotine patch or gum, joining a tobacco cessation class, going to Nicotine Anonymous meetings, or using self-help materials such as books and pamphlets. For the best chance at success, your plan should include one or more of these options.

On your Quit Day, follow these suggestions:

Do not smoke. This means at all - not even one puff!
Keep active – try walking, exercising, or doing other activities or hobbies.
Drink lots of water and juices.
Begin using nicotine replacement if that is your choice.
Attend stop smoking class or start following a self-help plan.
Avoid situations where the urge to smoke is strong.
Reduce or avoid alcohol.
Think about changing your routine. Use a different route to work. Drink tea instead of coffee. Eat breakfast in a different place or eat different foods.
Dealing With Withdrawal

Withdrawal from nicotine has 2 parts – the physical and the psychological. The physical symptoms, while annoying, are not life threatening. Nicotine replacement can help reduce many of these physical symptoms. But most users find that the bigger challenge is the mental part of quitting.

If you have been smoking for any length of time, smoking has become linked with nearly everything you do – waking up in the morning, eating, reading, watching TV, and drinking coffee, for example. It will take time to "un-link" smoking from these activities. That is why, even if you are using a nicotine replacement, you may still have strong urges to smoke.

One way to overcome these urges or cravings is to recognize rationalizations as they come up. A rationalization is a mistaken belief that seems to make sense at the time but is not based on facts. If you have tried to quit before, you will probably recognize many of these common rationalizations.

I’ll just use it to get through this rough spot.
Today is not a good day; I’ll quit tomorrow.
It's my only vice.
How bad is tobacco, really? Uncle Harry chewed all his life and he lived to be over 90.
You've got to die of something.
Life is no fun without smoking.
You probably can add more to the list. As you go through the first few days without tobacco, write down any rationalizations as they come up and recognize them for what they are: messages that can trap you into going back to using tobacco. Use the ideas below to help you keep your commitment to quitting.

Avoid people and places where you are tempted to smoke. Later on you will be able to handle these with more confidence.

Alter your habits. Switch to juices or water instead of alcohol or coffee. Take a different route to work. Take a brisk walk instead of a coffee break.

Alternatives. Use oral substitutes such as sugarless gum or hard candy, raw vegetables such as carrot sticks, or sunflower seeds.

Activities. Do something to reduce your stress. Exercise or do hobbies that keep your hands busy, such as needlework or woodworking, which can help distract you from the urge to smoke. Take a hot bath, exercise, read a book.

Deep breathing. When you were smoking, you breathed deeply as you inhaled the smoke. When the urge strikes now, breathe deeply and picture your lungs filling with fresh, clean air. Remind yourself of your reasons for quitting and the benefits you'll gain as an ex-smoker.

Delay. If you feel that you are about to light up, delay. Tell yourself you must wait at least 10 minutes. Often this simple trick will allow you to move beyond the strong urge to smoke.

What you're doing is not easy, so you deserve a reward. Put the money you would have spent on tobacco in a jar every day and then buy yourself a weekly treat. Buy a magazine, go out to eat, call a friend long-distance. Or save the money for a major purchase. You can also reward yourself in ways that don't cost money: vist a park or the library, develop a new hobby, or take a yoga class.

Staying Quit (Maintenance)

Remember the quotation by Mark Twain? Maybe you, too, have quit many times before. So you know that staying quit is the final, and most important, stage of the process. You can use the same methods to stay quit as you did to help you through withdrawal. Think ahead to those times when you may be tempted to smoke, and plan on how you will use alternatives and activities to cope with these situations.

More dangerous, perhaps, are the unexpected strong desires to smoke that occur sometimes months (or even years) after you've quit. To get through these without relapse, try the following:


Review your reasons for quitting and think of all the benefits to your health, your finances and your family.

Remind yourself that there is no such thing as just one cigarette – or even one puff.

Ride out the desire. It will go away, but do not fool yourself into thinking you can have just one.

Avoid alcohol. Drinking lowers your chance of success.

If you are worried about gaining weight, put some energy into eating a healthy diet and staying active with exercise.
What if you do smoke? The difference between a slip and a relapse is within your control. You can use the slip as an excuse to go back to smoking, or you can look at what went wrong and renew your commitment to staying off smoking for good.

Even if you do relapse, try not to get too discouraged. Very few people are able to quit for good on the first attempt. In fact, it takes most people several attempts before quitting for good. What’s important is figuring out what helped you in your attempt to quit and what worked against you. You can then use this information to make a stronger attempt at quitting the next time.


Special Concerns

Weight Gain

Many smokers do gain some weight when they quit. Even without special attempts at diet and exercise, however, the gain is usually less than 10 pounds. Women tend to gain slightly more weight than men. There is some evidence that smokers will gain weight after they quit even if they do not eat more.

For some, a concern about weight gain can lead to a decision not to quit. But the weight gain that follows quitting smoking is generally very small. It is much more dangerous to continue smoking than it is to gain a small amount of weight.

You are more likely to be successful with quitting smoking if you deal with the smoking first, and then later take steps to reduce your weight. While you are quitting, try to focus on ways to help you stay healthy, rather than on your weight. Stressing about your weight may make it harder to quit. Eat plenty of fruits and vegetables and limit the fat. Be sure to drink plenty of water, and get enough sleep and regular physical activity.

Walking is a great way to be physically active and increase your chances of staying quit. Walking can help you by:

Reducing stress
Burning calories and toning muscles
Giving you something to do instead of thinking about smoking
No special equipment or clothing is needed for walking, other than a pair of comfortable shoes. And you can do it pretty much anytime or anywhere. Try the following:

Walking around a shopping mall
Getting off the bus one stop before you usually do
Finding a buddy to walk with during lunch time at work
Taking the stairs instead of the elevator
Walking with a friend, family member, or neighbor after dinner
Pushing your baby in a stroller
Set a goal of 30 minutes of physical activity 5 or more times a week. If you don’t already exercise regularly, please check with your doctor before starting an exercise program.

Stress

Smokers often mention stress as one of the reasons for going back to smoking. Stress is a part of all of our lives, smokers and nonsmokers alike. The difference is that smokers have come to use nicotine to help cope with stress. When quitting, you have to learn new ways of handling stress. Nicotine replacement can help to some extent, but for long-term success other strategies are needed.

As mentioned above, physical activity is a good stress-reducer. It can also help with the temporary sense of depression that some smokers experience when they quit. There are also stress-management classes and self-help books. Check your community newspaper, library, or bookstore.

Spiritual practices such as prayer and meditation have been used very successfully with other addictions and are an integral part of 12-step recovery programs. These same principles can be applied to quitting smoking and can help with stress reduction.

Taking Care of Yourself

Any past or current tobacco use is important information for your health care provider to know so he or she can be sure that you have appropriate preventive health care. It is well known that tobacco use puts you at risk for certain health-related illnesses, so part of your health care should focus on related screening and preventive measures to help you stay as healthy as possible. For example, you will want to be certain that you regularly check the inside of your mouth for any changes and have an oral exam by your doctor or dentist if you have any changes or problems. The American Cancer Society recommends that periodic checkups should include oral cavity (mouth) exams. By doing this tobacco users may be able to prevent, or detect early, oral changes, leukoplakia (white patches on the mouth membranes), and oral cancer.

You should also be aware of any change in cough, a new cough, coughing up blood, hoarseness, difficulty breathing, wheezing, headaches, chest pain, loss of appetite, weight loss, general fatigue, and repeated respiratory infections. Any of these could be signs of lung cancer or a number of other lung conditions and should be reported to your doctor. While these can be signs of a problem, many lung cancers do not cause any noticeable symptoms until they are advanced and have spread to other parts of the body.

Remember that tobacco users have an increased risk for other cancers as well, depending on the way they use tobacco. You can become familiar with the types of cancer you may be at risk for by reading the American Cancer Society document that discusses the way you use tobacco. Other risk factors for these cancers may be more important than your use of tobacco, but you should be aware of the additional risks that might apply to your situation.

If you have any health concerns that may be related to your tobacco use, please see your health care provider as quickly as possible. Taking care of yourself and getting treatment for small problems will give you the best chance for successful treatment. The best way, though, to take care of yourself and decrease your risk for life-threatening lung problems is to quit using tobacco.




kartik
April 22nd, 2007, 01:13 AM
Congrats man.. Quit Smoking huh.. brave move !!

Absolutely admire your will power. Great going .

weirdo
April 22nd, 2007, 05:45 PM
On that note....

DREAMS will PERISH
If DRUGS are CHERISHED

bonddonraj
May 2nd, 2007, 12:50 AM
http://www.worldsfastestclown.com/images/vslims5a.jpg

bonddonraj
May 2nd, 2007, 12:51 AM
LUNG CANCER

http://www.tobacco-facts.info/images/lung_cancer-740.jpg

bonddonraj
May 2nd, 2007, 12:55 AM
THROT CANCER...........

http://www.the-alternative-health-daily.com/Preston_3.jpg

roshcrazy
May 2nd, 2007, 10:55 AM
these pics are horrifying n show the bitter truth if how dangerous smokin cud be...its really good tht uve posted this article n these pics..which shall make ppl more aware abt the illeffects of smokin...ppl knw its bad for health then too god knws y they smoke...i jus hope this helps in sum way..n dey give up smokin....!!

coolbrat
May 2nd, 2007, 01:00 PM
kuddos rahul as a doctor i never thought to start such thread here , you dong real nice job , kindly keep posting such photos they are hard truths , we face it every day. i never understoo why people want such brutel death. quit smoking it does no good to any , and ya if you need any counceling in this regard do post here in this thread.

coolbrat
May 2nd, 2007, 01:02 PM
kuddos rahul as a doctor i never thought to start such thread here , you dong real nice job , kindly keep posting such photos they are hard truths , we face it every day. i never understoo why people want such brutel death. quit smoking it does no good to any , and ya if you need any counceling in this regard do post here in this thread.

kartik i wish this thread to be sticky so all be constantly benefited, see if it can be done

bonddonraj
May 4th, 2007, 01:54 AM
http://www.lungcancer.org/images/patients/lungs/diseased_lung.jpg

LUNG CANCER

bonddonraj
May 4th, 2007, 01:55 AM
[http://www.aitkin.k12.mn.us/carlson/Healthy%20Lung.jpg

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;HEALTHY LUNG;;;;;;;;

[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[WHAT DO YOU WANT]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]

bonddonraj
May 4th, 2007, 01:57 AM
MOUTH CANCER

http://www.tobaccofacts.org/photos/mouth_cancer2.jpg

bonddonraj
May 4th, 2007, 01:58 AM
http://www.tcnj.edu/~fox2/smoking/mouth_clip_image005.jpg

DO YOU WANT THIS AS YOUR FUTURE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

bonddonraj
May 4th, 2007, 01:59 AM
http://www.uspharmacist.com/publish/images/8_1820_1.jpg

bonddonraj
May 4th, 2007, 02:01 AM
LUNG CANCER .............

http://images.medicinenet.com/images/Lung_8_01.gif

bonddonraj
May 4th, 2007, 02:02 AM
http://www.bhj.org/journal/april2005/images/study_132.gif

bonddonraj
May 4th, 2007, 02:10 AM
SO IT IS NOT JUST SAYING THAT AVOID SMOKING IN PUBLIC AS A SOCIAL CAUSE ....IT IS ....AS WE WE BEG ALL TOT TO SMOKE IT KILLS................


SIMPLY YAAR ITANA LIFE MAE KIYA IS LIF KO KHATAM KARNE KO !!!!!!

bonddonraj
May 4th, 2007, 11:19 PM
http://tobaccosucks.tripod.com/cgi-bin/image002.jpg

param
May 6th, 2007, 01:04 PM
yaar I just want to say thanks that u quit smoking

bonddonraj
May 19th, 2007, 11:33 PM
http://www.sadireland.com/images/more%20400.jpg

bonddonraj
May 19th, 2007, 11:41 PM
http://www.squarecirclez.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2006/11/smoking.jpg

Latanshu
May 20th, 2007, 03:38 PM
B]Sheesha - The DangeROus Puff[/B]
*A TIME BOMB in a gift-wrap is nevertheless a time bomb and is designed to explode*

It is difficult to point out a single source responsible for introducing the Sheesha to the public.. Nevertheless, it can be safely said that the Sheesha (also known as water-pipe, or hubble bubble) has gained popularity among the younger lot of the country.


It should never be forgotten that smoking the Sheesha [similar to smoking CIGARETEES] involves Smoking Tobacco, regardless of the flavour that gets into the mouth. In the same way, smoking tobacco is bound to be Injurious to health (as the country’s Health Ministry insists), irrespective of what it tastes or smells.

