Why Quitting Cigarettes is So Diifficult

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • Taken from JRE #1751 w/Brian Simpson:
    open.spotify.com/episode/4BsH...

Komentáře • 7K

  • @upnorthof60
    @upnorthof60 Před 2 lety +9228

    Quitting smoking was the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my entire life. Now I can say I’ve been smoke free for five years and two months after a nasty 23 year addiction. Best decision I have ever made 💯
    Update- 7 years smoke free today 10/23/23. Still going strong 💪.

    • @babyfood9537
      @babyfood9537 Před 2 lety +184

      Nice bro. 4 years 3 months free here.

    • @avonturyr
      @avonturyr Před 2 lety +74

      Yes. Cant agree with you more. Quit 3 years ago. Best decision ever. Greets from the Hague. Peace.

    • @TWrecks09
      @TWrecks09 Před 2 lety +33

      What was your secret?

    • @igunashiodesu
      @igunashiodesu Před 2 lety +32

      Any pointers?

    • @-_-naab-_-
      @-_-naab-_- Před 2 lety +353

      @@andrewthompson7478 you just boring man

  • @CristiandlfDeval
    @CristiandlfDeval Před 13 dny +95

    I started smoking cigarettes since my teenage, spent my whole life fighting Cigarettes addiction. Also suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Not until my wife recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. This is something that really need to be use globally to help people with related health challenges.

    • @Ronkaja
      @Ronkaja Před 13 dny +1

      Amen God bless people. Save your health save your mind. Life is better without heroin, cocaine, alcohol and cigarettes. And you have more money in your pocket. God bless everyone who has rejected the devils intentions to be addicted to alcohol and cigarettes etc which can cause so much damage to health.

    • @Malikrooney-hq5jj
      @Malikrooney-hq5jj Před 13 dny

      Can you help me with the reliable source 🙏. I'm 56 and have suffered for years with addiction, anxiety and severe ptsd, I got my panic attacks under control myself years ago and they have come back with a vengeance, I'm constantly trying to take full breaths but can't get the full satisfying breath out, it's absolutely crippling me, i live in Germany. I don't know much about these mushrooms. Really need a reliable source!! Can't wait to get them

    • @SusanaGomez-mp8sk
      @SusanaGomez-mp8sk Před 13 dny +4

      YES sure of Dr.benfungi. Did straight shrooms in few days. Left me like a blank slate after words, no more addictions, pains, ptsd and depression. Shit saved my life, all thanks to Dr.benfungi

    • @Edennnn926
      @Edennnn926 Před 13 dny

      Congrats! I'm really happy for you that your wife decided to help you. I always admire those who beat their addiction. Knowing it's possible to fix your life knowing there's people out there that have done what I thought was impossible gives me hope I will make it through as well. Those who share their experiences don't know how much it helps when you're about to give up, it gives you the strength knowing somone who actully know what it's like to go through this tell you it's possible, it's not the same somone telling you you can do it when they have no idea what it's like, but hearing somone who knows what it's like that helps a lot since you understand it firsthand and made it out gives so much hope. so thanks for sharing.

    • @VanRyan-bv7du
      @VanRyan-bv7du Před 13 dny

      How do I reach out to him? Is he on insta

  • @carpediem7654
    @carpediem7654 Před rokem +887

    This quote from my therapist helped me quit.
    "it's hard to quit now, it'll be hard to quit in 5 years. So why not just quit now?"

    • @parkerstroh6586
      @parkerstroh6586 Před rokem +68

      It’ll be harder to quit in 5 years even

    • @willieyork6999
      @willieyork6999 Před rokem +2

      ​@@parkerstroh6586 he just said that Bro.

    • @vonstarxo
      @vonstarxo Před rokem +21

      @@willieyork6999 he said harder

    • @anitaknight3915
      @anitaknight3915 Před rokem +42

      One quote that is great is you either choose pain of discipline or the pain of regret.

    • @carpediem7654
      @carpediem7654 Před rokem +3

      @@anitaknight3915 nice

  • @thepope9648
    @thepope9648 Před rokem +187

    The best way to quit for me was just arguing with it and trying to defeat it like it was an actual fight. I would talk to the nicotine like it was a person. When I would get a craving, I would say, "is that seriously the best you can do? you're weaker than I thought." after 2 days I was reduced to one small craving, and I just laughed at the nicotine, mocking it at how weak it was. I've never had one craving since then. Nicotine is like a school bully. seems really tough, but once you fight back, it cowers away rather quickly.

    • @aniket19931993
      @aniket19931993 Před rokem +15

      Wow good advice..will try it

    • @shadowthetwisted
      @shadowthetwisted Před rokem +7

      its not the nicotine though. its the hundreds of additives they put into cigs that make them so wildly addictive.
      nicotine its self is not more harmful than caffeine.

    • @chrisfoster3772
      @chrisfoster3772 Před rokem +4

      Some people don't get addicted to cigarettes, I don't think you were really addicted. I used nicotine pouches to quit smoking. My life was a depressed and anxious hell for 3 or 4 months. It was absolutely terrible. I didn't even quit nicotine and I was still so fucked up from quitting cigarettes.

    • @zacharylane2003
      @zacharylane2003 Před rokem +1

      I’ve been trying to do that but nicotine is winning the fight in the end.

    • @shadowthetwisted
      @shadowthetwisted Před rokem

      @@zacharylane2003
      no, its not, nicotine is not the problem. why do you think you can use patches, gum, or any other nicotine based stop aid, and still have withdrawals.

  • @primetimedurkheim2717
    @primetimedurkheim2717 Před 2 lety +2508

    "The best ways to quit drugs is with better drugs." - Basically Joe Rogan

    • @RaVisions
      @RaVisions Před 2 lety +131

      It’s true. The founder of Alcoholics Anonymous was an lsd advocate

    • @NoticerOfficial
      @NoticerOfficial Před 2 lety +35

      The funny thing is every Addictionologist would agree

    • @fleezuschrist4712
      @fleezuschrist4712 Před 2 lety +6

      Last time I checked that is how they make people leave the door alone

    • @vanessadisco6643
      @vanessadisco6643 Před 2 lety +16

      Yeah.. kind of like pharmaceuticals and the pharmaceutical company.
      Personally, I trust what the Earth provides over what human beings have cooked up in their labs.

    • @syzionaurifex5383
      @syzionaurifex5383 Před 2 lety

      Never has Joe ever said anything like that. Put down the pipe druggo

  • @jaysmith6013
    @jaysmith6013 Před 2 lety +3177

    10 year cigarette addiction for me, half pack a day, multiple failed attempts quitting. Wife and I had some difficulty conceiving our first child and the fertility specialist recommended to lay off cigarettes to improve sperm quality along with other treatments. Quit that day 10 years ago and never looked back, have several happy beautiful babies now, just needed the right motivation to finally give it up for good

    • @shivampatel298
      @shivampatel298 Před 2 lety +21

      So do you still smoke here and there ?

    • @JinnYoungKim
      @JinnYoungKim Před 2 lety +7

      I only smoke low tar ciggies due to extreme stress. I do all the activities.

    • @jaysmith6013
      @jaysmith6013 Před 2 lety +73

      @@shivampatel298
      Not me personally. The day I gave it up was my absolute last cigarette. I had occasional cravings for a cigarette, which became less frequent with time, but I just told myself no and the craving would pass. I just didn’t want to do anything, even 1 single cigarette, to cause me to become a full on smoker again

    • @brandeng1000
      @brandeng1000 Před 2 lety +59

      7 kids! You shoulda stayed smoking.

    • @kalyanvadlamani7607
      @kalyanvadlamani7607 Před 2 lety +36

      @@brandeng1000 He said several

  • @delonking301
    @delonking301 Před 2 lety +47

    It really just depends on the person. Everyone is very different of course. It just took me being scared straight with breathing problems. I’m only 23 but I smoked everyday since I was 16 and I quit cold turkey. Literally the day after I quit the smell would make me sick and instantly turn me off. It’s all in the mind for some people and for me it was. I didn’t even realize the mind was that powerful.

  • @noahodum9737
    @noahodum9737 Před 2 lety +22

    I quit smoking to help prepare myself for the Marines. I hadn't touched a cigarette for almost a year before basic, and was a few months longer than year post basic. I got into the habit at the smoke pit with my buddies, and it mutated into a crippling dip addiction since we couldn't smoke at night in the field, and only in frustratingly far designated areas on base. I was one of those guys that left dip bottles everywhere like this guys buddy, but I don't think anyone ever drank one by accident. For me, the only thing that's ever worked to help me quit was vaping. Cold turkey was horrific with withdrawals, the gums all tasted so bad and made my mouth numb, the patches left bruises, and vaping really helped me isolate the addiction from the carcinogens in cigarettes and dip down to just the nicotine, which is incredibly helpful for me with focus, clarity, and productivity. If I don't have nicotine, I find myself easily agitated, unfocused, and foggy, especially in the morning. Nowadays though, I've cut the nicotine consumption in half so I'm not attatched to my vape and need it to do everything.

