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• Avoiding the Temptation to Smoke • Avoiding Weight Gain When You Quit Smoking • Benefits of Quitting Smoking • Cancer Sticks • Cigarette Cravings • Give Up Smoking With Nicotine Gum • Giving Up Smoking • Health Risks of Smoking • Helping Your Spouse Quit Smoking • Hospital Smoking Cessation Programs • How to Stay Quit • Identify Smoking Triggers • Kick the Smoking Habit • Lung Cancer and Smoking • Methods of Quitting Smoking • New York State Quit Smoking Web Site • Nicotine Patches as an Aid to Quitting Smoking • Nicotine Replacement Therapy • Nicotine Vaccine • Pregnancy and Smoking • Psychological Cues to Smoking • Quit Smoking Again • Quit Smoking and Become Wealthy • Quit Smoking and Freshen Your Breath • Quit Smoking and Live Longer • Quit Smoking and Stay Slim • Quit Smoking Cold Turkey • Quit Smoking for a Healthy Lifestyle • Quit Smoking for Health and Fitness • Quit Smoking for the Sake of Your Kids • Quit Smoking Game Plan • Quit Smoking Methods • Quit Smoking Now • Quit Smoking with Hypnosis • Quit Smoking with Zyban • Quitting Smoking for Life • Secondhand Smoke and Your Childrens Lungs • Sign a Stop Smoking Contract • Smoke Free Zones in Your Environment • Smoking and Surgery • Smoking and the Pill • Smoking and Your Sex Life • Smoking and Your Social Life • Smoking Causes Cancers • Smoking Cessation • Smoking Damages Your Skin • Smoking is An Addiction • Smoking is Bad for Your Health • Smoking Relapses • Smoking Related Illnesses • Smoking Temptations • Stop Smoking With Herbal Remedies • Teenage Smoking • The Urge to Smoke • Weight Gain and Quitting Smoking • What Happens After Quitting Smoking • What Smoking Does to Your Body • Why People Smoke • Why Smoke • Withdrawal Symptoms When Quitting Smoking • Women Smokers • Your Quit Smoking Plan
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The Urge to Smoke
The Urge to Smoke During the Quitting Smoking Process
If you find yourself smoking again, simply stop! Some people pick up a cigarette without even thinking about it. Even if you are in the middle of a puff, put the cigarette out and throw it away. If you have bought a pack of cigarettes, don't even think about finishing it. Put them in the garbage. If you are smoking because you are sitting with other smokers, excuse yourself and leave.
Go for a walk and get some fresh air. Let your mind clear and use the opportunity to assess what made you pick up a cigarette. Remind yourself of all the reasons why you have decided to quit smoking and re-establish their importance in your mind.
Try to talk to a friend or family member who can offer moral support in your effort to quit smoking. Be upfront about your lapse and ask for their opinion on how to prevent it from happening again. Above all, do not let yourself get down. View the lapse as an opportunity to plan strategies for similar situations.
It is important to critically examine the situation which caused the lapse. Who were you with? What were you doing? How did that cigarette make you feel? The answers can help you reassess your desire to quit smoking and strengthen your resolve to overcome the desire to smoke in similar situations.
To overcome the lapse or relapse, you must renew your vow to quit smoking. Think of all the reasons that made you come to that decision in the first place - they are just as valid after a relapse as before, perhaps even more so. Recognize the progress you have made so far. After all, you may have gone several days or even months without having a cigarette. That is no mean feat. Congratulate yourself on your success to that point, rather than ruminate about the setback. Yes, give yourself a pat on the back, and resolve with even greater determination to continue on your successful quit smoking lifestyle.
If your lapse has been for several days, you may need a nicotine substitute like nicotine gum or a nicotine patch to tide you over. Don't hesitate to talk to your doctor or counsellor about what has happened and ask for their advice.
Above all, don't dwell on this temporary failure. Recognize it as one step along the path to a smoke-free future.
During the quitting smoking process the urge to smoke will be very strong. At some point, many people succumb to those urges. In fact, most people will have lapses or relapses on the road to smoke-free lives. Rather than viewing these lapses as failures, it is better to view them as learning opportunities to understand why we slipped and how we can prevent it from happening again.
Lapses can happen any time. It could happen days or months after making the decision to quit. They are often triggered by stressful situations or by placing yourself in a situation which you associate with smoking. You may say to yourself, "Oh, it's just a few puffs", or "Just this one time." That "one time" could very well lead into a resumption of full-time smoking.
All is not lost, however. Nearly every former smoker went through similar episodes as they tried to quit the habit. Each time you again resolve to give up smoking you are approaching the task with greater determination and knowledge about what lies ahead.
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