As for tar, the research stated that under normal conditions, smoke produced by a single Sheesha contains approximately the same amount of tar (dry particulate matter) as *20 cigarettes*

subodh167
May 31st, 2007, 10:07 AM
thanx for this useful information. we have to spread this message.
thanx again

AaronRoger
June 1st, 2007, 05:37 PM
good posts guys,, we need to create an awareness among every1..........
thanx!

diveshrohra
June 10th, 2007, 06:57 PM
i cant qiut... coz i dun want to... but i anna reduce the freq

ARVINDPATHAK
June 10th, 2007, 10:41 PM
hi aron

we r year all to do the same as quit smoking

melroy88
June 11th, 2007, 12:35 AM
man! the images are gross...Jeez every1 aught to stop smoking unless they want their liver and evrythng else to look like barbeque chicken

bonddonraj
June 11th, 2007, 08:35 AM
i cant qiut... coz i dun want to... but i anna reduce the freq

I THOUGHT SAME WAY BROTHER , BUT WHEN REALISED DOOM DAY OF MY HAPPY HEALTHY LIFE ...

bonddonraj
June 12th, 2007, 04:55 PM
http://www.caladangallery.com/albums/braceland4/a_braceland_kathy_enjoying_a_smoke_in_death_valley_california.thumb.jpg

crystalheart
June 12th, 2007, 07:48 PM
hey congrat u hav quite smoking, this post is great i do hope dat people would go through tis post and quite smoking one day... i dont know why when people do know dat smokin is bad for health they still smoke... moreover wit every puff one takes they deduct 11 minutes of their life, its more harmful for the passive smokers...

bonddonraj
June 12th, 2007, 11:39 PM
thanx buddy i am glad you are one of the AWAKENED one....................congrates...................

narasimhan
June 13th, 2007, 07:45 AM
seeing these pictures i hope i never come across a smoking person in my life, for life could turn hopeless for these guys.

sarika0211
June 13th, 2007, 03:51 PM
Hey Thats so informative... Thanks for that. Personally I feel Smoking is even out of fashion now. It looks so LS to see a guy smoke on road

miral.shah2003
June 16th, 2007, 01:04 PM
hi guys... tht information wa good one

nilay
June 17th, 2007, 03:20 PM
plzzzzzzz do it.......its must........................................... ......

gulshan
June 20th, 2007, 06:24 PM
well man hats off to you !!!!!!!!!!
GOD BLESS.

shaks
June 22nd, 2007, 05:50 PM
smoking is not cool

sheetal k
June 23rd, 2007, 08:26 AM
every1 knws wht good n bad 4 them......then y do they smoke wen its clearly proved tht its injurious 2 health.....mad guys

drsaurabhsrivastava
June 25th, 2007, 04:58 PM
great
i think wise people can never ever think of smoking once going through this
nice thread
regards

Archie
June 25th, 2007, 06:44 PM
good work!!!!!
im so happy for u!!
u quit smokin.. somethin i kinda nag my friends to keep doing... n never succeed...

i dont even think reading this will help them... b'coz they always have to go for "just one more puff"

can ya suggest anything i can say to help them quit????
if u cxan.. i'd be ever-so-grateful to you :SugarwareZ-190:

rutu
June 27th, 2007, 10:14 AM
hey first of all congrats buddy on ur success.............
and second thanx a lot for this gr8 post ...........the info u have given is mindblowing, informative and very helpfull........hav already forwarded the articles u wrote and pic u hav shown to my friend who is trying to hard to quit for long ...........hope ur case and article realy helps him out...... thanx one more time

Aka
June 27th, 2007, 10:48 AM
We should remove the cool around smoking... Many youngsters who smoke think it's cool..

pratham018
June 27th, 2007, 12:58 PM
I FEEL LIKE SMOKING

jhunjhun
June 27th, 2007, 01:05 PM
We should remove the cool around smoking... Many youngsters who smoke think it's cool..

smoking should be ban for youngsters....... its not at all cool.....

jhunjhun
June 27th, 2007, 01:11 PM
its not that easy 2 quit smoking though your determined to quit some where down the line you'll end up smoking for some or the either reason...... bad habits dont die fast.....

sakshi_123
June 27th, 2007, 02:51 PM
these pics r really horrifing....i hope dat ppl smoking shud understnd dat hw smoking can actually ruin their life....

sakshi_123
June 27th, 2007, 02:53 PM
sorry...i suppose i have posted in d wrong thread....

sakshi_123
June 27th, 2007, 02:55 PM
who is telin u to leave it right nw....u can try n reduce it day by day n den eventually stop it....if u wana really do it den no 1 can stop u...

abhimanjrekar
June 27th, 2007, 07:31 PM
smokin is really bad !!

planets4me
June 27th, 2007, 07:46 PM
very true..... quite smoking........

tanya malhotra
July 6th, 2007, 11:43 PM
smoking is injurious to health is written on eack ciaggrete packing
i still don nsatand y ppl smoke

ARVINDPATHAK
July 7th, 2007, 09:06 PM
i am trying to quit smoking but its not going on the way as i smoke when i am
with my friends. I started smoking when i was in STD 7th now i am in TY. So
thinging to quit doesnt help we have to thing it as we want to do it.

dharav
July 7th, 2007, 10:50 PM
cool ! m gonna surely share this article with ma friends ! :)

noren
July 12th, 2007, 11:13 PM
wat id some one does ntowant to quit.........it is better to keep it unsder control

bonddonraj
July 12th, 2007, 11:22 PM
i am trying to quit smoking but its not going on the way as i smoke when i am
with my friends. I started smoking when i was in STD 7th now i am in TY. So
thinging to quit doesnt help we have to thing it as we want to do it.

DEAR FRIEND , IF YOU CANNOT QUIT IT , IT SHALL MAKE YOU QUIT EARLY FROM LIFE ....BEST WAY DO SO IS TO BE VERY CRUEL IN YOUR ATTITUDE TOWARDS YOUR BAD LIKING.....IT IS NOT A BAD HABBIT RATHER A DISESAE TO FIGHT OUT..... TRY NO OTHER ALTERNATIVE .....BUT YOUR STRONG WILL.....

born2rule
July 12th, 2007, 11:36 PM
the pics r deadly...after watching i m sure every1 will forcibly quit smoking..

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 03:01 PM
Some people would argue that smoke-a-holic is just a cute euphemism which should not be compared to what they consider degrading syndromes. Contrary to this belief, nicotine addiction can be equally as strong and deadly as any of these other conditions. In fact, if you total the number of people who die yearly of all these other conditions combined, they would not add up to the number of premature deaths attributed to cigarette smoking.

Until recent times, the idea of nicotine being a physiologically addictive substance was controversial in the world-wide medical community. For a drug to be considered addictive, it must meet certain criteria. First, it must be capable of inducing physical withdrawal upon cessation. Nicotine abstinence syndrome is a well documented, established fact.

Second, tolerance to the drug usually develops. Increasingly larger doses become necessary to achieve the same desired effects. Smokers experience this phenomenon as their cigarette consumption gradually increases from what probably was sporadic occasional use to a required daily consumption of one or more packs.

The third criterion is that an addictive substance becomes a totally consuming necessity to its user, usually resulting in what is considered by a society as anti-social behavior. Many have argued that cigarette smoking fails to fulfill this requirement. True, most smokers do not resort to deviant behaviors to maintain their dependency, but this is because most smokers do manage to easily obtain the full complement of cigarettes they need to satisfy the addiction. When smokers are deprived of easy accessibility to cigarettes, the situation is totally different.

During World War II, in concentration camps in Germany, prisoners were not given enough food to fulfill minimum caloric nutritional requirements. They were literally starving to death. A common practice among smoking prisoners was to trade away their scarce supplies of life sustaining food for cigarettes. Even today, in underdeveloped countries, such as Bangladesh, parents with starving children barter away essential food for cigarettes. This is not normal behavior.

During the "stop smoking clinics" , numerous participants admit to going through ashtrays, garbage cans and, if necessary, gutters looking for butts which may still have a salvageable value of a few puffs when their own supplies are depleted due to carelessness or unforeseen circumstances. To them, it is sick to think that they ever performed such a grotesque act, but many realize that if they were currently smoking and again caught in a similar predicament, they would be fully capable of repeating the repulsive incident.

Nicotine is a drug. It is addictive. And if you let it, it can be a killer. Consider this when you get the urge for a cigarette. One puff can and most often will reinforce the addiction. Don't take that chance. Remember - NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF!

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 03:10 PM
I Smoke Because I Like Smoking!

Ask almost any current smoker why she continues to indulge in such a dangerous activity and she will normally reply, "Because I like smoking." While she may say this in all honesty, it is a very misleading statement, both to the listener and to the smoker herself. She does not smoke because she enjoys smoking, rather she smokes because she does not enjoy not smoking.

Nicotine is a powerfully addictive drug. The smoker is in a constant battle to maintain a narrow range of nicotine in her blood stream (serum nicotine level). Every time the smoker's serum nicotine level falls below the minimum limit, she experiences drug withdrawal. She becomes tense, irritable, anxious and, in some cases, even shows physical symptoms. She does not enjoy feeling these withdrawals. The only thing that will alleviate these acute symptoms will be a cigarette. The nicotine loss is then replenished and, hence, the smoker feels better. She enjoyed smoking.

A smoker must also be cautious not to exceed his upper limit of tolerance for nicotine or else suffer varying degrees of nicotine poisoning. Many smokers can attest to this condition. It usually occurs after parties or extremely tense situations when the smokers finds themselves exceeding their normal level of consumption. They feel sick, nauseous, dizzy and generally miserable.

Being a successful smoker is like being an accomplished tightrope walker. The smoker must constantly maintain a balance between these two painful extremes of too much or too little nicotine. The fear which accompanies initial smoking cessation is that the rest of the ex-smoker's entire life will be as horrible as the first few days without cigarettes. What ex-smokers will learn is that within a short period of time, the physical withdrawal will start to diminish. First, the urges will weaken in intensity and then become shorter in duration. There will be longer time intervals between urges. It will eventually reach the point where the ex-smoker will desire a cigarette very infrequently, if ever. Those who continue to smoke will continue to be in a constant battle of maintaining their serum nicotine level.

Included in this battle is the great expense of buying pack after pack and the dangerous assault on the smoker's body of inhaling the poison nicotine along with over 4,000 other toxic chemicals which comprise the tars and gasses produced from the combustion of tobacco. These chemicals are deadly by themselves and even more so in combination.

So the next time you think of how much you once seemed to enjoy cigarettes, sit back and take a serious, objective look at why you have such an idealization of this dangerous product. Consider all the consequences. You will probably realize that you feel physically and mentally better now than you ever did as a smoker. Consider all of this and - NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF!

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 03:31 PM
I Smoke Because I'm Self-Destructive

Many Smokers believe they continue to smoke because of their self-destructive attitude. They actually want to get sick. Some say they are afraid of reaching old age. Others arrogantly vow to continue smoking until it kills them.

While some people do have emotional problems which lead to self-destructive behavior, I believe the majority of smokers with this attitude are not in this category. Most make these statements to hide their fears of not being able to give up cigarette smoking.

They often explain that they had made such excuses yet were shocked when they actually did become ill. Clinic participants who fail occasionally state that they just didn't care enough about themselves to give up cigarettes. Unfortunately, some were later diagnosed of having cancer. Others have had heart attacks, strokes or other circulatory conditions. Many were discovered to have major breathing impairments from emphysema. None of them ever called me enthusiastically proclaiming, "It worked, it's killing me!" On the contrary, they were normally upset, scared and depressed. Not only did they have a potentially deadly condition, but they knew that, to a major degree, they were responsible for its occurrence.

An equally tragic situation is experienced by the survivors of people who die of smoking related illnesses. Many ex-smokers go back to smoking through the encouragement of family and friends. This usually happens to someone who is disease free and quits to stay healthy. Initially they are nervous and crabby (remember those days?). Soon the spouse, kids and others are saying, "If this is what you are like as a nonsmoker, for heaven's sake, smoke!" While it may seem to be a good idea at the time, consider how the relative feels when the smoker gets cancer or has a heart attack and dies. The guilt is tremendous.

Some beliefs or statements made by smokers sound irrational, as if they have a real death wish. Often, there is really nothing wrong with the person - it is a drug effect. Fear of withdrawal or of being unable to cope with life without cigarettes results in a defense mechanism to justify dependency. Once off smoking these excuses simply disappear, leaving a physically and psychologically healthier individuals who will have a good chance of remaining this way by following one simple procedure - NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF!

rajanshah.mba
July 15th, 2007, 04:58 PM
Good topic ...appriciated

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:11 PM
You Smoke Because

You're A Smoke-a-holic!