    • @motorhead099
      @motorhead099 Před rokem

      That’s funny because a lot of people I know including my dad starting smoking when they joined lmao, because everyone did it. But congrats on gettin off the little fuckers, all nicotine is bad but a little death stick with 7000 chemicals in each one is alot worse then a vape or dip.

    • @SeraphimxSins
      @SeraphimxSins Před rokem +2

      The agitation is a trick the nic plays on your brain to make you need it. My parents fell for that trick over and over and over again.

  • @WarrenRCG
    @WarrenRCG Před 2 lety +674

    I ended a 30 year cigarette smoking addiction just over 4 years ago, in 2017. The following winter I could shovel snow for an hour and half without a break. It's really amazing how fast your body can heal itself if you let it.

    • @rogerfurlong1535
      @rogerfurlong1535 Před 2 lety +11

      Thats awesome. Both my parents quit after smoking for almost 40 years, and are doing great. I was trying again when all this pandemic shit went down, did not work out haha

    • @cannabis_media1
      @cannabis_media1 Před 2 lety +3

      hell yea bro

    • @marchuitt
      @marchuitt Před 2 lety +1

      I did for 20 years till... last week. Switched to vapes last week and haven't smoked a cig since (and I was 2 packs a day).

    • @DanHammonds
      @DanHammonds Před 2 lety +11

      I remember when I quit smoking I decided to get into the gym and transform my body and health and it literally felt like I'd reversed the ageing process. I did the same with alcohol 2 years ago and felt even better.

    • @suncaseen489
      @suncaseen489 Před 2 lety +3

      Man
      The return of taste of food is something I love the most! I couldn't believe I've lost it. It's truly something special!!

  • @TomFooleryTheAustere
    @TomFooleryTheAustere Před 2 lety +1275

    I was one of the luckier ones. Quitting for me was much easier than most stories I’ve heard, but my motivation was hyper-charged. I was a smoker for 20+ years. 7 years ago, I was at the hospital with my father in ICU due (in part) to smoking. I went outside to have a cigarette to try and calm my nerves and looked at the pack with a picture on it of a cancer patient hospitalized, which looked quite like my father did only a few hundred feet away from the designated smoking section. That image made me throw the pack in the garbage at that moment and I never looked back. My father made it out of ICU, miraculously; however, as soon as he got out, he went back to drinking and smoking. I’ve stayed cigarette (and booze) free.

    • @joseimpact
      @joseimpact Před 2 lety +3

      💓

    • @--LZ---
      @--LZ--- Před 2 lety +25

      Hell yea brother... I started smoking in the army and now kind of going on/off for a few months but i definitely gotta quit, this shit is legitimately cancer. It's fun to smoke but it's just not worth it. Joints on the other hand...

    • @daisy23s
      @daisy23s Před rokem +2

      I am happy for you!💕

    • @jebaleverest1715
      @jebaleverest1715 Před rokem +1

      👏👏👏💪💪💪👍

    • @iy3165
      @iy3165 Před rokem +10

      Wow Tom.. Your story inspired me.
      I've been smoker for 15 years, and I've just stopped... I feel so inspired and able to do this since you could do it. I think I will addict myself to cooking and video games... Probably an occasional cigar that's it.

  • @daveodanger
    @daveodanger Před rokem +11

    I’m relatively young compared to other people that have shared they’re story. I am almost 5 years smoke free. And honestly I’ve gone cold turkey about 4-5 times and that was with no help, nothing to replace it.
    But every time I did go cold turkey it actually made my smoking worsen.
    I used to lightly smoke 3-4 a day and after my cold turkeys I went from 3-4 to 32-40 a day!
    It affected everything I could do, it affected my relationship and made me miserable.
    I discovered vaping back in 2013 and been trying it on and off then five years ago I went for it full throttle and I have not looked back.
    Vaping has honestly saved me from smoking.
    Despite the negative press vaping has gotten, you do your research and find all the facts and lay them in front of you (metaphorically), vaping doesn’t even touch the dangers as smoking does. Just make sure you stay away from anything that contain vitamin E acetate.
    And help the environment and don’t buy that disposable crap.
    I hope this helps anyone that wants to looking into vaping as a option as it’s honestly saved me.

    • @HPsawus
      @HPsawus Před 9 měsíci

      Vaping was such a seamless transition for me. You use the same muscle memory to inhale so it triggers the same sensation, in a way that nicotine patches or gum can’t

  • @bnadem.panormal
    @bnadem.panormal Před rokem +9

    Here's what worked for me: make a solid list of reasons why you want to quite, then refer to it whenever you feel weak while quiting. Keep this in your head "remember your motivation!!"

  • @ms3ben
    @ms3ben Před 2 lety +1115

    I smoked about a pack a day for about 8 years and decided to quit cold turkey during a bad cold. Smoking was negatively affecting my workouts and my grandfather had died from lung cancer due to smoking. The first 3 days were the hardest. It took about 10 years to truly be over it. Now cigarettes/smell repulses me.

    • @TheAnime_Hub365
      @TheAnime_Hub365 Před 2 lety +23

      Congrats brother

    • @pullingthestrings5233
      @pullingthestrings5233 Před 2 lety +27

      My grandpa also died from lung cancer. But you also know what, my grandma died young and she didn't smoke. So it don't matter because this life ain't promised tomorrow.

    • @user-nv5em1db6k
      @user-nv5em1db6k Před 2 lety +41

      10 years… wtf

    • @nbisho01
      @nbisho01 Před 2 lety +11

      Ill smoke to that, cheers mate

    • @bobwoods1302
      @bobwoods1302 Před 2 lety +7

      You're smart to quit early on. The addiction only get s stronger. When I quit after smoking for 33 years I loved smoking more than ever.

  • @pkz420
    @pkz420 Před 2 lety +1710

    I quit cold-turkey, and it was far easier than I thought. But there is a 'trick' to it.
    You have to genuinely *want* to quit. If you are quitting because someone is pushing you to, or because you know it is a good thing to do, then it will be very hard. When I quit, I kept a fresh new pack with me. I knew if I had to keep away from cigarettes to quit, then it was only a matter of time until I failed. But if I could have them close by, and not light one, then I was really winning. It's been about 6 years, and I sill have that pack, unopened.
    If you really want it, it's not so hard. It's hard because most of the time we don't really want to quit.
    I was told the smoke would start to smell bad, but it doesn't. I still enjoy standing near smokers and catch a bit second-hand. But I've never had any strong temptation to light one.

    • @Shovelman220
      @Shovelman220 Před 2 lety +113

      It's really wild how you're mind will argue with what you want to do.
      Really shows the strength and pride will power can bring you.

    • @WaKeUpTIs
      @WaKeUpTIs Před 2 lety +68

      Crazy you still enjoy the smell. I hate it now, and it hasn’t even been a year

    • @CoveringFish
      @CoveringFish Před 2 lety +36

      Damn man that’s hardcore

    • @pkz420
      @pkz420 Před 2 lety +80

      @@WaKeUpTIs It is odd, isn't it? Everyone I spoken with eventually stops liking the smell. The amount of time varies, but they all did, except me.
      I still smoke in my dreams, so I wonder if that has something to do with it. As an unexpected bonus for quitting, it triggers lucid dreams for me. When I am dreaming and I inhale smoke, it causes me to remember that I quit long ago, which makes me realize I am in a dream. It's strange, but very cool.

    • @tzughfd9175
      @tzughfd9175 Před 2 lety +1

      I also love the smell even after 2 years, wierd

  • @josephmontoya574
    @josephmontoya574 Před rokem +185

    Im 20 and I started smoking at 16 I was never addicted fully more like small episodes of addiction but since I have grown spiritually it has been pretty simple to control, if you want to quit try and identify the emotions that make you automatically smoke and try breathing exercises to decrease whatever feeling you got going

    • @interconnectedmysticalflyi130
      @interconnectedmysticalflyi130 Před rokem +1

      Excellent.

    • @tawumpas
      @tawumpas Před rokem +1

      Deep breaths help me cope with my alcoholic moments, 7 seconds inhale & 8 seconds out.
      And I do need to become active again!!

    • @clkgtr12
      @clkgtr12 Před rokem +12

      you will realise how addicted you are when you try to quit

    • @foedeer
      @foedeer Před rokem

      Agree, i think meditation or any form of mindfulness will help better understand what is motivating the need to smoke. Reading Alan Carr's book can also help on top of this.

    • @mulliano420
      @mulliano420 Před rokem

      @@tawumpas get after it dude! Only thing that’s helping me stop dope

  • @Kal-EL_Volta
    @Kal-EL_Volta Před 2 lety +1

    Learning how dopamine works, your prefontal cortex, and how the pleasure rewards system works really helps.
    It also helps to get to know yourself and understnad that childhood experience also affects our inclination towards addiction.

