Learning To Stop Smoking Harder Than Picking
Up Habit
While many persons addicted to nicotine
understand the health risks as well as having to fight an
unpopular view of their habit, they still find it extremely
difficult to stop smoking. For decades, lighting up was an
acceptable way of life and was even glamorized in movies and on
television, making it more of a socially acceptable way of life
than a life-threatening habit and with more states banning it,
more people are looking for better ways to stop smoking that
will be successful for them.
Ending a habit that many have had for
several years can be difficult at best and nearly impossible.
Especially for those that show no current signs of breathing
problems, the need to stop smoking may be lost. Too often, the
peer pressure that got them hooked on the habit in the first
place may not be enough to end their addiction. No longer
recognized as a bad habit that can be eliminated with a little
show of will power, being able to stop smoking is being
recognized as difficult due to the addiction to nicotine.
The main drug in tobacco has been shown to
be more addictive than many people initially thought,
explaining why it can be difficult to give it up. For the most
part, many of the therapies used to help people stop smoking
use nicotine replacement therapies, and instead of being
addicted to cigarettes, the smoker remains addicted to
nicotine, but only from a different source.
Many Find Smoking Not A Matter Of
Choice
Unfortunately, not everyone can simply
decide to stop smoking and then never touch another cigarette.
Their addiction to nicotine can be exceptionally strong and the
withdrawal from nicotine can be likened to giving up other,
more addictive drugs, depending on the number of cigarettes a
person is accustomed to smoking and for long they have had the
habit.
Experts and those who have been successful
in a stop smoking program agree that the first three days are
the toughest of any stop smoking plan. It takes about that long
before the body adjusts to not having a regular injection of
nicotine, but even once the need for the drug has diminished,
the habit can still be difficult to break.
For most smokers, behavior modification is
one of the best ways to stop smoking as they adjust their
lifestyle to include activities during which smoking is not
possible. Activities such as swimming and interpersonal
relationships do not lend themselves to being a partner with
cigarettes and to enable them to stop smoking they join in
activities in which smoking is unacceptable. See Stop Smoking
articles in Spanish (Pare el
Fumar) here. Also see Smetta di Fumare, Stoppen Sie Zu Rauchen.
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