Some smokers say they smoke because they are nervous. Others say they smoke to celebrate. Some think they smoke for energy. Many smoke to look sexy. Yet others smoke to stay awake or to sleep. Some think they smoke to think. One truly unique smoker once told me she smoked to breathe better. Another once said she returned to smoking when experiencing chest pains. She figured the fear of a heart attack is enough to make anyone smoke. None of these reasons satisfactorily explains why people continue smoking. However, the answer is, in fact, quite simple. Smokers smoke cigarettes because they are smokers. More precisely, smokers smoke cigarettes because they are smoke-a-holics.

A smoke-a-holic, like any other drug addict, has become hooked on a chemical substance. In the cigarette smoker's case, nicotine is the culprit. He is at the point where the failure to maintain a minimum level of nicotine in his blood stream leads to the nicotine abstinence syndrome, otherwise known as drug withdrawal. Anything that makes him lose nicotine makes him smoke.

This concept explains why so many smokers feel they smoke under stress. Stress has a physiological effect on the body which makes the urine acidic. Whenever the urine becomes acidic, the body excretes nicotine at an accelerated rate. Thus, when a smoker encounters a stressful situation he loses nicotine and goes into drug withdrawal. Most smokers feel that when they are nervous or upset cigarettes help calm them down. The calming effect, however, is not relief from the emotional strain of the situation, but actually the effect of replenishing the nicotine supply and ending the withdrawal. It is easy to understand why smokers without this basic knowledge of stress and its nicotine effect are afraid to give up smoking. They feel that they will be giving up a very effective stress management technique. But once they give up smoking for a short period of time, they will become calmer, even under stress, than when they were smokers.

The explanation of how physiological changes in the body make smokers smoke is difficult for some smokers to believe. But nearly all smokers can easily relate to other situations which also alter the excretion rate of nicotine. Ask a smoker what happens to their smoking consumption after drinking alcohol, and you can be sure they will answer that it goes up. If asked how much their consumption rises, they will normally reply that it doubles or even triples when drinking. They usually are convinced that this happens because everyone around them is smoking. But if they think back to a time when they were the only smoker in the room, they will realize that drinking still caused them to smoke more. Alcohol consumption results in the same physiological effect as stress - acidification of the urine. The nicotine level drops dramatically, and the smoker must light one cigarette after another or suffer drug withdrawal.

It is important for smokers considering quitting to understand these concepts because once they truly understand why they smoke they will be able to more fully appreciate how much more simple their life will become as an ex-smoker.

Once the smoker stops, nicotine will begin to leave his or her body and within two weeks all the nicotine will be gone. Once the nicotine is totally out of the body, all withdrawal will cease. No longer will they experience drug withdrawal states whenever encountering stress, drinking, or just going too long without smoking. In short, they will soon realize that all the benefits they thought they derived from smoking were false effects. They did not need to smoke to deal with stress, or to drink, socialize, or work. Everything they did as a smoker they can do as a non-smoker, and in most cases they will now do these activities more efficiently and feel better during them.

They will become a more independent people. It is a good feeling and a major accomplishment to break free from this addiction. But no matter how long they are off smoking and how confident they feel, the ex-smoker must always remember that he or she is a smoke-a-holic.

Being a smoke-a-holic means that as long as they don't take a single drag off a cigarette, cigar or pipe, or chew tobacco, or inject it into their bloodstream with a syringe, they will never again become hooked on nicotine. If, on the other hand, they do make the tragic mistake of experimenting with any nicotine product, they will reinforce their addiction. This will result either in returning to their old level of consumption or experiencing a full fledged withdrawal process. Neither situation is fun to go through.

So, once off of smoking, the ex-smoker must always remember just who and what he is - a smoke-a-holic for the rest of his life. Remembering this, you can remain truly independent from nicotine by following one simple practice - Never Take Another Puff!

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:12 PM
Why Do I Smoke?

Most smokers spend countless hours during their smoking careers trying to satisfactorily answer this most perplexing question. Typically, answers they come up with are that they smoke because they are unhappy, unsatisfied, nervous, bored, anxious, lonely, tired or just frustrated without their cigarettes. Other reasons often quoted are that cigarettes keep them thin, make them better able to think, or that they are more sociable while smoking. Some claim that they smoke to celebrate the joyful times of life. Food, drink, fun and games, and even sex all seem to lose their appeal without an accompanying cigarette. After hearing all of these wonderful qualities attributed to cigarette smoking, I find myself amazed that millions and millions of earth's inhabitants have successfully given up smoking.

What in the world is wrong with these ex-smokers? I can understand people who never smoked. They never knew or believed all of these wonderful benefits derived from smoking. What you never had you'll never miss. But these ex-smokers, having given up such a marvelous chemical addiction with so many benefits, must be crazy.

The fact is ex-smokers are not crazy. To the contrary, it was their ability to be rational which enabled them to successfully break free from cigarettes. They had the foresight to put themselves through the pain and agony encountered during the initial withdrawal from the nicotine addiction. It is both a powerful physical and psychological addiction which creates many irrational beliefs as defense mechanisms in order to perpetuate the smoking behavior. Most of the reasons mentioned above of why smokers claim they smoke are such drug induced beliefs.

All ex-smokers should be applauded for their great accomplishment in overcoming the many obstacles created by their addiction. Encountering the initial quitting process creates a state of emotional insecurity and self doubt. Will they ever be able to survive in our complicated world without their cigarettes? Once they become totally free of the grip which cigarettes exert upon them, they will be able to get a clear perspective of how many misconceptions they had about the benefits they thought they derived from smoking. Being drug free after years of enslavement brings a sense of relief and accomplishment that the smoker never anticipated. To their pleasant surprise, they discover the marvelous fact that there is life after smoking. It is a healthier, calmer and more pleasant life. They now have a choice as to whether or not they ever wish to smoke again. If they look honestly and objectively at the advantages and disadvantages, the logical choice is to remain ex-smokers.

Unfortunately, some don't remember all of the consequences associated with their now arrested dependency, but only recall the infrequent good times they believe they had with their cigarettes. They think that they could once again enjoy just a few cigarettes. What must be understood by all ex-smokers is that they only have two options. They can smoke nothing or they can smoke at their previous level of consumption. There is no in-between. They are wasting their time contemplating how nice it would be to be an occasional social smoker. They can never again have that luxury.

All ex-smokers must consider both options. Then if they choose to smoke, all they need do is take their first cigarette and again become trapped in the nicotine addiction. If they choose to remain free, all they need is to follow the simple practice - NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF!

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:15 PM
How would you deal with

the following situations?



Your 2-year-old is having a temper tantrum because he wants a new toy. Would you;

Leave him alone until he calmed down
Give into his demands
Give him a tranquilizer
Your 7-year-old is anxious about next week's Little League tryouts. Would you;

Assure him that he can do it
Practice with him and tell him to try his best
Give him a valium every three hours until the game
Your 14-year-old is crushed when she is not asked to the sophomore dance. Would you;

Fix her up with one of your friend's children
Tell her to go anyway
Give her cocaine to pick up her spirits
Your 15-year-old is self-conscious about being 5 pounds overweight. Would you;

Cook lower calorie meals
Enroll her in a diet or exercise program
Put her on appetite suppressants

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

All of these young people are experiencing what adults would consider "growing pains." A little time, patience and positive reassuring will help them overcome all of these difficult situations.

The fact is, as long as anyone continues to develop physically, emotionally, intellectually, professionally or spiritually, they too will experience growing pains. Adults are prone to hurt, pain, sadness, depression and anxiety just as children are. These feelings are all necessary if we wish to continue to develop our minds and bodies. Without such growth, we would not experience happiness, satisfaction, contentment or purpose to their full extent.

The third choice in each of the above situations was, of course, ridiculous. We would not subject our children to chemical hazards to overcome such trivial problems. However, as adults we are fully capable of practicing such dangerous behaviors for our own relief. Take cigarette smoking as an example.

When you were still a smoker, how many times would you say you had to smoke because you were lonely and sad without your friendly cigarettes? How many times did you say that you had to smoke because of all the stress in your life? How many times did you tell yourself that many social activities were just not fun without your cigarettes? How many times did you say that you would gain too much weight if you quit smoking? All you were saying was that you needed nicotine, a drug, to overcome everyday life problems.

It was not until you were off cigarettes that you realized you could overcome such problems without smoking, and in most cases more effectively than when you were a smoker. Once you had quit you realized just how much a source of stress dependence upon nicotine was to you. You were caught by a socially unacceptable and physically deadly addiction and were quite often aware of it. This is when you had the desire to give them up, but thought the pain of quitting too great to even attempt it.

Even today, you probably still desire an occasional cigarette. It may be in a stressful situation, at a party after a few drinks, or at a time when you find yourself alone with nothing better to do. The fact is, there is nothing worse you can do than take a cigarette. One cigarette will not help you over the problem. In reality, it will create a new problem, a disastrous situation of a revived and reinforced addiction, with all the physical dangers and the dirty means of delivery that come with it.

So, next time you have the desire for a cigarette, sit back and take a few moments to reflect upon what you are setting yourself up for. Do you need that drug? Do you want that addiction? If not, simply remember - NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF!

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:17 PM
Remember, smoking cannot solve problems of daily living. No matter what the problem, there is a more effective way of solving it than smoking. In fact, a smoker's health risks are a real problem that can only be solved if they - NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF!

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:18 PM
I've Smoked for So Long and So Much,

What is the Use in Quitting Now?





On the third day of a recent clinic, a woman participant in her late fifties who had been off smoking for just over 48 hours asked one of those questions that I have heard hundreds of times in past programs. “I have smoked so long and so heavily, what good will quitting smoking do for me now?” A few minutes of explaining the bargaining phase people go through when they are initially quitting smoking seemed to clarify why she was having such thoughts rationalizing why she didn't really need to quit.

A few minutes later, she told me a story about her personal family history, one that quite simply gave a better answer to her original query than I could ever have come up with. “My father was a chain smoker,” she said. “He quit when he was 60 because he had a heart attack. Never smoked one after that. Even though he was a heart attack victim, after he quit smoking he felt better than he had felt in years. Much more endurance, greater vitality. He lived to the age of 95, bright and alert to the end.”

On the sixth night I called her to see if she had made it through the weekend all right. “I feel so bad,” she replied. “I had a terrible evening last night and I had a major problem dealing with a client at work this morning. I was just so upset from lack of sleep and frustration, I finally broke down and took a cigarette. I've been beating myself up for it ever since. I am more depressed now than I was before. Why am I beating myself up so, and what should I do now?”

I said she had two options, quit right then and face a potential full three day withdrawal or go back to full fledged smoking all over again. If she didn't make a decision, her body would automatically make the decision for her. Again she expressed the sentiment that she was beating herself up so badly and wanted me to explain why she was so upset with herself. She just couldn't believe that one cigarette could be so important to be making such a big issue.

A few minutes later, she told me the story of how her husband had once been off for three years. One day while they were in the car together, for one reason or another he bummed a cigarette from her. She raised the issue with him of what good would a cigarette be after all that time, but he convinced her it was no big deal. What right did she have to protest anyway, she thought, she was a chain smoker herself. He finally got his way. He never stopped smoking after that day. Four years later she got a call at work that her husband had collapsed at her mother-in-law's home. By the time they got to him it was too late. He had died of a sudden and totally unexpected heart attack. She has little doubt that his last four years of smoking was a major contributing factor to his sudden and premature death.

So why was she now making such a big deal out of a cigarette? Once again, her own personal history was giving her a more powerful answer than I could ever have expressed. One cigarette, in a car a number of years earlier helped to end her husband's life. If he had known the implication that one cigarette would have had, he would never have considered the thought for more than a second. In retrospect, she had the opportunity to look back to that day and realize how a fleeting urge followed by poor judgment helped to end or shorten her husband's life.

With the kind of personal experiences she had witnessed associated with smoking, it is quite easy to see how she could be so hard on herself for what occurred earlier that day. She witnessed how smoking diminished the quality of her father's life and almost brought on a premature death. Equally important, she saw how quitting smoking vastly improved his health and general feeling of well being. She also witnessed how her husband's momentary lapse of judgment resulted in her suffering such a grave loss just a few years earlier. If he had the opportunity, he would surely have cursed the day he lit just one. She had the benefit of hindsight, which now was haunting her because she had made the same mistake that day he had made just a few years earlier. He never got the chance to quit again. She still had time to make a decision - and she was asking me what she should do now. Again, I feel her own personal experience and the immediate emotional reactions she was now experiencing were giving a more powerful answer to her question than I could. If she listened to her heart, I am sure it was telling her to - NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF!

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:21 PM
The Power of Advertising

The father sat reflecting on how much joy his two sons brought to him during the year. He decided to buy them both the present of their choice this holiday season. When he asked his older boy what he would like, the son replied, “Oh boy, I would like so many things. Maybe a bicycle, or new skis, or skin diving equipment. I wish I would have them all, but any one would make me happy.”