  • @ReynaSingh
    @ReynaSingh Před 2 lety +286

    Good luck to anyone trying to quit. You can do it!

    • @masonmurphy4978
      @masonmurphy4978 Před 2 lety

      Good vibesh

    • @illuddivinus3309
      @illuddivinus3309 Před 2 lety +8

      Daily smoking sucks. However NOTHING beats a good nicotine cig hit on a fun weekend.

    • @metallicat1973
      @metallicat1973 Před 2 lety

      I quit at 30 in 2003 after 16 years I used weights on lunch breaks and ate Halls vitamin C drops like candy been using them ever since been sick maybe 4 times since then I did gain alot of weight I ate more after quitting but I lost it all Now but yeah if I can anyone can

    • @StanHowse
      @StanHowse Před 2 lety

      @@illuddivinus3309 Crack & Jack witch week, would beg to differ.

    • @adamsafin6819
      @adamsafin6819 Před 2 lety

      I read it you can't do it i have problems

  • @shannonlove9969
    @shannonlove9969 Před 2 lety +271

    I quit cold turkey after smoking for over 20 years. It was weird, I just had an “epiphany” one day & I knew it was time to quit, I can’t explain it. I had a full pack left so I went ahead & finished that pack & after the last cigarette I threw my lighter away. That was nearly 4 years ago & I haven’t looked back. I still get an occasional craving but it passes very quickly. Trust me, if I can quit, anybody can quit.

    • @fierroboy1
      @fierroboy1 Před 2 lety +1

      I quit cold turkey and managed to last for 1 year and 4 months. It was hard and i was angry every single day. I kept reading these articles about how you wouldn't feel urges after so many months but I felt the urge all day every single day. I started again when a sibling of mine went through depression and had suicidal tendencies. I know that doesn't make it ok to smoke but I was mentally fucked for a long time and I just gave in. I eventually got married and came to a compromise with my wife where I can vapr instead of smoke. It still affects me. Just not as bad and now I have a high stress job where I could lose my shit if I don't get my fix . It's hard. There's other factors involved but I wish I would've never gotten involved in nicotine. I think that alot of addiction issues stem from metal health and past trauma but from what I've seen we are at leat a thousand years from tackling any sort of mental health issues. Definatley an uphill and expensive as fuck fight. Probably more expensive than all wars combined and that's why it will always be an issue.

    • @kylep4223
      @kylep4223 Před 2 lety

      Almost 4 years for me now... but every once in awhile just smelling one is good enough for me hahaha

    • @shannonlove9969
      @shannonlove9969 Před 2 lety

      @@kylep4223 yeah I still enjoy the smell oddly enough.

    • @shannonlove9969
      @shannonlove9969 Před 2 lety

      @@fierroboy1 I’ve heard that if you set a date to quit it makes it easier. Smoke all you want until like, Feb. 3 or something then plan on putting them down on that day.

    • @sterling7178
      @sterling7178 Před 2 lety +2

      Same. I quit in 2014. I tried to smoke one at a party 3 years ago and couldn't finish it. Zero temptation now.

  • @pootoilet3758
    @pootoilet3758 Před rokem +6

    Smoked for 4 years and eventually my body just had enough. I had tried quitting a few times before that but failed each time. You have to really want to quit for it to work, for me I got to a point where the idea of smoking just one would give me a headache and I just didn’t even want to smoke anymore. So when it came to it quitting was actually really easy for me

  • @bs8825
    @bs8825 Před rokem +51

    Alcohol is the demon I can't quit.

    • @rel8m868
      @rel8m868 Před rokem +20

      go to rehab before its too late, I believe in you.

    • @Al_Straik
      @Al_Straik Před rokem +7

      Brother, I wish you all the strength in the world, you are going to make it.

    • @trigremlin
      @trigremlin Před rokem +1

      @@rel8m868 Not everyone is a millionaire 😑

    • @scissorsck
      @scissorsck Před rokem +4

      @@trigremlin you don’t need to be a millionaire nor rich to attend rehab

    • @danielfahimislam3166
      @danielfahimislam3166 Před rokem +5

      Ah, the most disgusting drug of them all. Alcohol was my first addiction, but it was so easy to leave once I tried other drugs and realized how alcohol is literal trash. Doesn't even feel good.
      Not saying try other drugs, i'm saying throw this shit in the bin, it's not fun, doesn't feel good at all and you're just drinking for other reasons you should figure out what are with a psychiatrist or rehab.

  • @sufferedlearnedchanged
    @sufferedlearnedchanged Před 2 lety +232

    I am a recovering heroin addict and former cigarette smoker. Sober and cigarette free since 02/02/2020. Quitting cigarettes was incredibly hard. I don't get cravings for heroin anymore but I still get cravings for cigarettes sometimes. It is a crazy addiction. The nicotine patch and nicotine gum helped me quit. Good luck quitting. Smoking destroys your body.

    • @Shrnirpledorp
      @Shrnirpledorp Před 2 lety +5

      🧢

    • @kanyeeast1662
      @kanyeeast1662 Před 2 lety +5

      @@Shrnirpledorp yeah i highly doubt a former heroin addict names his youtube account jimmy neutron lol

    • @Boorasha
      @Boorasha Před 2 lety +36

      @@kanyeeast1662 boyyyythe world is gonna scare the shit outta you

    • @Shrnirpledorp
      @Shrnirpledorp Před 2 lety +3

      @@kanyeeast1662 too much 🧢 this comment section is full of junkies even though yt is mostly kids

    • @krystalriley10
      @krystalriley10 Před 2 lety +25

      @@Shrnirpledorp You would be surprised what people go through - and overcome. Open your mind.

  • @markarmstrong5096
    @markarmstrong5096 Před 2 lety +389

    I started at 16 smoked for 10yrs. At 26 i tried working out and running couple times a week, .... Lets just say i couldnt make it around the block. Eventually i cut the cigarettes way down i went from a pack a day to a pack a week. Then after a year of that got it down to 1 pack a month. And now im going on 32 and this year total i only smoked 4 packs this whole year. I can honestly say im not addicted anymore, and only really feel the urge to smoke every 3 or 4 months. Ill never completely quit but i have been able to learn how to control it. Good luck to everyone. Learn to control the cigarettes dont let them control you.

    • @jayshawnelder8017
      @jayshawnelder8017 Před 2 lety +7

      That’s dope brother I can relate. Never had a addictive personality but I noticed my nicotine usage increases when I’m anxious. I vape which is bad from what I’ve heard constantly from the media but i don’t think I’ll completely quit. I condemn people for their vices but once you start to feel out of control it’s time to make some changes.

    • @rondleberik5337
      @rondleberik5337 Před 2 lety +35

      I'd still recommend quitting it completely. I had two friends who were "occasional smokers", mainly on parties etc but they both smoke a pack a day now after years of occasional smoking thinking they had it under control. One of them slowly slipped into it because her new boyfriend smokes and the other had someone close to them pass away and he tried smoking the stress away.
      I'm not someone who thinks you should never do anything that's unhealthy, I think you should live a little but smoking is a sneaky one even when you think you have it under control.
      Hope it makes sense, I don't speak much English.

    • @frankgrizzle1313
      @frankgrizzle1313 Před 2 lety +11

      You might as well quit 100%

    • @danielsteel9757
      @danielsteel9757 Před 2 lety

      I'm down to 2 a day and I feel that!

    • @nickoliver3523
      @nickoliver3523 Před 2 lety +7

      Cut that shit out bro you’re lying to yourself. Go look at them lungs again

  • @FlikkieFloekieFlakkie
    @FlikkieFloekieFlakkie Před rokem +13

    It was funny for me to see and realise how easy it was to quit smoking weed in comparison to cigarettes. The first week after I stopped using weed I felt a bit wacky especially during the nights laying in bed all like soaked from the sweat but those effects wear off quite quickly after.
    To stop smoking cigarettes it was quite a hell but so glad that I have done it! It is a mental game and a physical one at the same time. Willpower is the key. No more excuses, try to find excuses to NOT smoke and replace it with different satisfying rituals/habits to distract and it will give you a good feeling.
    I am not going to lie tho.. when sitting at a terrace holding that beer and watching other people smoke a cig around me and taking in that smell is such a trigger that makes me not want to drink beer at all anymore so therefore I also quit the occasional joy of alcohol consumption at all.

  • @Moto_Medics
    @Moto_Medics Před 2 lety +1

    Smoked basically for 15 years, Rogue gum and then moving to a similar trident gum from the dollar store helped loads but the biggest thing I found was deciding 1000% that I was through, not a single aspect of desire could remain and that was the hardest part was moving past that block it’s hard to explain but it was more mental than physical craving…

  • @pj3p488
    @pj3p488 Před 2 lety +37

    I was a 2 carton a week smoker and read an article in a science magazine. It said, 3 days to get over the physical addiction. After that it was all mental. I did 3 days cold turkey, the 3rd day sucked massive. The fourth day I woke knowing I had won. That was 40 years ago. Never went back and never wanted to.

