How To Beat Cigarettes With Psychology

By

sudesh

Posted Date: Saturday, October 03, 2009 | Viewed: 77
Posted In Category: Health & Fitness » Cancer Articles
Article Directory | Cancer RSS Feed Cancer RSS Feed | Email to Friend | Report Article

Many experts believe smoking is only about 10% physical addiction and 90% psychological. Your body will recover fairly quickly from nicotine withdrawals with the worst symptoms usually subsiding in about three days or less. But your psychological dependency on cigarettes can be much more difficult to overcome.

One way to combat this is to do a bit of self-analysis before giving up cigarettes.

Make a list with two columns. Label column one "Why I started smoking" and label column two "Why I want to quit smoking."

In column one, list all the reasons you can remember as to why you started smoking. Was it peer pressure? Rebellion? Did you think it made you look cool? Did it make you feel like a grown-up? Really try to remember the exact reasons why you started smoking and write them all down.

Now look over that list. Do any of those reasons still apply in your life today?

If you're like most people, you will see that your reasons for becoming a smoker are no longer valid, and are easily outweighed by the risks to your health and your family's well being.

So let's move on to column two...

Why do you want to quit smoking?

This one may seem obvious, but it can be a bit complicated. You really need to take some time and think about this. Don't just list the obvious health reasons. You've been reading the Surgeon General's warnings for years with little effect, so you need to come up with reasons that truly have meaning for you.

The things most people write down will NOT help you quit smoking...

- I don't want to get lung cancer.
- I don't want to have a heart attack or a stroke.
- I'd like to live long enough to see my grandchildren grow up.

Those are all good reasons to quit smoking... but they deal in "possibilities" rather than in specifics.

Sure you MIGHT get lung cancer, you MIGHT have a heart attack or a stroke, you MIGHT die young and miss out on seeing your grandchildren grow up.

Or, you MIGHT NOT! You're not likely to break a strong psychological addiction based on what MIGHT happen. Your mind will work hard to convince you that it won't happen to you! Instead, list health problems that you are already experiencing.

Your list should point out things in your life that you are unhappy about and are STRONGLY MOTIVATED to change. In order to break your psychological addiction, you need an arsenal of new thoughts and desires that are stronger than your desire to smoke.

Here are the types of things you want to put in column two...

Why Do I Want To Quit Smoking?

1. Health Reasons

- I get so out of breath when I exert myself even a little bit. Just vacuuming the house makes me pant and gasp.

- My feet are always cold. This could be due to high blood pressure and poor circulation associated with smoking.

- I have a nasty wet cough and I have to blow my nose way too often. Mucus build-up is the body's reaction to all the toxins and chemicals in cigarette smoke and could be a precursor to serious respiratory disease. Even if I don't get cancer, I don't want to be one of those people who has to tote oxygen bottles around everywhere.

- I'm always tired. Could it be that my body is using up all its energy trying to eliminate the toxins and chemicals from cigarettes?

2. Vanity Reasons

- Smoking causes premature aging and drying of the skin. I don't want to look like a wrinkled up old prune!

- My fingers, fingernails and teeth are all tobacco stained. Disgusting! How embarrassing.

- When I get on the elevator after a smoke break at work, everyone wrinkles their nose and tries to edge away from me because I reek of cigarette smoke. I feel like a pariah. It's embarrassing to always be the big "stinker" on the elevator. I feel like I have no self-control.

- My breath is awful. Kissing me must be like kissing an ashtray. I spend a fortune on breath mints.

3. Financial Reasons

- If I save all the money I used to spend on cigarettes, I'll have enough to take a vacation in Cancun every winter!

- I could use the money to pay off my credit cards!

- I could donate money to my favorite charity or sponsor a child. My cigarette money could make the world a better place!

4. Family Reasons

- My family can stop worrying about me.

- My spouse will have to find something new to nag me about.

- My children will be proud of me and hopefully they'll never start smoking themselves, having seen first hand what a nasty destructive habit it is.

5. Cleanliness Reasons

- The walls used to be white. Now they're a nasty dirty looking brown.

- I stink, my car stinks, my house stinks, everything I own reeks of cigarette smoke. I can't even lend a book to a non-smoking friend because they can't stand the smell of smoke permeating the pages.

Do you see yourself in any of the items listed? You may have many more reasons of your own. Find as many compelling and emotional reasons to quit smoking as you can think of and write them all down.

If you can re-train your mind to think of smoking as a silly and self-destructive thing to do, then you're almost sure to succeed.