That was fine with the father, he now had some good choices. Next, he turned to his younger son, who was only eight years old. The boy envied his brother for all the games he could play and all of the sports he could do so well. When asked what he would like, he made one simple request. “I would like a box of Tampax Tampons.” The father was shocked, “What in the world do you want a box of tampons for?” he demanded angrily. The poor boy, not knowing he had said something wrong, answered, “With Tampax, you can swim, ski, sky dive, horseback ride and play any sport you want.”

This humorous story illustrates a serious point. Advertising promises can influence our desires for material products. The more naive we are, the more effective advertising will be. The claims ads promote are often misleading or exaggerations of the truth. No product abuses the truth more than cigarettes.

Just as the young boy in our story expected great things from this marvelous unknown product, smokers have great confidence in the emotional benefits brought from inhaling burning weeds. To tell a smoker the truth about his cigarettes while he still is in the midst of the smoker's psyche results in a state of denial and defiance. He cannot believe his cigarettes, his friends and allies, would in any way hurt him. They help him over trauma, they help him enjoy life to the fullest. Think of all the things he does with his cigarettes. He wakes in the morning to them, works with them, plays with them, eats and drinks, goes to the bathroom, reads the paper, watches television, socializes with all of his friends and even has them on his mind during sex. If any person hung around him that much, it would drive him crazy. But not his friendly cigarettes - they enhance everything. The advertisements even say they do.

The advertisements do claim this, but the claim is not true. He does not smoke during all of these activities because he chooses to. He has to. Smokers are drug addicts. They cannot enjoy natural pleasures, no matter how good they are, until their serum nicotine level is raised. They are controlled by this product. Cigarettes are not friends, they are lousy acquaintances. Once you get rid of them, stay clear. Yes, they may call to you, and the ads may strike out at you. But you know the truth about cigarettes. Don't let any smoker who is feeling inferior, or tobacco company or advertising agency which wishes to maintain its vast wealth at the expense of your life convince you of anything different. Life can be longer as a ex-smoker, and life is better as a ex-smoker. Consider this whenever external or internal forces call out to you. Remember this and - NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:23 PM
A Safer Way to Smoke





Smokers are always looking for ways to reduce the health risks of smoking. Unfortunately, most techniques used to reduce the risk don't work, and, in many cases, may actually increase the dangers of smoking.

Probably the most popular method of risk reduction is switching to low tar and nicotine cigarettes. If people only smoked to perpetuate a simple habit, low tar and nicotine cigarettes would probably reduce the dangers of smoking. Unfortunately, the necessity to smoke is not continuance of a habit but rather maintenance of an addiction. Switching to a low tar and nicotine cigarette makes it difficult for a smoker to reach and maintain his normal required level of nicotine. The smoker will probably develop some sort of compensatory smoking pattern. Compensatory behaviors include smoking more cigarettes, smoking them further down, inhaling deeper, or holding the smoke down longer.

By doing one or a combination of these behaviors, the smoker will reach similar levels of tar and nicotine in his system as when he smoked his old brand, but, in the process, he may increase the amount of other potent poisons beyond what was delivered by his old cigarettes. Low tar and nicotine cigarettes often have higher concentrations of other dangerous poisons. By increasing consumption, substantially greater amounts of these poisons are taken into the system, thereby increasing his risk of diseases associated with these chemicals. One such poison, found in higher quantities in many low tar and nicotine cigarettes, is carbon monoxide. Carbon monoxide is one of the major factors contributing to the high incidence of heart and circulatory diseases in smokers. Also, to give flavor to the low tar and nicotine cigarettes, many additional additives and flavor enhancers are used. Tobacco companies are not required to disclose what the chemical additives are, but the medical community suspects that many of these additives are carcinogenic (cancer producing) and may actually be increasing the smoker's risk of tobacco-related cancers.

The filter at the end of cigarettes also may make a difference in how much poison a smoker takes in. Some filters are more effective than others, but, again, a smoker will generally alter the way he smokes rendering many of the protective actions of the filters useless. Some cigarettes have holes inserted around the perimeter of the filter permitting more air to be inhaled with the tars and gasses of the cigarette. Theoretically, this lowers the amount of the actual tobacco smoke being inhaled. But, a smoker will normally find these cigarettes difficult to inhale and cannot get the amount of nicotine necessary to satisfy the craving. In response, he may smoke more or may discover an even more innovative way to interfere with the filter's protective action. Many times a smoker will learn how to put the cigarettes a little deeper into his mouth and seal his lips around the ventilation holes, thus decreasing the filter's efficiency. I have even encountered smokers in clinics who put tape around these holes because they found the cigarette easier to inhale and generally tasted better. In the process, they inactivated the semiprotective mechanism of the filter. Their attempts at making their smoking safer were simply an inconvenience and a waste of time. Filters could be developed that would take out all of the nicotine, but, unfortunately, in order to satisfy the addiction, most smokers would give themselves a hernia trying to inhale.

One last method of risk reduction worth mentioning is vitamin supplements. The body's ability to utilize Vitamin C is impaired by smoking. When some smokers learn this, they start taking supplemental Vitamin C. But vitamin C acidifies the urine, resulting in the body accelerating the excretion rate of nicotine. In response, the smoker may smoke extra cigarettes. In the process, he will probably destroy the extra vitamin C and increase his exposure to all of the poisonous chemicals found in tobacco smoke.

Almost every method of making smoking safer is a farce. There is only one way to totally reduce the deadly effects of smoking, and that is, simply, not to smoke. Only then will your chances of diseases such as heart disease, cancer and emphysema be reduced to the level of nonsmokers. And to keep your risk at these low levels, only one method is necessary— NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF!

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:27 PM
Are You Smoking More

and Enjoying it Less?





This creative slogan was once used by a cigarette advertiser trying to entice smokers of other brands to switch to their product. The slogan was a brilliantly conceived advertising tactic. Almost every smoker who had indulged for a significant period of time would instantly recognize him or herself in the slogan. He or she may even have tried smoking the other brand to recapture the pleasure and joy of earlier days of smoking. But to his or her dismay, even this cigarette failed to deliver that special feeling once derived from smoking.

Why do cigarettes seem to lose that special appeal for the veteran smoker? Have cigarettes changed so drastically over the years? No, that is not the problem at all. Cigarettes haven't changed, smokers have. For the longer an individual smokes, the more dependent the smoker becomes on his nicotine fix. In his early days of smoking, the smoker derived much pleasure from the pharmacological action of nicotine. It made him feel alert, energetic, or maybe even had a calming, relaxing effect. It helped in studying and in learning. Sometimes it made him feel more mature, confident, and more social. It pretty much did whatever he wanted it to, depending on the circumstances surrounding him while he smoked it. In these early days, he smoked maybe 5 to 10 per day, usually just when he wanted the desired effect.

But gradually, something happens to the smoker. He becomes more dependent on cigarettes. He no longer smokes to solve a problem, to celebrate, or to feel great. He smokes because he NEEDS a cigarette. In essence he smokes because he is a smoker, or, more accurately, a smoke-a-holic. No longer does he get those special smoker highs--now he smokes because not smoking makes him feel withdrawal. Not smoking means feeling nervous, irritable, depressed, angry, afraid, nauseous, or headachy just to mention a few effects. He grasps for a cigarette to alleviate these symptoms, all the time hoping to get that special warm feeling that cigarettes used to give him. But, to his dismay, all that happens is he feels almost normal after smoking a cigarette. And 20 minutes later the whole process starts up again.

Once he quits smoking, life becomes nice again. No longer does he go into withdrawal 20 to 80 times per day. He can go anywhere any time he wishes and not have to worry about whether he will be able to smoke at his needed intervals. When he gets a headache or feels nauseous, he knows he is coming down with an infection, not feeling the way he does every day as a smoker from too much or too little smoking. In comparison to his life as a smoker, he feels great. But then something insidious starts to occur.

He begins to remember the best cigarette he ever had in his life. It may be one he smoked 10, 20 or maybe even 40 years earlier. He remembers that special warm feeling of that wonderful cigarette. If he thinks about it long enough, he may even try to recapture the moment. Unfortunately, however, the moment will recapture him. Once again he will be in the grip of an addiction which will cause him to be smoking more and enjoying less. This time he may not get off. This wonderful cigarette will cost him his freedom, his health and eventually his life. Don't make this mistake when you quit. Remember how cigarettes were the day you stopped, for that will be what they are like the day you go back, no matter how far apart those two days are. Remember the way they were and - NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF!

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:29 PM
"Quitting Smoking"

A Fate Worse than Death?

People sitting in at smoking clinics are amazed at how resistant smokers are to giving up cigarettes. Even smokers will sit and listen to horror stories of other participants in sheer disbelief. Some smokers have had multiple heart attacks, circulatory conditions resulting in amputations, cancers, emphysema and a host of other disabling and deadly diseases. How in the world could these people have continued smoking after all that? Some of these smokers are fully aware that smoking is crippling and killing them, but continue to smoke anyway. A legitimate question asked by any sane smoker or nonsmoker is, “why?”

The answer to such a complex issue is really quite simple. The smoker often has cigarettes so tied into his lifestyle that he feels when he gives up smoking he will give up all activities associated with cigarettes. Considering these activities include almost everything he does from the time he awakes to the time he goes to sleep, life seems like it will not be worth living as an ex-smoker. The smoker is also afraid he will experience the painful withdrawal symptoms from not smoking as long as he deprives himself of cigarettes. Considering all this, quitting smoking creates a greater fear than dying from smoking.

If the smoker were correct in all his assumptions of what life as an ex-smoker were like, then maybe it would not be worth it to quit. But all these assumptions are wrong. There is life after smoking, and withdrawal does not last forever. Trying to convince the smoker of this, though, is quite an uphill battle. These beliefs are deeply ingrained and are conditioned from the false positive effects experienced from cigarettes.

The smoker often feels that he needs a cigarette in order to get out of bed in the morning. Typically, when he awakes he feels a slight headache, tired, irritable, depressed and disoriented. He is under the belief that all people awake feeling this way. He is fortunate though, because he has a way to stop these horrible feelings. He smokes a cigarette or two. Then he begins waking up and feels human again. Once he is awake, he feels he needs cigarettes to give him energy to make it through the day. When he is under stress and nervous, the cigarettes calm him down. Giving up this wonder drug seems ludicrous to him.

But if he quits smoking he will be pleasantly surprised to find out that he will feel better and be able to cope with life more efficiently than when he was a smoker. When he wakes up in the morning, he will feel tremendously better than when he awoke as a smoker. No longer will he drag out of bed feeling horrible. Now he will wake up feeling well rested and refreshed. In general, he will be calmer than when he smoked. Even when under stress, he normally will not experience the panic reactions he used to feel whenever his nicotine level fell below acceptable levels. The belief that cigarettes were needed for energy is one of the most deceptive of all. Almost any ex-smoker will attest that he has more strength, endurance, and energy than he ever did as a smoker. And the fear of prolonged withdrawal also had no merit, for withdrawal symptoms would peak within three days, and totally subside within two weeks.

If any smoker just gives himself the chance to really feel how nice not smoking is, he will no longer have the irrational fears which keeps him maintaining his deadly addiction. He will find life will become simpler, happier, cleaner, and most importantly healthier, than when he was a smoker. His only fear will now be in relapsing to smoking and all he has to do to prevent this is - NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF!

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:30 PM
Quitting by Gradual Withdrawal







Quitting by the gradual withdrawal method. I discuss this method quite extensively in my seminars. I always tell how if there is anyone attending who knows a smoker who they really despise they should actively encourage them to follow the gradual withdrawal "cut down" approach. They should call them up every day and tell them to just get rid of one cigarette. Meaning, if they usually smoke 40 a day, just smoke 39 on the first day of the attempt to quit. The next day they should be encouraged to smoke only 38 then 37 the next day and so on. Then the seminar participant should call these people every day to congratulate them and encourage them to continue. I must reemphasize, this should only be done to a smoker you really despise.

You see, most smokers will agree to this approach. It sounds so easy to just smoke one less each day. Thirty-nine cigarettes to a two pack a day smoker seems like nothing. The trick is to convince the person that you are only trying to help them. For the first week or two the one downside is you have to pretend to like the person and you have to talk to them every day. They won’t whine too bad either. When they are down to 30 from 40, they may start to complain a little. You really won’t be having fun yet. When the payoff comes is about three weeks into the scam. Now you've got them to less than half their normal amount. They are in moderate withdrawal all the time.