  • @arI-Yabs
    @arI-Yabs Před 2 lety +3

    I started living a healthier lifestyle and smoking started to feel awful. After that shift it was very easy to quit. It actually felt so much better to not smoke. (I also told my relatives and friends to tell me to stop if I ever craved one)

  • @charliervr
    @charliervr Před rokem +30

    I've been a casual smoker for the past 8 years. I've never developed a habit of smoking, one pack usually lasts for around 2-3 weeks. I can also got for about a month or so without smoking. I really hope I never have to quit, the pleasure of smoking my Camel's with a cup of coffee during a sunny Sunday morning is immense.

    • @banginzaza
      @banginzaza Před rokem +1

      That's why a lot of smoke. Those moments and others. Lol

    • @csantana1
      @csantana1 Před rokem +1

      i dont wanna be the one to tell you, but everytime you smoke you are on actual physical withdrawal for 72 hours after that, so you are constantly in withdrawal if you are a habitual but very reserved smoker, this is probably the worst state to be in mentally and will severely negatively impact your life over time, i suggest reserving those moments where you do smoke to the utmost minimum, im not saying u have to quit forever and fully, but you should severely limit the amount of occasions on a YEARLY, not monthly basis
      That is if you want to experience life without withdrawals, there is some unique pleasure in being addicted

  • @JB-dn9kd
    @JB-dn9kd Před 2 lety +258

    I feel blessed after reading the struggle of some of you guys , I smoked a pack for 10 years straight everyday and woke up one day and got lazy to go get a new pack and I haven’t gone since it’s been 6 years now without smoking , proud of everyone wanting to stop smoking you got this . 💯

    • @JB-qy1gx
      @JB-qy1gx Před 2 lety +1

      Good job JB. Maybe one day I'll quit.. maybe.

    • @ZZZ-Hip-Hop
      @ZZZ-Hip-Hop Před 2 lety +12

      Do you now have a problem with laziness?

    • @JB-dn9kd
      @JB-dn9kd Před 2 lety

      @@ZZZ-Hip-HopI don’t :)

    • @stevem.o.1185
      @stevem.o.1185 Před 2 lety

      The first time I quit smoking, that lasted the longest (a few years), it was just after my 21st birthday, and I just stayed black out drunk for a week, so I couldn't drive to the gas station. After a while I realized that I hadn't smoked in a long time (at least that I could remember), and just decided not to go back to it.

    • @strangebrew1988
      @strangebrew1988 Před 2 lety +1

      That's partially how I quit , I just let myself run out of smokes and decided to not buy more.

  • @MCCABEWORLD
    @MCCABEWORLD Před 2 lety +728

    Smoking cigars and cigarettes 🚬 while looking at lung cancer pictures is very bizarre Joe.. 😂

    • @noTH9IK
      @noTH9IK Před 2 lety +46

      Cigar smoke doesn't get into your lungs. You just keep it in mouth. So I guess it's better for your lungs than cigarette

    • @JacobC479
      @JacobC479 Před 2 lety +18

      Yeah you're not *supposed* to inhale cigars but people do.

    • @prototype3162
      @prototype3162 Před 2 lety +8

      @@JacobC479 idk how they do tho because i tried and that s some heavy shit for the lungs and throat. (i smoke for 6 years cigs and weed)

    • @tommygunn1119
      @tommygunn1119 Před 2 lety +2

      Your videos are dope bro 👌🏼

    • @Jesusluvz
      @Jesusluvz Před 2 lety +9

      @@JacobC479 never got how people do inhale though. I’ve only done it once and I swear it was like a shot of pure toxins into my lungs with the worst gruff throat feeling ever. I’ve been smoking cigs for at least a decade too. Shits awful

  • @TrippyWheelz
    @TrippyWheelz Před 2 lety +6

    I smoked 2 packs a day for 10 years until the day the dentist sent me to a specialist because they thought i had a tumor in my jaw. I quit the second I left the dentist. turned out to be nothing but a bad tooth. I couldn't see myself quitting but once you hear something like that, it gets real. been off the smokes since November 2021. if anyone out there is dealing with that struggle, you can do it. its not at all easy and not a day goes by that I don't smell someone smoking and want one but just gotta get away from it. the gum really helped me. I hope maybe this helps someone finally kick the habit. don't make someone rich while you die.

  • @chrisknight6109
    @chrisknight6109 Před 4 měsíci

    Aye joe I don't comment much but ur a big influence in my work out regiment, an gave me a better way to look at quiting smoking 5 months no cigarettes from 2 packs a day thanks man ur a great idle bro for me an my kiddos (work hard play hard )

  • @Eddie53172
    @Eddie53172 Před 2 lety +518

    When Joe pulls the fear-factor card, you know he’s being real.

    • @thephilosopher7173
      @thephilosopher7173 Před 2 lety +19

      Well fear is not a factor for him.

    • @mykslash
      @mykslash Před 2 lety +10

      while smoking a cigar !

    • @YunggKhalifaa
      @YunggKhalifaa Před 2 lety +1

      🤣

    • @datt5698
      @datt5698 Před 2 lety +7

      "Joe Rogan.... I'm gonna tell you something.... I smoke rocks"

    • @nicicpredrag
      @nicicpredrag Před 2 lety +3

      You will stop when doctor say...you have 2 years to live more

  • @Riclmnopp
    @Riclmnopp Před 2 lety +546

    I told myself I would quit smoking when cigerrates get to $3.00 a pack. They are $10.00 a pack now and I'm still smoking.

    • @mostlypeacefulmisterputin
      @mostlypeacefulmisterputin Před 2 lety +4

      $10?!?! You’re insane!!! They’re only $8.75 here!!!

    • @Botmfeeder02
      @Botmfeeder02 Před 2 lety +19

      If your happy the way you are who gives a shit, I’ve seen guys who smoked cigarettes for 60 years still going strong

    • @rojdancam1676
      @rojdancam1676 Před 2 lety +10

      i’m on an off marlboro reds and they’re £13 here lol

    • @yamahakid450f
      @yamahakid450f Před 2 lety +20

      In Yukon territory in Canada its $15 a pack, I've even seen them for $20 for players filtered. Same with good chew

    • @jonnymalone480
      @jonnymalone480 Před 2 lety +6

      £12 a pack here in Northern Ireland, 50g of tobbacco £13+.

  • @lewisburton1852
    @lewisburton1852 Před rokem +5

    I started vaping not too long ago because I never wanted to pick up a cigarette habit and I casually picked it up since it was promoted as a "healthier alternative to cigarettes" but now I can't put it down, trying to kick it before it gets worse and new studies come out of the dire effects of vaping since there is still isn't much data yet. Wish me luck!

    • @kubakrarroub4673
      @kubakrarroub4673 Před rokem +1

      Lol same

    • @Adam-hp5hj
      @Adam-hp5hj Před rokem

      Vaping pushed me to quit nicotine. Smoked for 10 years, switched to vaping slowly over a few months, then just did that for about a year. General chest pain and numbness I've never experienced smoking built up over the time I vaped. Eventually quit that and finally started exercising like I've wanted to since I was a teenager. Nicotine always held me back.

  • @natalierose4273
    @natalierose4273 Před rokem +1

    Allen Carr's "Easy Way to Quit Smoking" is what I used to quit this time. I'm 29, and I had been smoking about 8-9 years. I had cut down in most recent years to about 4 per day or less. I bought that book and didn't open it for several months. It's not going to hurt to buy it, and keep it around in case some random day you decide to look at it. Quitting isn't "easy." I'm a little over 2 months smoke free now. It's been 70 days. I bought a six pack of beer yesterday and decided to try to relax but it made things so much worse! I got through 1 and a half before I couldn't stop thinking about smoking and was making a plan to drive or walk to the gas station for a pack. And I just thought about all the time I spent quitting and resentful that I was resolved not to smoke, because I really wanted to. I poured out the rest of my second beer and took a jog in the dark while crying on and off. I've never taken mushrooms or willingly took any drugs except alcohol and weed. And caffeine. I drink coffee in the morning now and don't think I could give that up. I think if mushrooms actually worked I'd be willing to try but I currently live in a different state than home and don't have any friends I trust to use mushrooms around safely. That book is basically full of helpful facts you know are in the back of your mind, as a smoker, but you conveniently don't listen to them. And reading that book just forces you to remember and that's what I needed. I also need my hormonal IUD removed because I think that's also causing depression and irritability and I want to know for sure if the lack of smoking is truly what's bothering me right now, so if I eliminate one possible cause of the mental pain, I can deal with quitting easier. I quit back some time in 2016 or 17 for about 6 months and I don't remember it being this hard. Last time I used lozenges, quit for 5 or 6 months and then started smoking again when I was drinking with a friend, and felt fine but I smoked part of his cigarette and basically soon afterwards bought my own pack. I used to smoke at my job at break time out by my car, but my coworkers who still smoke do so near where I'm working and they can't seem to wait until break time, so that's difficult because I love the smell, and I just want to get away from it. The book tells you not to drastically change your lifestyle when quitting, unless your lifestyle is very negative. Like I liked to take smoke breaks and drink while practicing guitar, and now I do it anyways but it's difficult because I associate that activity with smoking and drinking, but if I keep doing it it can become fun again I think. It currently just feels like work.