Article Tags: health, diseases, heart attack, cancer, family

About Author:
Did you find this article useful? For more useful tips and hints, points to ponder and keep in mind, techniques, and insights pertaining to Internet Business, do please browse for more information at our websites. http://www.adsence-dollar-factory.com http://www.100earningtips.com

Related Articles, Information, Products And Links

Comments on How To Beat Cigarettes With Psychology:


Post A Comment on How To Beat Cigarettes With Psychology
  • No Comment Posted Yet...

Related Articles on Cancer

  1. Cancer: No appetite? How to get the nutrition you need
  2. Bone density test
  3. Gastric Cancer
  4. 10 Options in Treating Mesothelioma
  5. Akt Family: Antibodies from Imgenex
  6. Apoptosis Programmed Cell Death
  7. Are we "Livin" or just "Survivin"?
  8. ATM (Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated) Antibodies from Imgenex
  9. QuikChIP Chromatin Immunoprecipitation Kits
  10. Epigenetic and Signal Transduction Reagents
  11. Faces of DARPP-32: Master Signaling Mediator in the Brain?
  12. GPR83: A Novel Treg Expressed Cell Surface Marker
  13. New FOXP3Δ2 (Exon 2 Deleted) Specific Antibody
  14. GPR83: A Novel Treg Expressed Cell Surface Marker
  15. Colorectal Cancer Screening
  16. Anti-cancer drug fights cardiovascular disease
  17. Common Std Diseases And Cure
  18. Liver Cancer Treatment, Causes And Symptoms
  19. Pancreatic Cancer Treatment
  20. Cancer - Causes Of Cancer And Therapies

Latest Articles on Cancer

  1. Cancer - Causes Of Cancer And Therapies
    Prostate Cancer Kills. According to the American Cancer Association over 192,000 men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer each year. Over 27,000 men will die from this form of cancer each year. Cancer of the prostate is the second most deadly cancer for men, second only to lung cancer....
  2. Pancreatic Cancer Treatment
    Pancreatic cancer is typically diagnosed after the above symptoms are either detected by the patient or the supervising doctor. After the indicators are evaluated, liver function tests and tests for CA19-9 - a marker for pancreatic cancer - are often performed. The first step in beating pancreatic cancer is empowering yourself with knowledge of how cancer works, pondering the critical thinking...
  3. Liver Cancer Treatment, Causes And Symptoms
    Liver cancer also known as primary or metastasis hepatic carcinoma is a fairly rare form of cancer in the western world (1% of all cancers) but much more common in Africa and parts of Asia (10% to 50% of all cancers). It is much more prevalent in men and incidence increases with age....
  4. How To Beat Cigarettes With Psychology
    Many experts believe smoking is only about 10% physical addiction and 90% psychological. Your body will recover fairly quickly from nicotine withdrawals with the worst symptoms usually subsiding in about three days or less. But your psychological dependency on cigarettes can be much more difficult to overcome....
  5. Diagnose Breast Cancer
    Breast Cancer - Prevention And Cure Breast cancer, the growth of malignant cells in the breast, is the most common cancer among women. It is rare but does occur in men breast cancer usually originates in the milk carrying ducts, although it may arise in the milk producing lobules or, more rarely, in the dense connective...
  6. Common Std Diseases And Cure
    We all know the importance of becoming aware of extensive ranges of sexually transmitted diseases. I have prepared a guideline of such diseases that will help everyone in getting the right cure and prevention.Sexually transmitted diseases or STD is infectious disease; it can ....
  7. Anti-cancer drug fights cardiovascular disease
    An experimental anti-cancer drug can prevent -- and even reverse -- potentially fatal cardiovascular damage in a mouse model of progeria, a rare genetic disorder that causes the most dramatic form of human premature ageing, National Institutes of Health (NIH) researchers reported today. In a study published in the Oct. 6 early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences...
  8. Colorectal Cancer Screening
    Colorectal Cancer Screening Methods Comparison - There are five main screening methods for colorectal cancer. Digital Rectal Exam,Fecal Occult Blood Test (FOBT), Colonoscopy, Sigmoidoscopy, Double-contrast Barium Enema (DCBE). It serves as an excellent initial screening due to its safe, simple and inexpensive nature. ...
  9. GPR83: A Novel Treg Expressed Cell Surface Marker
    GPR83 is a member of the Orphan-A G-Protein coupled receptor family, and has anunknown ligand. It has been previously reported in various regions of the brain, within a subset of T-lymphocytes, and by RT-PCR at low levels in heart, kidney, liver, and otherorgans. For more details read out the article:...
  10. New FOXP3Δ2 (Exon 2 Deleted) Specific Antibody
    FOXP3 is a master regulator of immune homeostasis expressed specifically in CD4+ CD25+ T regulatory cells controlling their growth, development and function and generally accepted to be expressed in both mouse and human CD4+ CD25+ regulatory T cells. For more details read out the article:...

Related topics in Health & Fitness



Other Categories