A month into the approach you’ve got them into pretty major withdrawal. But be persistent. Call them and tell them how great they are doing and how proud you are of them. When they are in their 35th to 39th day, you have pulled off a major coup. This poor person is in peak withdrawal, suffering miserably and having absolutely nothing to show for it. They are no closer to ending withdrawal than the day you started the process. They are in chronic withdrawal, not treating him or herself to one or two a day, but actually depriving him or herself of 35 to 40 per day.

If you want to go in for the kill, when you have them down to zero, tell them don’t worry if things get tough, just take a puff every once in a while. If you can get them to fall for this, taking one puff every third day, they will remain in withdrawal forever. Did I mention you really should despise this person to do this to them? It is probably the cruelest practical joke that you could ever pull on anyone. You will undercut their chance to quit, make them suffer immeasurably and likely they will at some point throw in the towel, return to smoking, have such fear of quitting because of what they went through cutting down, that they will continue to smoke until it kills them. Like I said, you better really despise this person.

Hopefully there is no one you despise that much to do this to them. I hope nobody despises themselves enough to do this to themselves. Quitting cold turkey may be hard but quitting by this withdrawal technique is virtually impossible. If you have a choice between hard and impossible, go for hard. You will have something to show at the end of a hard process, but nothing but misery at the end of an impossible approach. Quit cold and in 72 hours it eases up. Cut down and it will basically get progressively worse for weeks, months, or years if you let it.

I should mention, this is not a new technique. It has been around for decades. Talk to every long-term ex-smoker you know. Try to find one person who successfully used the cut down approach, gradually reducing to eventual zero over weeks or months. You will be hard pressed to find even one person who fits this bill. One other perspective that should help you see the flaw in the approach. Look at people here who had once quit for months or years and then relapsed. One day, after such a long time period, they take a drag and are smoking again. If one puff can do this after years or decades, guess what it will do after days or hours of being smoke free. It puts the smoker back to square one. All that any ex-smoker has to do to avoid relapse or chronic withdrawal is to - NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:32 PM
I Can't Quit or I Won't Quit




"I don't want to be called on during this clinic. I am quitting smoking, but I don't want to talk about it. Please don't call on me." This request was made by a lady enrolling in one of my clinics over 20 years ago. I said sure. I won't make you talk, but if you feel you would like to interject at anytime, please don't hesitate to. At that she got mad and said, "Maybe I am not making myself clear-I don't want to talk! If you make me talk I will get up and walk out of this room. If you look at me with an inquisitive look on your face, I am leaving! Am I making myself clear?" I was a little shocked by the strength of her statement but I told her I would honor her request. I hoped that during the program she would change her mind and would share her experiences with the group and me but in all honesty, I wasn't counting on it.

There were about 20 other participants in the program. Overall, it was a good group with the exception of two women who sat in back of the room and gabbed constantly. Other participants would turn around and tell the two to be quiet. They would stop talking for a few seconds and then start right up again with just as much enthusiasm as before. Sometimes, when other people were sharing sad, personal experiences, they would be laughing at some humorous story they had shared with each other, totally ignorant of the surrounding happenings.

On the third day of the clinic, a major breakthrough occurred. The two gossips were partying away as usual. There was one young woman, probably early twenties who asked if she could talk first because she had to leave. The two gossips in back still were not listening and kept up with their private conversation. The young woman who had to leave said, "I can't stay, I had a horrible tragedy in my family today, my brother was killed in an accident." Fighting back emotions she continued. "I wasn't even supposed to come tonight, I am supposed to be helping my family making funeral arrangements. But I knew I had to stop by if I was going to continue to not smoke." She had only been off two days now. But not smoking was important to her.

The group members felt terrible, but were so proud of her, it made what happened in their day seem so trivial. All except the two ladies in the back of the room. They actually heard none of what was happening. When the young woman was telling how close she and her brother were, the two gossips actually broke out laughing. They weren't laughing at the story, they were laughing at something totally different not even aware of what was being discussed in the room. Anyway, the young woman who lost her brother shortly after that excused herself to go back to her family. She said she would keep in touch and thanked the group for all of their support.

A few minutes later I was then relating some story to the group, when all of a sudden the lady who requested anonymity arose and spoke. "Excuse me Joel," she said loudly, interrupting me in the middle of the story. "I wasn't going to say anything this whole program. The first day I told Joel not to call on me. I told him I would walk out if I had to talk. I told him I would leave if he tried to make me talk. I didn't want to burden anyone else with my problems. But today I feel I cannot keep quiet any longer. I must tell my story." The room was quiet.

"I have terminal lung cancer. I am going to die within two months. I am here to quit smoking. I want to make it clear that I am not kidding myself into thinking that if I quit I will save my life. It is too late for me. I am going to die and there is not a damn thing I can do about it. But I am going to quit smoking."

"You may wonder why I am quitting if I am going to die anyway. Well, I have my reasons. When my children were small, they always pestered me about my smoking. I told them over and over to leave me alone, that I wanted to stop but couldn't. I said it so often they stopped begging. But now my children are in their twenties and thirties, and two of them smoke. When I found out about my cancer, I begged them to stop. They replied to me, with pained expressions on their faces, that they want to stop but they can't. I know where they learned that, and I am mad at myself for it. So I am stopping to show them I was wrong. It wasn't that I couldn't stop smoking- it was that I wouldn't! I am off two days now, and I know I will not have another cigarette. I don't know if this will make anybody stop, but I had to prove to my children and to myself that I could quit smoking. And if I could quit, they could quit, anybody could quit."

"I enrolled in the clinic to pick up any tips that would make quitting a little easier and because I was real curious about how people who really were taught the dangers of smoking would react. If I knew then what I know now- well, anyway, I have sat and listened to all of you closely. I feel for each and every one of you and I pray you all make it." Even though I haven't said a word to anyone, I feel close to all of you. Your sharing has helped me. As I said, I wasn't going to talk. But today I have to. Let me tell you why."

Then she turned to the two ladies in the back of the room, who actually had stayed quiet during this interlude. Suddenly she flared up, "The only reason I am speaking up now is because you two BITCHES are driving me crazy. You are partying in the back while everyone else is sharing with each other, trying to help save each other's lives. She then related what the young woman had said about her brother's death and how they were laughing at the time, totally unaware of the story. "Will you both do me a favor, just get the hell out of here! Go out and smoke, drop dead for all we care, you are learning and contributing nothing here." They sat there stunned. I had to calm the group down a little, actually quite bit, the atmosphere was quite charged with all that had happened. I kept the two ladies there, and needless to say, that was the last of the gabbing from the back of the room for the entire two-week clinic.

All the people who were there that night were successful at the end of the program. At graduation, the two ladies who had earlier talked only to each other were applauded by all, even the lady with lung cancer. All was forgiven. The girl who lost her brother also came for the graduation, also smoke free and proud. And the lady with lung cancer proudly accepted her diploma and introduced one of her children. He had stopped smoking for over a week at that time. Actually, when the lady with cancer was sharing her story with us, she had not told her family yet that she had even quit smoking.

It was a few days later, when she was off a week that she told her son. He, totally amazed said to her that if she could quit smoking, he knew he could and stopped at that moment. She beamed with joy. Six weeks later she succumbed to the cancer. I found out when I called her home just to see how she was doing and got her son on the line. He thanked me for helping her quit at the end. He told me how proud she was that she had quit and how proud he was of her, and how happy she was that he had quit also. He said, "She never went back to smoking, and I will not either." In the end, they had both given each other a wonderful gift. He was proud her last breath was smoke free- she NEVER TOOK ANOTHER PUFF!

Epilog: I normally say you can't quit for someone else, it has to be for yourself. This incident flies in the face of this comment to some degree. The lady with lung cancer was quitting smoking to save her children from her fate, to some degree undo the lesson that she had taught years earlier. The lesson that she "could not stop." It was that at the time she "would not stop." There is a big difference between these two statements. It holds true for all smokers. The lady in this story proved years later she could quit too late to save her life, but not too late to save her sons. Next time you hear yourself or someone else say, I cannot stop, understand it is not true. You can quit. Anyone can quit. The trick is not waiting until it is too late

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:34 PM
"Why Did I Start Smoking?
Why Did I Quit?"
It is pretty funny. People often try to reflect on when and why they started smoking as if thinking that it would answer the daunting question of why they continue to smoke. In reality, the reason you start and the reasons you continue are not the same.

Some people start because of peer pressure. But in society today, if peer pressure were going to be the influencing factor, it would be making people quit smoking , not continue to smoke.

Some people took up smoking to look older and more mature. How many people in their 30's, 40's, 50's or 60's or beyond want to do everything in their power to look older than they already do?

Others take up smoking out of a sense of rebellion. Their parents, teachers, doctors and other adults told them they couldn't smoke. So to show them who was in control, they smoked anyway. Well, how many 60-year-old smokers are there who are smoking today so that they can snub their nose at their 80 to 90 year old parents saying, "you see, you still can't tell me not to smoke."

People start for a variety of reasons, but they continue for just one – they became drug addicts, the drug--nicotine. It is interesting though because the same thing happens when the smoker quits. The initial reason that people quit smoking often become secondary in importance to reasons they eventually stay off.

Some people quit to make others happy, or because of non-smoking policies issued at a place of employment. But after quitting, they find they feel better than ever, are calmer, have more energy, have more money, overall are happier and in more control of their own life. Their new reasons may have little bearing to their initial quit reason. In many ways they are better reasons and more lasting. Or, some people who quit for medical risks alone start to realize that not smoking is just a nicer way of life. Sometimes the quality of life becomes more important to them than the concept of length of life.

Whatever your initial reason for quitting was, it is still valid. On top of that there are numerous benefits you may have noticed and some you haven't even thought of yet which are still to be noticed. Some you will never think of but are real anyway. Keep focused on every good reason not to smoke. This becomes your ammunition to stay the course, and to ride out those annoying craves or thoughts that can pop out of nowhere.

Whether or not you ever accurately remember why you started to smoke, as long as you remember why you quit and why you desire to stay free, you will keep your resolve strong enough to NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF!

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:49 PM
http://img402.imageshack.us/img402/8060/ntpgreyai3.gif

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:51 PM
The Law of Addiction -


The law of addiction states, "administration of a drug to an addict will cause re-establishment of chemical dependence upon the addictive substance." Yes, just one powerful puff, dip or chew and you'll be faced with again enduring up to 72 hours of nicotine detox, by far the most challenging period of recovery. We’re simply not that strong. Adherence to a simple restatement of the law of addiction guarantees success to all. No nicotine just one day at a time ... "Never Take Another Puff, Dip or Chew."

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:53 PM
Be Honest With You -

Nicotine dependency is every bit as real and permanent as alcoholism. An external chemical has caused your brain reward pathways to teach your deep inner mind that regular nicotine feedings are your #1 priority in life, more important than family, friends, eating, hostile weather, your health or your life. Your brain has grown millions of extra nicotinic receptors in at least eleven different regions. It is wired to function on your current level of daily nicotine intake (tolerance). Why play games? Treating a true addiction as though it were some "nasty little habit" capable of manipulation, change or control is a recipe for relapse. There is no such thing as "just one." Recovery truly is an all or nothing proposition.

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:56 PM
http://www.tobaccofreedom.org/issues/documents/cancer/cancer_images/bender.jpeg

THROAT CANCER.........

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:58 PM
Calm Your Deep Inner Mind - The primitive subconscious mind (the lizard brain) falsely sees ending all nicotine use as though committing suicide or starving ourselves to death. It does not think, plan or plot against us but simply reacts to the years of input it has received from the mind’s priorities teacher, the brain's dopamine reward pathways, pathways long ago taken hostage by nicotine. Use your conscious thinking mind to calm and reassure the lizard brain, especially in the fleeting seconds before dosing off into sleep. They are precious communication moments where the two draw near.

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 05:58 PM
Measuring Victory -

Forget about quitting "forever." Like attempting the seemingly impossible task of eating an entire cow or steer, it's the biggest psychological bite imaginable. Instead, work hard at adopting a more manageable "one steak at a time," or better yet "one day at a time," recovery philosophy for measuring victory. If you insist on seeing success only in terms of quitting forever then on which day will you celebrate? Who is coming to that party? Why not celebrate every day of healing and freedom.

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 06:00 PM
Recovery Phases –

(1) Physical nicotine withdrawal peaks by day three and is substantially complete within 10 days to two weeks. Once you stop using all nicotine, the amount remaining in your bloodstream will be cut by half every two hours. Within 72 hours, 100% of nicotine and 90% of the chemicals nicotine breaks down into will have passed from your body. During this period it is normal to feel de-sensitized. But your brain is working hard to restore natural neuro-chemical sensitivities. Be patient.


(2) Subconscious smoking trigger/cue reconditioning normally peaks during the first week, also about day 3. All but remote, infrequent, holiday or seasonal triggers are extinguished within a month.