  • @kittywhompus
    @kittywhompus Před 2 lety +279

    Out of the half dozen friends I've had over the years that have quit and failed to quit, the ones that went Cold turkey were all successful. The ones that tried to step down, gum, vape, patches, all of those friends have failed and still smoke. Cold turkey seems to be the best way since choosing to not fall into the addiction is pure will power.

    • @shawnberthiaume7056
      @shawnberthiaume7056 Před 2 lety +7

      It's the only way! 👍

    • @tpammt8276
      @tpammt8276 Před 2 lety +12

      Yep. on January 2nd, 2020, I finished the last cig in my pack and made the snap decision that i was done. I stuck with it, no slips or alternatives, til October 31st 2020. Used a friends vape at a halloween outing and have slowly descended back into normal vape use and now back to buying cigarettes as of 2 weeks ago. Gonna quit cold turkey on new year again, hopefully for good.

    • @TheMastermind729
      @TheMastermind729 Před 2 lety +13

      Maybe people who are strong enough to attempt cold turkey are the only ones that can actually do it

    • @Owen-wh7of
      @Owen-wh7of Před 2 lety +4

      So true, I chew gum , dip, and vape, and smoke cigarettes cuz al of the latter methods of consumption started out as attempts to quit smoking and now I just do it all . My grandpa quit from going cold turkey . So true what you said .

    • @BartBasquiato
      @BartBasquiato Před 2 lety

      You know what's up & I hate the people that say I'm this amount of years sober like congrats want me to clap for you?

  • @SAMMYP33PU5
    @SAMMYP33PU5 Před 2 lety +33

    The thing that gave me the power to quit was a quote " every single time you wake up in the morning, you wake up at a non-smoker, once you smoke a cigarette, the cycle starts over, just don't let the cycle start over, you have the power to stop it." Good luck guys, I'm going on 2 years nicotine free

  • @_hunterwaterston
    @_hunterwaterston Před rokem +2

    The quitting process looks different for everyone. I smoke on and off, when it’s on it’ll only be like 2 a day, maybe 3 or 4 if I go out with friends. But there was a point I was smoking regularly about half a pack a day and I ended up semi-quitting from there. I pretty much only have a pack on-hand if I’m dealing with a really stressful time. I hope to eventually not want it at all, but I’m lucky enough to have the control to limit myself the way I have

  • @FromDark2Light-
    @FromDark2Light- Před rokem +55

    I quit smoking 1 day ago, and started chewing Redman. "Save your lungs, pack your gums" I also quit drinking 5 years ago by the grace of god and the men and women of AA. It is all hard to stop, but once you get to age 40 you should start to consider what that stuff does to your health. I want to live! Next comes weight loss and muscle gain. You really can do anything if you put your mind to it, it's all in the mind. And you have to be able to be strong mentally. You can train yourself to do this. You can train yourself to do anything. You need to have discipline, self-love and health awareness. You have to fight for your life to overcome these addictions. You fight to climb that hill and once your over the hump , it cake work from their on. Good luck.

    • @wavy.m3
      @wavy.m3 Před rokem +11

      "save your lungs, get lip cancer"

    • @r.v.b.
      @r.v.b. Před rokem

      Stay alive and stay healthy my man

    • @FromDark2Light-
      @FromDark2Light- Před rokem

      @R Will do, and thank you!

    • @FromDark2Light-
      @FromDark2Light- Před rokem

      @Joey believe it or not the percentage of people that get mouth cancer from tobacco is under 2% of people that chew and they cannot prove that it was from smokeless tobacco. Dr. Rodu who is a world-renowned mouth cancer doctor says that smokeless tobacco can save your life if you are a smoker. And also talks about how when he worked in a mouth cancer clinic that he could not believe that after many years he was not seeing any patients that chewed tobacco. So he wrote a book on it and also does a bunch of interviews and stuff on youtube. Also, the FDA has taken smokeless tobacco off the list of the top 100 leading causes of cancer. Smoking is #1 and Obesity is #2.

    • @thepope9648
      @thepope9648 Před rokem +3

      @@FromDark2Light- the gum doesn't do shit. it's just weaker nicotine, which makes you crave a cig even harder. give up all nicotine. it's the only way

  • @hisholiness4537
    @hisholiness4537 Před 2 lety +375

    I honestly expected it to be harder after being a regular smoker for 7 years, but turns out the appeal in it for me was the peace and quite I had while smoking. Having the mentality that "okay, this is my smoke break. And I will not have it be anything other than relaxing." really made me just enjoy those 5 mins more than I should've.

    • @akarshsharma1266
      @akarshsharma1266 Před 2 lety +1

      SAME !!!!

    • @FM-dm8xj
      @FM-dm8xj Před 2 lety

      then after that 5 mins u feel killing yourself right? do not think smoking is enjoying, because it is not.

    • @akarshsharma1266
      @akarshsharma1266 Před 2 lety +2

      @@FM-dm8xj You might be projecting

    • @FM-dm8xj
      @FM-dm8xj Před 2 lety +1

      @@akarshsharma1266 I guess, smoking=bad is obvious tho, should i break it down easier for you to understand?

    • @akarshsharma1266
      @akarshsharma1266 Před 2 lety +4

      @@FM-dm8xj Yeah thats pretty obvious. Whats your point though ?

  • @JasonMacKenzie
    @JasonMacKenzie Před 2 lety +91

    I tried to quit countless times. I finally read Quit Smoking the Easy Way. He basically demolishes all the crazy mind games you play with yourself. He tells you to smoke while you’re reading the book. At the end of the book I threw my smokes out and said to myself, “Man that was fucked up that I was addicted to smoking.” I never smoked again. That was about 6 years ago. It was incredibly easy after so many times of seeming impossible

    • @charlesvictorrose
      @charlesvictorrose Před 2 lety +9

      I also quit using that book. It's even in CZcams.... That book is amazing!

    • @krupke525
      @krupke525 Před 2 lety +5

      I quit three years ago.
      I puked so much on my last one. Mind games shouldn’t be underestimated.

    • @alexandergedeon409
      @alexandergedeon409 Před 2 lety +4

      Same. March 23, 2008 I ended a pack a day habit that lasted for 10 years. I feel like my life started that day.

    • @DeanValleyMusic
      @DeanValleyMusic Před 2 lety +5

      Best book I ever read cost me 11 dollars. 4 months free who knows how much I’ve saved on cigs and vapes and who knows how much in medical bills.

    • @ryanm4031
      @ryanm4031 Před 2 lety +4

      That book got me off them too

  • @damianperovic9804
    @damianperovic9804 Před rokem +1

    I’m lucky that I snapped out of the addiction after a month and a half after I realized it was killing my motivation to study and made me smell worse and physically a lot weaker (I come from a background of high level hockey and student athlete life for 5+ years). I now only smoke when I get drunk which is rarely ever and if I have cravings (like I did today) I just think to myself “if I went and smoked right now and gave in to bad habits, what other bad habits will I let myself get into. How many times is “one last time” going to come around”. Anyways that’s how I deal with it. I’m trying to become a better person so I have a lot of motivation to not do it as well

  • @kerbygator
    @kerbygator Před rokem +1

    My first cigarette was in 1972, when they were 39 cents a pack in some stores, and my last one was in May of 2014. I was sick with the flu and my lungs were full of fluid and I couldn't smoke if I wanted to, so i took advantage of that and beat the habit....I had dreams of smoking for a few years, I missed them so much. lol

  • @barrywhite1770
    @barrywhite1770 Před 2 lety +587

    I remember the thought that helped me quit. It was this:
    “You think quitting is hard, imagine getting lung cancer.”
    Yeah that’s going to be hard.

    • @indigochild3700
      @indigochild3700 Před 2 lety +12

      Some people may never get lung cancer tho. There are women over 100 years old that are still smoking. Definitely depends on your genes and lifestyle choices.
      Not saying smoke is okay
      Just saying scaring someone with lung cancer isn't enough anymore
      People literally don't care what happens when theyre addicted

    • @dyschromotopia
      @dyschromotopia Před 2 lety +1

      @@indigochild3700 😄

    • @dyschromotopia
      @dyschromotopia Před 2 lety +5

      @@indigochild3700 Lung cancer is almost exclusively caused by smoking.....joe is wrong though when he says people with lung cancer end their days struggling to breath, more often than not, the metastases kill them. of course, copd, coad, emphysema is different.......an irreversible amount of damage to the lungs means the sufferer struggles for breath for the rest of their lives, often requiring continuous o2 therapy.

    • @lingling21100
      @lingling21100 Před 2 lety +8

      Some people actually get diagnosed with lung cancer and still cant quit.. cigarette is one hell of a drug. It needs to be banned honestly.

    • @dyschromotopia
      @dyschromotopia Před 2 lety +3

      @@lingling21100 Tobacco is big business, generating massive profits for the corporations that dictate govt. policy......in 2020, revenue from tobacco taxes amounted to 12.8billion dollars in the U.S & 9.7 bn pounds in the U.K.....so what if it causes cancer, healthcare is big business too.

  • @paphet
    @paphet Před 2 lety +178

    Respect to those still struggling to quit. I woke up one day and decided to quit, coincidentally my lung collapsed 3 months after going cold turkey. Had 2 small holes in my left lung. Doctors say it had nothing to do with cigarettes, diagnosis was spontaneous pneumothorax. Idk what to believe but I’m good now.

    • @jamesdesormeaux1074
      @jamesdesormeaux1074 Před 2 lety +20

      Quitting that few months before may have saved your life. If your lungs hadn't had that time to heal imagine how it would have went.

    • @paphet
      @paphet Před 2 lety +16

      @@jamesdesormeaux1074 yes sir, one of the most painful experience’s in my life.

    • @manuhameed5470
      @manuhameed5470 Před 2 lety +5

      @Austin Batton yeah sorry guys I was just pretending to have a nicotine addiction who knew

    • @syria7981
      @syria7981 Před 2 lety

      Spontaneous pneumothorax is usually caused by being under weight

    • @JohnSmith-fk7cq
      @JohnSmith-fk7cq Před 2 lety +5

      @@paphet just had a spontaneous pneumothorax myself three weeks ago, it was AWFUL! Needless to say have been cig free now three weeks using patches ... hope your doing good

  • @campbell682
    @campbell682 Před rokem +10

    I never even smoked cigarettes but I always mixed tobacco with my weed. Didn’t even realize I had gotten addicted to nicotine until I quit smoking weed, and therefore tobacco as well. Really sucked for about two weeks, and was still rough for about a full month. I guess the silver lining was that it made the quitting weed part feel like an absolute breeze in comparison. Don’t mix your weed with tobacco my friends.

    • @blend3461
      @blend3461 Před rokem +2

      shi too late I should've just smoke weed

  • @405adam
    @405adam Před rokem +1

    I smoked from 15 - 34. I quit for 3 years but then I started again at 37 and smoked until I was 39. I’m now 41, currently smoke free. I still get urges every now and then. They never really go away, although it does get much easier. I don’t think about cigarettes but maybe once every couple of weeks.

  • @tomoneill4593
    @tomoneill4593 Před 2 lety +133

    Something I learned was nicotine stimulates the liver which releases some blood sugar, providing that lift. But, that's only the first cigarette of the day. The liver reacts to the second one, but only releases about 10% of the blood sugar as from that first one. After that the over stimulated liver doesn't respond again until it’s had a chance to fully clear out the nicotine, and that takes many hours. We poor mortals light up over and over again in a subconscious search for that blood sugar lift, but it doesn’t come.
    I quit cold turkey back in April 1979. Just decided one night I didn't need the little crutches and tossed the remainders of my last pack in the trash. Sucked on hard candy, gained weight, but soon brought that under control again with healthier eating habits and brisk walking. Food tasted so good all over again and I went on to train my palate for wine tasting. Today my sniffer is very sensitive, particularly to the smell of smoke on someone's clothing.

    • @Sange4499
      @Sange4499 Před 2 lety

      It smells like shit doesn't it? Ive been on and off years each end at a time, ive picked up a vape with a low nicotine dosage and cigarette smokes smell worse to me now, and im using the vape less everyday

    • @theoutsider675
      @theoutsider675 Před 2 lety

      @@Sange4499 That's so strange... When you smoke regularly, you smell it and you crave it more. It makes you wanna light up, too. Am I alone in feeling this way?

    • @iamhere314
      @iamhere314 Před 2 lety

      holy shit where have you read that information about the liver blood sugar? The only place I‘ve read that is in Aajonus Vonderplanitz‘s book so I‘m quite amazed others know too. Also congrats on quitting

  • @hiyg
    @hiyg Před 2 lety +23

    I quit cold turkey.
    It was one of the most difficult but best decision I made.

    • @SpaceboundJoker
      @SpaceboundJoker Před 2 lety

      congrats bro, I'm kicking the habit of alcohol right now

    • @stockontruthchannel2631
      @stockontruthchannel2631 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/giV3plTE6Z8/video.html Take a look at what Elon musk said about tbis yesterday

    • @stockontruthchannel2631
      @stockontruthchannel2631 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/giV3plTE6Z8/video.html Take a look at what Elon musk said about tbis yesterday

  • @RP-tq9me
    @RP-tq9me Před rokem +5

    I quit vaping about a year ago and I FEEL NOTICEABLY GREAT physically and mentally!! If you’re trying to quit you can do it! Tell yourself you can!!

    • @treeeyn5721
      @treeeyn5721 Před rokem

      I quit vaping as well after doing it for 6 years and I feel the same I’ve quit for about 2 years now. Best decision I’ve ever made to stop.

    • @treeeyn5721
      @treeeyn5721 Před rokem

      If you’re on the journey of quitting YOU CAN STOP if I can do it anyone can.

  • @jrizzledrizzle4697
    @jrizzledrizzle4697 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Started smoking when I was 10 years old and quit at 41. Im 41 still. Hope I can keep it going. Those lung pictures freak me out.

  • @fullmindstorm
    @fullmindstorm Před 2 lety +42

    After 8 years of smoking, I had forgotten how good it felt to breath and actually have energy to do things, im 3 months without smoking and its a life changer. Im back in college and Im exercising again. I love it.

    • @jimshorts5970
      @jimshorts5970 Před 2 lety +3

      I’ve never tried to breath.

    • @jrjr1295
      @jrjr1295 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jimshorts5970 alcoholism is a better alternative

    • @CeeDoubleU
      @CeeDoubleU Před 2 lety

      @@jrjr1295 wine is a good trade up. Worked for me

  • @danielsinclair9918
    @danielsinclair9918 Před 2 lety +75

    I was smoking almost 2 packs a day. The hardest part of quiting for me was going cold turkey and replacing the habit. If I was on break at work, it almost felt like I didn't have a break because I didn't smoke. After meals amd in the morning where hard too. My best advice is too keep busy, stay occupied and try not to get bored.

    • @eddycervantea7882
      @eddycervantea7882 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes

    • @ChicanoOne760
      @ChicanoOne760 Před 2 lety

      Just use a patch

    • @metalcake2288
      @metalcake2288 Před 2 lety

      Enjoy boredom. Getting bored is healthy.

    • @nickbradbury1144
      @nickbradbury1144 Před 2 lety +2

      dude after meals for me is the biggest one!!! nothing i want more than a nice rolled cigarette after a massive feed

    • @Asto508
      @Asto508 Před 2 lety +2

      Yes, you really have to reprogram your brain around these habits and that takes time, multiple years. I quit 10 years ago on my third try after 12 years of heavy smoking and only after 3 years the craving finally stopped completely for me. It was freaking hard but it was a great decision. If you can push yourself through this, you can push yourself through anything in life.

  • @jdub-uz3ql
    @jdub-uz3ql Před rokem +1

    I remember seeing these black lung pictures when i was a kid and i thought there's no way i'll ever start smoking. Fast forward to senior year in HS, I started smoking and have tried to quit numerous times, but i always go back to it. I really hate it, especially after watching this video and seeing those black lungs again.

  • @kdawson8981
    @kdawson8981 Před rokem +3

    I was a pack a day smoker for 20yrs. I quit cold turkey. I was heading to RN school. It was SO HARD. I lost my mind for 3 days. But I am so happy I quit.

  • @mostlypeacefulmisterputin
    @mostlypeacefulmisterputin Před 2 lety +27

    Put either the J&J, Moderna, or Pfizer dose in all cigarettes and I bet everyone quits!!!

  • @ZakH644
    @ZakH644 Před 2 lety +23

    The best advice I heard when I was quitting smoking ( I smoked nearly 2 packs a day, so a bad addiction.) is treat yourself like an drug addict, it’s not a “habit”. You have to think of it like a heroin addiction.

    • @grannybemx6729
      @grannybemx6729 Před 2 lety +2

      Quitting smoking is harder than quitting heroin. I quit heroin 6 years ago but I still smoke.