(3) The final phase of recovery, conscious thought fixation, is the least intense yet longest. Although at times nearly impossible to see and appreciate, with each passing day thoughts of wanting to use nicotine will gradually grow fewer, shorter in duration and generally less intense. Within a few months they will become the exception not the rule, as you’ll gradually start to develop an expectation of going entire days without once "thinking" about wanting to use nicotine

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 06:07 PM
http://www.youcanquit.co.uk/Images/Cancer/throat_cancer_Large.jpg

THROAT CANCER FROM SMOKING

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 06:08 PM
Withdrawal Symptoms -


As strange as it sounds, withdrawal symptoms are good not bad, for they are true signs of healing. Within reason it is fairly safe to blame most of what you will feel during the first three days on quitting. But after that you need to listen closely to your body and if concerned get seen and evaluated. If you must, blame them on where you have been, not where you are going.

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 06:12 PM
Possible Hidden Conditions

- Each puff of smoke contained more than 500 different gases and 3,500 different particles. One or more of these 4,000 chemicals may have been masking an underlying hidden health problem such as a thyroid condition (iodine) or breathing problems including asthma (bronchiodialiators). Cigarette chemicals may also have been interacting with medications you were taking and an adjustment may be necessary. Stay alert and get seen if at all concerned.

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 06:14 PM
Emotional Phases –

Chemical dependency upon nicotine was likely the most intense, repetitive, dependable, and destructive relationship you have ever known. It infects every aspect of life. Be prepared to experience a normal sense of emotional loss. Expect to travel through and experience six different emotional phases:
(1) denial,
(2) anger,
(3) bargaining,
(4) depression,
(5) acceptance, and
(6) complacency.

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 06:17 PM
Quitting Methods –


Those standing to profit by selling quitting products paint cold turkey quitting as almost impossible with few succeeding. Take your own poll. What you will discover is that nearly 90% of all long-term ex-smokers quit smoking cold turkey. Not only is it our most productive quitting method, it is fast and free. But quitting cold -- in ignorance and darkness -- can be frightening. When combined with education, skills development and ongoing support, no quitting product comes close. Not only do cold turkey quitters avoid potential medication side effects, they do not get hooked on the cure (nearly 40% of all nicotine gum users are chronic long-term users of at least 6 months). All pharmacology products share a common feature. They delay brain neuronal re-sensitization to varying degrees. What it means is that there is almost always some level of back-end re-adjustment, once they stop using the product, where they are left feeling temporarily de-sensitized.

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 06:19 PM
Record Your Motivations -

Once in the heat of battle, it is normal for the mind to quickly forget many of the reasons that motivated us to commence recovery. Write yourself a loving reminder letter, carry it with you, and make it your first line of defense - a motivational tool that you can pull out during moments of challenge. As with achievement in almost all human endeavors, the wind beneath your recovery wings will not be strength or willpower but robust dreams and desires. Keep those dreams vibrant, on center-stage and calming the impulsive lizard brain and no circumstance will deprive you of glory.

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 06:23 PM
http://www.quit4good.com/cancer.jpg

EFFECT OF SMOKING ON TOnGue

bonddonraj
July 15th, 2007, 06:26 PM
http://www.nacada.go.ke/data/smokersbody.gif

SMOKER`S BOdy

horry
July 18th, 2007, 05:07 PM
scary. will not be able to puff now

bonddonraj
July 18th, 2007, 08:58 PM
धूम्रपान एक कार्य महान

सिगरेट है संजीवनी
पीकर स्वास्थ्य बनाओ
समय से पहले बूढ़े होकर
रियायतों का लाभ उठाओ

सिगरेट पीकर ही
हैरी और माइकल निकलते हैं
दूध और फल खाकर तो
हरगोपाल बनते हैं
जो नहीं पीते उन्हें
इस सुख से अवगत कराओ
बस में रेल में घर में जेल में
सिगरेट सुलगाओ

अगर पैसे कम हैं
फिर भी काम चला लो
जरूरी नहीं है सिगरेट
कभी कभी बीड़ी सुलगा लो
बीड़ी सफलता की सीढ़ी
इस पर चढ़ते चले जाओ
मेहनत की कमाई
सही काम में लगाओ

जो हड्डियां गलाते हैं
वो तपस्वी कहलाते हैं
ऐ कलयुग के दधीचि
हड्डियों के साथ करो
फेफड़े और गुर्दे भी कुर्बान
क्योंकि…
धूम्रपान एक कार्य महान

cool_123
July 18th, 2007, 08:58 PM
people are blowing their life in smoke it is not at all cool nowadays.

cool_123
July 18th, 2007, 09:00 PM
pictures above shld be an eye opener 4every1

hit2003200307
July 18th, 2007, 10:45 PM
it's injurious to health, why to waist ur precious life..................use ur life in constructive purpose and not in destructive purpose.......... it's small piece of advice pls "QUIT SMOKING"

dennis123
July 20th, 2007, 11:43 PM
YOUR FROM WHICH STREAM

divaker.j
July 22nd, 2007, 02:10 PM
ThanQ buddy!!!!

yeahh
everybody knows smooking is a bad habbit. But a lot of ppl smoke. As 4 me, I smoke. But I also take care about myself- i sing 4 my voise and lungs. I do some activities like shaping. I use some health creams and masks 4 my skin. And a lot of others.

Gr8 work!!

Thankss!!

as 4 me I like hookah. And I smoke it very often. Twice a week or like that///

I`ve read hookah is usefull even ... Not bad 4 our health.

sahil.s
July 22nd, 2007, 06:27 PM
hey.....gud move by u...

sahil.s
July 22nd, 2007, 06:29 PM
hey...u know Chandigarh has become d 1st city in india where smoking is totally banned...

GuruRJ
July 23rd, 2007, 12:19 PM
quit yaar not for self but for others.........

khaiser
July 27th, 2007, 04:13 PM
You are absolutely right. Since I am sufferubg with Chronic Bronchitis due to excess smoking, I definitely use these techniques to quit smoking. Thank you very much for your advise.

meghu_kulkarni
July 29th, 2007, 11:07 AM
hi everyone
A few things i would like to add to this
i think we should first seek for the reason behind why people smoke ?
may a times i found that people who are under frustration opt smoking to forget their tensions/worries.
but we must explain them that smoking will not help them to solve their existing problems but will definately make their problems more complicated
if one has to reduce his frustration then there are so many better solutions available like - to take help of psychiatrist , to undergo meditataion etc
one must understand that no one gets 100% of that what he expects from his life so frustration is a part of life
and we must take it bravely

shrikhire
July 29th, 2007, 09:19 PM
no ididnt smoke

prachee
July 30th, 2007, 09:30 AM
i hope many ppl willl quit smoking after reading and seeing

sonam berde
August 1st, 2007, 08:20 PM
its not difficult if tried

Harryman
August 6th, 2007, 08:24 PM
i have never smoked and will never will . There are no benefits coming from it so why do it ,like in the short run you run out of cash which definitely could have been used for some other useful and meaningful purpose that makes a difference to your life and ofcourse in the long run your health gets ruined and you get a faster and a more painful death !!

just ask yourself this simple question ,in what way does this benefit you in and if you think it is beneficial then dont stop but if you know what are the consequences and can realize that your precious life is being affected by it ,then please quit it at once !!

Harryman
August 6th, 2007, 08:24 PM
i have never smoked and will never will . There are no benefits coming from it so why do it ,like in the short run you run out of cash which definitely could have been used for some other useful and meaningful purpose that makes a difference to your life and ofcourse in the long run your health gets ruined and you get a faster and a more painful death !!

just ask yourself this simple question ,in what way does this benefit you in and if you think it is beneficial then dont stop but if you know what are the consequences and can realize that your precious life is being affected by it ,then please quit it at once !!

pratikbharti
August 8th, 2007, 12:04 PM
i m sure many ppl will quite smoking when they see such pics n article.......
bt the truth is hardly any smoker cares to go through this...........

Archie
August 17th, 2007, 02:19 PM
:frusty: :mmph: :( no one listened to me evn after i showed dem dis thread!!!!

bonddonraj
September 4th, 2007, 08:46 PM
The Smoker’s Vow

With this puff I enslave myself
to a lifetime of addiction.
While I can’t promise to always love you,
I do promise to obey every craving and
support my addiction to you
no matter how expensive you become.

I will let no husband or wife,
no family member or friend,
no doctor or any other health professional,
no employer or government policy,
no burns or no stench,
no cough or raspy voice,
no cancer or emphysema,
no heart attack or stroke,
no threat of loss of life or limbs,
come between us.

I will smoke you forever
from this day forth,
for better or worse,
whether richer or poorer,
in sickness and in health,
till death do us part!

“You may now light the cigarette.”

“I now pronounce you a full-fledged smoker.”

yourspooji
October 4th, 2007, 06:39 PM
damn consequences of smoking are so bad.................thn too ppl r still smoking .......i guess now a days they r nt worried abt their own lives.........
good job............
atleast sm ppl are made aware abt cancer n all n might use their brains n stop it ...........

Wizard
October 6th, 2007, 12:38 PM
DO NOT SMOKE IF YOU SMOKE THAN YOUR LIFE WILL BE IN FLAMES THUS REMEMBER DON`T FLRIT WITH DANGER

satishkikani
October 9th, 2007, 08:13 PM
..................................

Wizard
October 15th, 2007, 08:25 PM
DON`T SMOKE AS IT MOVE US TOWARDS THE END SO STOP DOING IT

Wizard
October 15th, 2007, 08:27 PM
IT DOES NOT HELP IN ANY WAY BUT ONLY HELPS US TO COMMIT SUICIDE SO ACT REACT AND DO THE NEED FUL

vinodhthiruvenkatam
October 27th, 2007, 11:08 PM
Hi...the information s really useful.. i will advise my friends to quit smoking..

born2rule
November 14th, 2007, 12:40 AM
India takes effective steps to curb smoking


Johannesburg: Anti-smoking measures in China, India, Mexico and Bangladesh have won accolades at an international conference on lung health in Cape Town which was told that global tobacco-related deaths are set to almost double by 2030.


Some 1.3 billion out of the world's 6.6 billion people are smokers and 5 million people die each year from tobacco use, the International Union against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (The Union) and the World Lung Foundation (WLF) told the 38th Union World Conference on Lung Health.


While saluting anti-smoking efforts in developing economies such as China, Bangladesh, Mexico and India, The Union and the WLF warned that tobacco-related deaths were set to double by 2030 as tobacco use shifted from rich to poor countries.


The World Health Organization (WHO) in July predicted tobacco-related deaths would shoot up to 8.3 million annually by 2030.


The WLF and The Union estimated the figure at closer to 10 million, of which 70 percent would be in low and middle-income countries.


"The whole epidemic has shifted from rich to poor countries," Dr Judith Mackay, coordinator of Global Tobacco Control Programmes at the WLF told the news agency DPA.


"Reducing tobacco use must inevitably be a central strategy in the fight against lung disease for many years to come," she said.


Reducing exposure to smoking and second-hand smoke could also help bring down tuberculosis rates, Dr Karen Slama of The Union told the conference. Around 1.6 million people died of TB in 2005, according to the WHO.


Two thirds of the world's smokers live in just 15 countries, several of which are major tobacco producers and have scant, if any anti-smoking programmes, according to The Union and the WLF.