    • @reginaldbowls7180
      @reginaldbowls7180 Před 2 lety +1

      Pretty much. Heroin is less insidious than nicotine in my experience!

    • @reginaldbowls7180
      @reginaldbowls7180 Před 2 lety +1

      @@grannybemx6729 it’s true! I don’t understand why 12step/AA people still can smoke… ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
      That’s why psychedelics and introspection are the route that worked for me. And practising moderation.
      Basically now every-time I partake in an escape it’s a game of moderation. Once you know the rules it’s easy to win.

  • @mreshadow
    @mreshadow Před rokem +2

    I'm 41, smoking since 16 (minus a year and a half) now getting over covid and I had to stop else I'd choke on the smoke. I have a patch on and can barely hit a vape without coughing. I'm close to crying because the depression is just so much without cigarettes. Its just so hard

  • @emphieishere
    @emphieishere Před rokem +1

    I remember how i quit cold turkey 2 years ago and never regretted about it ever since.

  • @ambbie2710
    @ambbie2710 Před 2 lety +79

    I smoked cigarettes for 10 years, 8 of them I chain smoked. Every break at work smoke. Every time I commute somewhere I smoke. Need to take a second at a social event smoke. It became the only thing that calmed me down because I also used it as a break. I saw my stepdad around year 8 of my smoking get lung cancer from his smoking. He passed in the house I was in from it over a span of a year. I smoked for a year or two more after idk why. But I also was growing a mental hate for it over that time because of what it took from someone I loved. Eventually I stopped seeing smoking as a "break" and started to view it as a chore and work. Finally one day I just stopped because I was tired from the draining energy it took from me. And it was like i finally defeated something mentally but I felt free. Now I don't care at all for it, addiction is gone completely and I have never felt better. Keep quitting to whomever is trying! I tried a million times before I truly GREW the mental change and then I quit for good. Remember the key word is grow. You have to grow more of the dislike energy for smoking then the like for it. And it's not easy but it will work!

  • @alfiesolomon3531
    @alfiesolomon3531 Před 2 lety +49

    Still trying to stop...hardest drug i've ever come accross in terms of addiction and i have tried a LOT. I've quit everything with ease but not cigarette. Best i have ever done was 7 months cold turkey. I'm reading people who made it 5 years, 10 years i am amazed, Congrats to you. Best advice to people who don't smoke : don't even try

    • @BG-fe3ip
      @BG-fe3ip Před 2 lety +3

      Try vaping and build off the nicotine amount gradually, been off nicotine for about 2 years now with ease. Still vape though sometines but 0 nicotine, give it a try!

    • @alfiesolomon3531
      @alfiesolomon3531 Před 2 lety

      @@BG-fe3ip I read something similar elsewhere. Going to buy a dry herb vape tomorrow. Cheers & thanks for the idea

    • @BG-fe3ip
      @BG-fe3ip Před 2 lety

      @@alfiesolomon3531 great! I use a vape with E juice though and not a dry herb because ive never heard of that 😄

    • @TheBanjoShowOfficial
      @TheBanjoShowOfficial Před 2 lety

      try the patch

    • @emmanuelchah7812
      @emmanuelchah7812 Před 2 lety

      Please read The Easy Way to Stop Smoking by Allen Carr. It will help!

  • @gymfamily
    @gymfamily Před 2 lety

    Smoked for 6-7 years and quitting was the hardest shit of my life but I managed it. It convinced me that if I can quit smoking I can truly accomplish anything in my life.
    I would stop smoking cigarettes, then would relapse because I would be with my friends who smoke, or it was an easy escape to just be alone while fueling my nicotine cravings and fiddling behavior.
    I then moved to vaping and even though I got to 0mg, quitting vaping I felt was even harder than quitting cigarettes. It was so easy to vape anywhere and I could not do anything for more than 45 minutes without taking a hit.
    The three things I needed checked off before successfully quitting was:
    1. I truly needed to want to quit
    2. Accept you are addicted. People are so sensitive to admitting this shit it’s why you can’t stop.
    3. Accept you need to make changes to your life to continue being free of nicotine. You’ll be an addict for the rest of your life.

  • @divadoge5584
    @divadoge5584 Před rokem +2

    Its not just nicotine in cigarettes, its also MAOI's that are naturally found in tobacco, it kinda acts like an antidepressant but not good enough to be an actual antidepressant. Thats why sometimes vapes dont work

  • @alecs6492
    @alecs6492 Před 2 lety +43

    I’m coming up on 5 years tobacco free. My friends all say that it seemed like I just quit cold Turkey. Honestly it was a one year process. I weened myself off them, smoking les and less. I knew when I was ready when cigarettes started to smell bad to me. Then I was done, just stopped, but it really took about a year to get to that point.

  • @mrjeromy
    @mrjeromy Před 2 lety +515

    “Can I smoke a cigarette in here” …that’s how this JRE clip started. Had me thinking how many times I’ve asked that question when I was inside someone’s else’s car, or my own, for respect to the passenger.
    My Mom brought up this exact topic earlier today. So, as we’re smoking the last 2 cigarettes in the pack…she tells me “if there are no cigarettes in the house she would stop smoking.”
    Given the fact I smoked and I always had cigs, i felt I was a huge part in her addiction playing out. She then tells me “this should be our last cigs in this house, we should quit today.”
    I think to myself that I could just live a lie and just smoke when I’m not with her, for her best interest of course. But I’m really thinking that this can be the best thing that can ever happen to us. To “QUIT” is something that we can have together, a beautiful bond that we had from smoking together could turn on to something special quitting together. She decided, so in turn I decided.
    Today is Christmas Eve 2021, this is the last day we we’ll be having cigarettes to smoke.
    It’ll be a tough road, and it definitely isn’t the first attempt. But this one, THIS ONE FEELS DIFFERENT.
    May god bless us in this journey, and may god bless you all who’s trying to kick this horrible addiction. 🙏
    And to all reading this, have a very Merry Christmas! 🎄and have a Happy New Year! 💫✨

    • @jw1312
      @jw1312 Před 2 lety +39

      You smoked today right ?

    • @reke9592
      @reke9592 Před 2 lety +7

      Honestly, it’s tough but you’ll get it done. Sounds like a good story to keep to tie your future success to. Remember when you get a craving for the first 3 days to drink some fruit juice. Helps a lot because your blood sugar will drop.

    • @luckyjones9124
      @luckyjones9124 Před 2 lety +9

      You can do it bruh so do it for your Mom

    • @11energize
      @11energize Před 2 lety +2

      Good luck brother, stay strong

    • @bajenbilly
      @bajenbilly Před 2 lety +10

      Yeah fuck it, I’m quitting today as well. I’m gonna talk to my mother about it too and see if she’ll quit with me. Good luck my man and happy new years!

  • @Perfectt852
    @Perfectt852 Před 2 lety

    I'm going on 2 years without a cigarette started at 17 and I'm 31 now. My now ex wife left for her bf she met online and I kept our 3 kids but even tho it was a stressful time my gf I met later on was alot more supportive and helped me stay motivated to the goal.. She also quit smoking cigarettes so we helped each other cross that bridge.

  • @alan6685
    @alan6685 Před 2 lety

    26 years as a smoker here. I do break down from time to time and burn one down. But I've been quiting for a few years now. It is getting easier.
    After being smoke free for about a year now- and just recovering from COVID.. my left lung is still is so much pain. I can't imagine how much worse it would of been if I still smoked as much as I did full time.
    So thankful I quit. Although I understand after smoking for more years than not- I e changed my DNA and I'm a smoker for ever. It will be a constant battle.

  • @CasualDandyAkaSqwrty
    @CasualDandyAkaSqwrty Před 2 lety +31

    When I had to quit, the turning point was just like Brian's book: It was my realizing that excuses were what I had to dispel. Excuses attached to rituals, like waking up in the morning or mealtime rituals. Excuses attached to recurring moments, such as getting in a car or stepping outside. It's hard, but worth it.

  • @AlanTheBest97
    @AlanTheBest97 Před 2 lety +654

    Marijuana helped me quit cigarretes a lot. The feeling you get when you are high, your whole body gets very sensitive and I noticed how my breathing was just that little more difficult. So I started only smoking marijuana from that point on. It was still smoking but when I got that nicotine craving I got high instead which is pleasurable by itself and I like it a lot, it helps me to focus on my activities. Eventualy the nicotine cravings stopped compleately. After that I quit smoking marijuana too and now only do edibles when I want to get high on something for any reason. Smoking anything is really the dumbest way to consume any kind of substânce, highly ineficient and terrible for your health. It was a very gradual process for me, it took almost a year of reducing the amount of cigarretes, than going for the mj and then quitting the mj. I was an addict for 9 years and Im free for almost 4 years now.