China received praise for creating smoke-free public places for the 2008 Olympic Games, Mexico for implementing comprehensive tobacco control laws, Bangladesh for a tobacco advertising ban and India for its plans to make Delhi a smoke-free city by 2009.

varunkohli.jim
November 14th, 2007, 03:08 AM
gr8 work dear......... and yaa thanx dear 4 such a useful information....... thanx

achilleess
November 14th, 2007, 06:09 PM
I used to be a heavy smoker.
And then I discovered yoga.
It had such an effect on me that I completely gave up smoking.
If anybody is serious in giving up smoking then they should seriously consider yoga
:SugarwareZ-166:

maverick.sidd
November 15th, 2007, 11:32 AM
quittin smoking is the right thing to do !!

esha27
November 15th, 2007, 12:22 PM
most definitely

kunalnayyar
November 15th, 2007, 08:49 PM
yes guysss ur rgt

shrishi
November 19th, 2007, 01:00 AM
one way to quit smoking...watch NO SMOKING.....
tht movie is so frustating ..u'll automatically quit it :P

purple.stains
November 29th, 2007, 03:37 PM
gud job!!!...quite informative

Maria
December 1st, 2007, 02:45 PM
Ive been smoking for three years now...i tried to stop...it can be done, however.......WILL POWER is key....you dont need those gums and patches just so that you can break away from it....all you need is have the mindset to really really throw those packs away...Goodluck! YOU CAN DO IT! I DID...;-)

bonddonraj
December 2nd, 2007, 06:25 PM
Ive been smoking for three years now...i tried to stop...it can be done, however.......WILL POWER is key....you dont need those gums and patches just so that you can break away from it....all you need is have the mindset to really really throw those packs away...Goodluck! YOU CAN DO IT! I DID...;-)

Great Maria keep it up:tea:

Sudhanshu.imt
December 2nd, 2007, 07:56 PM
agreed.. a slow killer...

rajyahoo
December 3rd, 2007, 12:11 AM
agree dddddddddd

kash_pvr
December 5th, 2007, 07:03 PM
well if i can do it, anyone can do it :D ... so c'mon guys give it a try... always remember...u can quit only if u really want to

Abby
December 6th, 2007, 05:14 PM
it depends on one's will ..
if he wants to smoke he will smoke come wt may...and wil curse d situation fr smoki
if he wants to quit he wil at any cost

atishayster
December 10th, 2007, 10:14 PM
i appriciate ur thread... :)

ritesharora
December 11th, 2007, 03:14 PM
i also appreciate............

reminicism
January 15th, 2008, 01:07 PM
wel i agree that it kills slowly but its hard to resist at the same time..
i do quit many times when it begins to give problems like short breadth...
stop for few weeks and then start again when i feel good,,,
thats the best way to keep a chek ur health and at the same time be in touch if you cant quit.... but it also depends on your will power,

mohsin146
February 16th, 2008, 12:57 PM
Nice dude that u quit smoking it was a brave thing u have did...
Keep It up.

ocean_global
February 17th, 2008, 07:54 AM
Hi, I'm a new member here, I want to share my experience about smoking, Yes it's true that quit smoking is really hard to do but If there is a will there is a way, but finally I can do it, It's been 5 months since I decided to quit smoking and I feel a lot better now especially when I wake up from night sleep.The most important thing if you want to quit smoking is you must never think about cigarretes' taste after you quit smoking.

bharath2k6
March 15th, 2008, 04:23 AM
it is easy to quit smoking, provided u have the will power. determination is the key to success.

sorrow
March 16th, 2008, 02:59 AM
hmm...this is some serious issue......well i agree that will power is the key factor....so its just inside you.....

spidyrulz
March 27th, 2008, 12:27 AM
I think smokin is d only habit which people can leave many times:SugarwareZ-191:

princess2008
March 29th, 2008, 12:59 PM
Everyone must quit smoking! It is not only self destructive but also harms people around who have done no harm. Atleast in a bid to not harm anyone else because of their actions everyone must quit smoking!

zaidi
March 29th, 2008, 05:51 PM
nice post dude.................liked it very much

onlyorkut
March 30th, 2008, 02:12 PM
i stand with you ................................

satishyard
March 30th, 2008, 02:23 PM
c this comparison!!

http://tbn0.google.com/images?q=tbn:sWtUIxH3wJY1KM:http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/pubaf/pr/photos/2003/kirschner-image1-100dpi.jpg



Whole body PET scans showing the distribution of radiolabeled monamine oxidase in one of the nonsmokers and one of the smokers. Red is the highest radiotracer concentration; purple is the lowest.

manik.saluja
March 30th, 2008, 03:12 PM
cool man the comparison is really great, i guess, even i need to think over the same and try to quit

darelina
March 30th, 2008, 04:03 PM
In simple words smoking causes lung cancer which can lead to death.So if anybody wants to go to heaven or hell u can continue smoking....i m sure the govt must be earnin loadzz from the dozens of cigarette packets u buy evryday!!!!

vikram7879
March 30th, 2008, 09:12 PM
i have too quited smoking. I think smoking not only effects you but also effects your surrounding people badly.

deepak.gvpit
April 3rd, 2008, 04:14 PM
smoking need to be quited as its dangerous to our health

Sonal Dubey
April 3rd, 2008, 07:43 PM
Congrats to all those who had the courage to quit smoking..........1 advise for all 'NEVER LET ANYTHING DOMINATE YOU'........esp true for bad habits......

jsandesh
April 3rd, 2008, 08:20 PM
Good Idea,
Everybody shows courage to quit the smoking.

sharewithkinjal
April 4th, 2008, 02:31 PM
I Agree, quitting smoking requires lots of courage and determination. I know couple of friends of mine who are not able to quit smoking.

They stop smoking for sometime and then it starts again.

Smoking is really bad for health

sagar s
April 4th, 2008, 03:58 PM
:SugarwareZ-064: nice
.thankz this could help me n my frnds

neha_15in
April 4th, 2008, 04:35 PM
thnx man......it ws real nice effort 4m ya side...i made all ma near n dear 1's read it...

abhibhai
April 5th, 2008, 03:09 AM
Kudos Good one !!!!! ...but there is always an easier way for each thing and to quit smoking ..there is a much simpler way ..you only have to keep yur finger opened while smoking !!!!!

devilhorns
April 7th, 2008, 08:58 PM
There is nothing good or bad about smokin ...

its just that ...
1. It is terribly unhealthy
2. It is an artificial way of getting high ...

ceegee
April 8th, 2008, 11:09 AM
hey man.....

guys who smokes,even I,know the outcome of this things but its very hard to quit these types of habit when u are in these types of habit for last 6 to 7 years........but anyways its good those who can quit this.....even me trying to quit...

mtmk
April 10th, 2008, 06:55 PM
thnx a lot for the post really good stuff man .thanx

sachinkothari00707
April 20th, 2008, 10:38 AM
ya i am with you for the noble act of quit smoking , It is dangerous to society

kap_bang
May 2nd, 2008, 04:53 PM
good post man... keep it up

quitting is not as hard as one might assume it to be. first of all, cigaretts are a psychological addiction rather than phisiological, unless u've been smoking for ages now or if u r a chain smoker.

for ppl who have been doing it in the last 1-2 years, its more a psychological addiction, which they are unable to withdraw from due to lack of forces, inhibiting factors.
to strengthen this point, let me sight examples of ppl who live in hostels away from home and take up smoking.... when they visit home they do not smoke... be it for a week or for a month...nicotine traces vanish from the blood stream after 48 hours. so technically if it is nicotine urge, one can't quit for that long either. so make up ur mind, look for things that matter to u more than cigarettes, and make the obvious choice. its easy to quit that way.

for ppl who are addicted because of long term issues, well i think u'd read up articles for that.

ashpt33
May 2nd, 2008, 10:03 PM
gud informative post man.....congratss...

tryman
May 5th, 2008, 06:09 PM
Quittig smoking is like a life born new......!!

ppdude
May 8th, 2008, 05:47 PM
ya i m trying to qiut smoking..but its very difficult.........to qiut

RC1327
June 6th, 2008, 12:23 AM
WELL I SMOKED ON THREE DIFFERENT DAYS COZ I WANTED TO GIVE IT A TRY.I HAVE BEEN LIKE THIS ONLY I GIVE TRY TO EVERYTHINGSO THAT I LATER DO NOT REGRET WHEN I DID SMOKE I DIDNT FEEL A BIT BETTER .ITS JUS WASTAGE OF HEALTH AND SMOKING SHOULD BE STRICTLY BANNED

James21
June 9th, 2008, 12:23 PM
Quitting smoking is not easy, but it can be done. To have the best chance of quitting successfully, you need to know what you’re up against, what your options are, and where to go for help. This document will provide you with this information.

Why Is It So Hard to Quit Smoking?

Mark Twain said, "Quitting smoking is easy. I've done it a thousand times." Maybe you've tried to quit too. Why is quitting and staying quit hard for so many people? The answer is nicotine.

so nice.... & gud ... :thumb:

dony.geetu
June 11th, 2008, 01:23 PM
Informative Article..........Sad part is very few people take it seriously.

soapy
June 12th, 2008, 09:53 AM
thnx a lot for such a useful post. ill try my best to quit smoking...

mayank_parmar
June 13th, 2008, 04:32 PM
:SugarwareZ-158:never quit smoking cz no one dies of smoking...its jus a human psychology......if so ws d case thn d govt wud hav banned smoking....:SugarwareZ-191:

kukrejanilesh
June 14th, 2008, 12:50 AM
its better than than reading a book or a seminar

ankitgokani
June 16th, 2008, 04:18 PM
I lie in here, beside the whitewashed wall,
My hair is gone, my head is bald,
The room is sterile and it's very cold,
Wish you were here, Dad, I need someone to hold.


I can't breathe, I'm on a machine,
It goes whirr and click, it's such a din,
I've got lung cancer, it's all black inside,
When Mom says smoking causes cancer, Dad, I think she lied.


I never lit up, even when you did,
I just sat next to you, a small little kid,
You huffed and puffed through your life, Dad,
And Mom always looked so very sad.


My friends asked me to smoke, but I never did,
Because Mom told me from young: smoking is stupid,
It soots up your lungs and blackens your teeth,
So when I see a smoker, Dad, I anger and seethe.


You smoked two packs a day but you're still healthy and strong,
I hate smokers, Dad, but I never thought you wrong,
I love you, Dad, I always sat next to you,
And I know that you always loved me too.


The room here is cold, I see you through the glass,
And I think back to long ago, Dad, of times past,
Of the memories, I recall as much as I can,
There's always been a cigarette, Dad, stuck inside your hand.


I remember the fun things, Dad, all the times we had,
But as I look at you from here, you look so very sad,
You're not smoking, Dad, no cigarette I can see on you,
Maybe it's just the hospital, and this is the ICU.


My breathing becomes labored, I don't think I'll live,
Well, I tried my best, I gave all I had to give,
But one thing, Dad, I cannot comprehend,
I'm not a smoker, so why is my life about to end?

THIS POEM SHOWS THT THER IS MUCH DANGER TO D PERSON SITTING NXT TO A SMOKER N INHALING THT SMOKE INDIERCTLY THAN D SMOKER HIMSELF........ITS TRUE.......

kash_pvr
June 23rd, 2008, 04:23 PM
I lie in here, beside the whitewashed wall,
My hair is gone, my head is bald,
The room is sterile and it's very cold,
Wish you were here, Dad, I need someone to hold.


I can't breathe, I'm on a machine,
It goes whirr and click, it's such a din,
I've got lung cancer, it's all black inside,
When Mom says smoking causes cancer, Dad, I think she lied.


I never lit up, even when you did,
I just sat next to you, a small little kid,
You huffed and puffed through your life, Dad,
And Mom always looked so very sad.


My friends asked me to smoke, but I never did,
Because Mom told me from young: smoking is stupid,
It soots up your lungs and blackens your teeth,
So when I see a smoker, Dad, I anger and seethe.


You smoked two packs a day but you're still healthy and strong,
I hate smokers, Dad, but I never thought you wrong,
I love you, Dad, I always sat next to you,
And I know that you always loved me too.


The room here is cold, I see you through the glass,
And I think back to long ago, Dad, of times past,
Of the memories, I recall as much as I can,
There's always been a cigarette, Dad, stuck inside your hand.


I remember the fun things, Dad, all the times we had,
But as I look at you from here, you look so very sad,
You're not smoking, Dad, no cigarette I can see on you,
Maybe it's just the hospital, and this is the ICU.


My breathing becomes labored, I don't think I'll live,
Well, I tried my best, I gave all I had to give,
But one thing, Dad, I cannot comprehend,
I'm not a smoker, so why is my life about to end?

THIS POEM SHOWS THT THER IS MUCH DANGER TO D PERSON SITTING NXT TO A SMOKER N INHALING THT SMOKE INDIERCTLY THAN D SMOKER HIMSELF........ITS TRUE.......




i might sound arrogant...but wats the other person (the one sitting next to the smoker) doing next to him?? he has two options...make him stop or go away... :) .. no one asked him to inhale it and then complain!! ... just a thought :D

Samy_1987
June 30th, 2008, 04:39 PM
Hey dats a gr8 message ....thank u....its worth a billon ..........cheers

manthan_479
June 30th, 2008, 11:28 PM
well al i knw abt smoking is evrytime u smoke a cig, its lessen ur 7 mins.

sunny9830561380
July 5th, 2008, 11:01 AM
itz give sus immence plzr..so cont..:SugarwareZ-191:

Sunhirise
July 13th, 2008, 05:08 PM
i smoke but i try my best not to encourage ppl to smoke

marketingmaniac
July 13th, 2008, 09:54 PM
Smoking should be banned... I agree with you.

rockeerocks
July 17th, 2008, 06:56 PM
It is not at all difficult to Quit Smoking !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Just come out of feeling tht smoking makes us great and non smokers are all bachassss.......when u get ride of this feeling it is very easy to give away smoking if u know its harms(of course every one knows tht)

melroy88
July 17th, 2008, 07:40 PM
It is not at all difficult to Quit Smoking !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Just come out of feeling tht smoking makes us great and non smokers are all bachassss.......when u get ride of this feeling it is very easy to give away smoking if u know its harms(of course every one knows tht)

Kudos to ya :tea:............................................

ronnierules
July 21st, 2008, 09:41 PM
good efforts from evryrone who contributed in this topic to sread this awareness...plz quit smoking guyz...

mayanksingh123
July 22nd, 2008, 11:45 PM
smoking should be banned...:SugarwareZ-064:

cinarksk
July 23rd, 2008, 10:06 AM
it costs a lot around ıin here in canada lots of taxes:) quit immeadietly....

aankur_kasliwal
July 23rd, 2008, 01:33 PM
the pics were just horrifying man.


Cool Move.

aankur_kasliwal
July 23rd, 2008, 01:37 PM
:SugarwareZ-254:


Smokin really kills man















Seriously.





One sholud stop smokin

dibyojyoti
July 27th, 2008, 08:43 PM
smoking kills!! quit smoking...atleast start tryin

aurus_coool
July 29th, 2008, 12:14 PM
to quit is not easy smoking is bad i would nt advertise smoking but
trying to quit smoking is difficult

somwal
July 29th, 2008, 11:53 PM
smoking may cause serious health problems lyk mouth cancer

somwal
July 29th, 2008, 11:55 PM
smoking causes lung cancer n even mouth cancer. it causes serious breating problems as well..its a silent killer..
one day u'lb vanishedlykdsmoke...so stop now.

prateek_negi2003
July 30th, 2008, 07:56 PM
hi nice 1 dude
kuddos rahul as a doctor i never thought to start such thread here , you dong real nice job , kindly keep posting such photos they are hard truths , we face it every day. i never understoo why people want such brutel death. quit smoking it does no good to any , and ya if you need any counceling in this regard do post here in this thread.

dalviahmed11
July 31st, 2008, 05:54 PM
Please stop smoking...It's a waste of money...give it to some needy

patelhiteshk
August 3rd, 2008, 02:18 PM
hi great job and a great initiative ,, hatsoff

waseem46
August 7th, 2008, 09:28 PM
damn,,,, nice writup dude...very good.... QUIT SMOKING..................

hahaha
August 7th, 2008, 10:53 PM
..every..body....should...quit...smokin'...brave...decision...keep...it..up

abhimanjrekar
August 8th, 2008, 09:45 AM
yep;;;;smoke killss....u as well as others !!

vaibhav2121
August 14th, 2008, 12:52 PM
hey guys its true pls try nd quit smoking:SugarwareZ-123:

velvetgifts
August 15th, 2008, 09:57 PM
The hazards of smoking are real – they are not fabricated statements that are calculated to scare the holy terror out of smokers, though the reality is that it should. In fact, if you value your life so much, you would steer clear of smoking or even steer clear of the smokers themselves – the hazards of smoking do not just affect the smokers themselves, but also the people in their immediate vicinity.

Smoking is the one of the, if not the, major cause of preventable deaths around the world. On average, smokers die 5 to 8 years earlier than non-smokers. Cigarette smoke has more than 4,000 carcinogenic – cancer-causing – compounds, plus 400 other toxins. Some of these hazards are typical ingredients you will find in known poisonous substances like arsenic, DDT, insect poison, and rat poison, and some can also be found in nail polish removers and wood varnish. These substances causes the risks of developing certain diseases and illnesses - like cancers of the bladder, cervix, esophagus, kidney, mouth, pancreas, and throat – to be more than the average of non-smokers who are not exposed to any traces of cigarette or tobacco smoke. Smoking is also the primary cause of emphysema – a devastating lung disease that slowly destroys one’s ability of breathing

The hazards of smoking are especially multiplied for those who have:

Blood vessel disease

Diabetes

Heart disease

High blood pressure

High cholesterol

Family history of such diseases

Risks of fatal heart diseases are twice greater for smokers and those who live with smokers. Another hazard of smoking is the increase of the likelihood of suffering a stroke. Women who take birth control pills and smoke, especially those over 35 years old, have increased risk of heart attack or stroke – not to mention that smoking increases the risk of miscarriage and stillbirth. Children born to smoking mothers have lower birth weights than the average, and they suffer a higher risk of asthma and chronic ear infections, less efficient lung function, and more frequent respiratory functions. Still another is increased blood pressure – smoking decreases the HDL – the “good cholesterol” – level of the blood.

Smokers and those around smokers have twice or thrice greater chance of suffering peptic ulcers. They also have more risk of hip, vertebral, and wrist fractures, as the nicotine of cigarettes causes the bones of the body to brittle. Smoking complicates sleep disorders – and probably one of the greatest hazards of smoking is that it decreases the body’s immunity; hence, smokers and those around them tend to get colds, respiratory tract infections, and other diseases much more quickly.

Other hazards of smoking:

Smoking is the leading cause of chronic lung diseases, and has been linked to 90% of all lung cancer cases.

Smoking is responsible for 25% of heart attack deaths.
Smoking is the attributed cause of 75% of deaths from chronic bronchitis and emphysema.
Environmental tobacco smoke is classified as class A (known human) carcinogen along with arsenic, asbestos, benzene, and radon gas.

username123
August 19th, 2008, 11:19 AM
^^ thats nice too. but people are so tensed now a days, that they resort to smoking as a last resort.

arindamdas
August 20th, 2008, 11:52 AM
does smoking really helps in easing tension....:tea:

utkarshgoel
August 24th, 2008, 06:40 PM
its a matter of personal choice i feel. waise i dont smoke but dont mind if anybody smokes

sumeet160586
August 24th, 2008, 08:25 PM
smoking is nothing but the hell where every thing in bad,
it will effect your health and wealth both.
so plz quit smoking
thank u

velvetgif
August 26th, 2008, 08:07 AM
smoking is always injurious to health....but it can be fun for some people.I urge them to leave in order to live a healthy life

username123
August 27th, 2008, 01:44 AM
lol, those who have already formed a habit our of smoking due to some reeasons like living in hostel along with bad comoany, etc .. its difficult for them to leave smoking as they are already addicted..

ankur_maurya
September 11th, 2008, 08:13 PM
moreover if one smokes in public, it harms others too...

chrispy_chap
September 21st, 2008, 07:18 PM
Highly motivating and interesting to read. I fall in the light smokers category and am sure of what is to be done next....
Cheers!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

flawracle
September 21st, 2008, 11:07 PM
i heard that nicotine is not bad for your health...the problem with smoking is other substances that came along with cigarette

DRISHYA
September 22nd, 2008, 10:05 PM
smoking ws a thing developed in ancient period in cold snowy areas... wer ppl used to smoke to keep their body warm enuf so that their blood flows n n de stay alive.. but slowly ppl caught it as a fad n showing manly powress n now considered cool... Wat can i say..ppl who smoke r aware abt their mistakes...also...in hilly high range mountains..ppl eat chillies to keep ther nose running in d snow (in d himalayas)...how funny dat wud b if ppl in cities start eating chillies also like a cool trend....hahahhahah

tejas277
September 28th, 2008, 12:07 PM
:SugarwareZ-191: after reading this thread, it has boosted my confidence & mental strength in my ongoing prrocess of quitting....



Thanks a ton

web_bug2005
October 5th, 2008, 06:15 PM
its all about why a person started smoking in the first place..
most of them do it to look "COOL"

gaganemesis
October 7th, 2008, 01:04 AM
i have been trying to quit for several months now...but now i guess i really will..
thank you :)

sts4567
October 8th, 2008, 01:16 PM
Really it is very nice forum to the smokers.

.....................
steven

sanaa88
October 8th, 2008, 04:52 PM
its all about will power....if u are adament enough its easyyyyy

Zmon
October 13th, 2008, 09:09 AM
if u want to quit, u can do it.:SugarwareZ-254:

ansh_d
October 13th, 2008, 10:29 PM
Kill Cigratte Before it Kills you, Thats all I would say!! The fear that it is killing you, can only help you to quit it.

Cheers
No Smoking

CITYBOY
October 17th, 2008, 08:48 PM
its all about ur wish depends on you only

rouger
November 6th, 2008, 02:11 PM
thanks u for this.....

and i stopped it

bharatmjain
November 6th, 2008, 10:48 PM
smoking is a passion these days....many undergraduates are smokers and are oftenly observed in the campuses itself...

khundmir
November 7th, 2008, 10:58 AM
yea ive seen many too .. there r lots of students in the campus who go out for a smoke ...

ambition_mba
November 19th, 2008, 11:29 PM
its all about ur wish depends on you only

U r right buddy..it all depends on one's wish will & wish..

username123
November 20th, 2008, 01:39 PM
ability and willingness... these are the two things required to do/get something

kusajishi
November 22nd, 2008, 12:09 PM
Goto the hospital and go n talk to a 35 yr old who has lung cancer n is struggling for life a tube coming somewhere out of his body.. n u will quit smoking..:SugarwareZ-064:

kapil21682
December 1st, 2008, 12:25 AM
Don't know... Maybe i have been a tad lucky... Can smoke 5 lights at a stretch and same time can refrain from it for weeks... Been lucky enough to not really cling on it... wish everyone else a refrain from this bad habit...

ankurbms
December 1st, 2008, 06:32 PM
Don't know... Maybe i have been a tad lucky... Can smoke 5 lights at a stretch and same time can refrain from it for weeks... Been lucky enough to not really cling on it... wish everyone else a refrain from this bad habit...

But frnd u never knw when will it start eating you...u shd refrain 4m it completely

scotty78
December 3rd, 2008, 11:04 PM
Premature wrinkling of the skin
Bad breath
Stained teeth
Gum disease
Bad smelling clothes and hair
Yellow fingernails
Kicking the tobacco habit offers benefits that you'll notice immediately and some that will develop gradually over time. These rewards can improve your day-to-day life immensely.
Food tastes better. :SugarwareZ-210:

I think enough reasons to quit smoking!!!
:SugarwareZ-178:

deep89
December 9th, 2008, 01:40 PM
please quit smoking!! its injurious to health... not only urs but everyone aronud you!!

khaitansaket
December 12th, 2008, 01:39 PM
occasional smoking may not be bad but chain smoking is injurious to health......as sme1 said ecess of anything is bad

starday
December 12th, 2008, 01:45 PM
after 7 years of smoking this could be a bit tricky, hope i'll manage this

pnorten462
December 29th, 2008, 10:40 AM
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death for both men and women, and with 87 percent of all lung cancer cases involving tobacco, it is one form of cancer information (http://www.survivingmesothelioma.com) that is preventable.

sodhanisid
December 30th, 2008, 10:52 AM
Good ONe freinds.

I appreciate this and we should definitely stop people from smoking as it is injurious to health

sri26
December 30th, 2008, 08:17 PM
this is an serious problem driving our country nuts and should get rid of it

wsophie
May 18th, 2009, 01:36 PM
Quit smoking is a good idea. It helps you for your oral and dental health. Many dentists also help to quit smoking.

lostgirl
May 21st, 2009, 11:16 AM
awesummm write up man... truely eye opening

bshirley
May 21st, 2009, 01:24 PM
Quit smoking for healthy reasons is a wise idea to maintain oral care and dental health.

sid_1
May 21st, 2009, 05:35 PM
great writeup man, i think this is a great idea but how do we make up the revenue shortfall due to moking bans and how do we counter the unemployment as a result of this.

Kelvin Sovi
May 22nd, 2009, 10:51 AM
Smoking has long been identified as a hazard but many fail to quit because it is addictive. There must be a lot of effort on the part of the addict to begin to quit. Ask oneself: What benefit have I gained from smoking? Is there anything tangible that I am proud of which has come thru smoking?

titanicluve
May 27th, 2009, 08:48 PM
smoking very big problem !!! because anytime anywhere every smoker want to smoke is it good for their children society etc ............................. big bad habit

savio13
May 28th, 2009, 12:09 PM
Smoking is a serious problem....
It has to stop,,
It causes infection, ulcers, lung infection, cancer....
Although it is a fab which makes you look manly and elderly, the generation has to realise the ill-effects.....

singhpallavi89
May 28th, 2009, 01:41 PM
i hate ppl who smoke.. its jst so disgusting .. its harmful fr ur ownself.. n fr others aswel ..

Tinchen
May 29th, 2009, 01:29 AM
I agree, smokers just just stop polluting the air and poisoning not only themselves but more importantly others!!

savio13
June 12th, 2009, 05:43 PM
Smoking has a lot of ill-effects but people dont realisse it ....
They think it is a fab and a way to show that you're manly or grown up...
If you think so , do something constructive, not smoking which is absolutely destructive....

You're not only killing yourself , but also killing others too by your smoke...