    • @brockstory3076
      @brockstory3076 Před 2 lety +10

      That's amazing man I'm proud of you.👍👍

    • @ricoco7891
      @ricoco7891 Před 2 lety +2

      Applaud u sir 🙏

    • @EdgeToFortnite
      @EdgeToFortnite Před 2 lety +52

      I’m a weed addict lol, glad I don’t like cigs, but I feel like I NEED to stop smoking/inhaling it at the very least

    • @AlanTheBest97
      @AlanTheBest97 Před 2 lety +13

      @@EdgeToFortnite definitely not good for your health too, you should try more edibles, nowadays there are many óptions, its just a matter of finding what is right for you. You should try something weaker than you normaly would think you could handle. Usually edibles have a delayed hit, and they hit me so much harder. But Iam sure there is something just right for you to stop smoking or vaping.

    • @Jacob-ug5hy
      @Jacob-ug5hy Před 2 lety +8

      @@AlanTheBest97 unfortunately if you work the next morning edibles are not as effective as you probably won’t wake up in time

  • @EBiz-tv9jq
    @EBiz-tv9jq Před rokem +1

    My experience as a heavy smoker
    1. Before you quit TAPPER down quantity. I.e. use any methods you see fit to simply smoke less and less every week. I found that my limit was about 4x/day, if I smoked less, I felt bad. But after smoking 4 cigs a day for a month, I also felt that smoking more had adverse effects.
    2. Try to smoke in inconvenient places. I often smoked in two locations - at home on balcony and at work on the roof. I slowly shifted to walking to a river some 200 meters from home and smoking there when at home + not smoking when I am out in bars + trying to not have cigs on me at work, so if I wanted to smoke, I went to a shop which was pretty far away. This allows breaking the psychological associations easier. I still smoked a ton when I had major stress, but those were odd occasions. I also often smoked after dinner, which I stopped. Rule of thumb: Be inconsistent with bad things, and consistent with good things.
    3. When you feel like quitting, take a vacation. After you quit I have experienced 1) extreme sleepiness 2) brain fog 3) jolts of dopamine 4) insane craving of sugar (due to insulin in the body expecting smoke) 5) irritation. I'd say you can safely save 2 weeks of vacation solely to quit. Yes, sounds like a waste, but it is worth it. Avoid stress at all costs. Try to have limited tasks done every day and sleep on it.
    I also have experienced insomnia (this is worst, as it messes with your work and relationships and thoughts). Melatonin and just constant chilling is the best aid. Phenibut (Noofen) helps a lot with anxiety.
    I have experienced extreme anxiety - but when you know it will go away it is not as crazy, When you experience it first time in life, it is a bit scary. People with OCD and ADHD will experience this worse. Phenibut (Noofen) helps a lot with anxiety. Dont do xanax or other stuff, it is not worth it.
    symptoms
    5. Find WHY you want to quit. For me it was that I wanted being better in gym more than smoking. Smoking interferred with my eating, and gave me headaches often. Once I quit my headaches were gone and I felt amazingly better under stress.
    Other factors were - I hate stench from smoke, both clothes and oral. I think my gf was much happier once I stopped stinking up the house and kissing became much more tasteful. (btw guys, smoking makes your semen disgustingly bitter as well).
    Smoking felt good initially, but once it became a habit it felt like I have no rush from it. I simply HAD to smoke to feel normal. I thought it was very stupid waste of my health.
    I felt much stronger physically + my sense of smell increased tenfold (if you are a lifelong smoker, you probably can't even properly smell the subtle way your wife or husband smell).
    Once you quit you realize how idiotically people who hang out and smoke look. Like why tf are you standing there and becoming more stinky and disgusting. There is nothing cool about smoking. You are not a teenager who rebels. You are an adult with an addiction.

    • @rosehip5101
      @rosehip5101 Před rokem

      If you quit and are vegan then the smells can be really disturbing. Smoking helps mask the smell of the city. 🤣

  • @Th3lionKingzz
    @Th3lionKingzz Před rokem +2

    I’ve never touched cigarettes, I smoked joints with a little bit of tobacco inside it for 10 years.
    When I started to notice my breath getting shorter, my heartbeat going faster sometimes, my throat being full of slime, my tongue being yellow, I decided to look for tobacco alternatives..
    I talked to a 90 year man in Amsterdam who told me he only rolls camomile with his weed and nothing else.
    I decided to give it a try, threw my last pack of tobacco in the trash.
    The benefits of doing this are just unbelievable, my lungs feel so much better.
    My teeth are not as yellow, my tongue has gone completely clean.
    The taste is 100x beter.. so happy that I ran in to that guy.
    He literally saved me years and years of not taking care of myself.
    I’m not saying smoking weed is the healthiest thing in the world, but at least I’m not smoking something that has been taxed and produced in a factory.
    ( it’s so much cheaper to smoke camomile as well )

  • @daha9546
    @daha9546 Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks for all your stories about quitting!
    It really helps!

  • @XXusernameunknownXX
    @XXusernameunknownXX Před 2 lety +76

    You gotta do it. Hardest thing I've done, but worth it. Take it One day, one week, one month at a time. And it's ok to slip up, just don't give up.

    • @mopar_keys
      @mopar_keys Před 2 lety +1

      Today’s day one for me but I’m already bout to fuck up!! How long did it take for the cravings to go away??? Everyone’s different

    • @AbdulKhan-hj2fd
      @AbdulKhan-hj2fd Před 2 lety

      I think its very doable. I'm 100% no longer addicted but in some gatherings i let myself just have the occasional cheat day.

    • @stockontruthchannel2631
      @stockontruthchannel2631 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/VF5GkihII7k/video.html What the media don't like you to see

    • @dgbsnobgrass
      @dgbsnobgrass Před 2 lety

      Been 7 years since I’ve had a smoke. Still have cravings from time to time.
      I always say I’m still a smoker but just choose not too. Sure hope I never start it up again but it’s always gonna be in my mind I think.

    • @yuhyuhjankins6817
      @yuhyuhjankins6817 Před 2 lety

      @@dgbsnobgrass keep going brother!! I’m on my first week hope to say 7 years one day 🙏🏽

  • @peterdevreter
    @peterdevreter Před 10 měsíci

    6:20 is the reason I quit after 23 years. Was sick and I couldn't walk the stairs anymore without running out of air. It was like a switch in my head flipped and I was like "hell no!". First two weeks were hard but now (three months in) I don't think about it. Biggest downside right now is total lack of energy. Upside is that I save almost 300 euro's a month.

  • @MrStephenlederle
    @MrStephenlederle Před rokem +4

    I'm a 20-year smoker, and I'm 3 days sober. Damn it, this is hard af.

  • @Ryan-Horgan
    @Ryan-Horgan Před 2 lety +129

    All you smokers out there trying to quit, keep going even when you fall off the wagon. Allow yourself a mistake here and there. This is a war to be won not a battle. Don't give up completely if you cave in the first time. Good luck all, the struggle is real

    • @thickpickles2325
      @thickpickles2325 Před 2 lety +3

      Took me 2+ years of trying until I finally kicked the habit

    • @voodoodr
      @voodoodr Před 2 lety

      Words of light Ryan. Thank you!

    • @SouthoftheHill
      @SouthoftheHill Před 2 lety +1

      I beat my addiction through cold turkey, as well as getting married. I didn't want to enter into my marriage with this habit. Mind you, only time I smoke is through social drinking situations, and still it's seldom.

    • @michelle5254
      @michelle5254 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes! 👏🏼 Each cigarette is a choice.

    • @MysticWolf1223
      @MysticWolf1223 Před 2 lety +1

      Great words

  • @offgridcarnivore
    @offgridcarnivore Před 2 lety +12

    A good friend of mine who was dieing from smoking scared the smoke right outta me on his death bed. His family asked me why I was even there said he is sleeping and can't talk even when he is awake. I came to his bed side and he rose from his bed grasping my arm very tightly and with great difficulty screamed at me "quit fucking smoking" he shuddered closed his eyes and slowly fell back in bed. He never said anything else. I never ever even had one craving. Threw my crumpled pack out the window on the drive outta there. He was like 84. I miss him..

  • @magicsdolbear19
    @magicsdolbear19 Před rokem +1

    As someone who has never smoked in my life and who doesnt drink much if there are anyone who has battled with your addiction and defeated it. Can you tell me the battles you went though and how you feel afterwards I'd love to hear your story.

    • @MattDemon-it4bl
      @MattDemon-it4bl Před rokem

      So my story's a little different from the others, it's long so let me give you an advice. Never touch a cigarette, but it's good to drink occasionally.

    • @edumizzy2141
      @edumizzy2141 Před 11 měsíci

      Never smoke

  • @janzkee
    @janzkee Před rokem +2

    my dad was a smoker for as long as i can remember. I started up too and here i am at 21, we had a night out and went off the rails and the days after that he quit cause he was too hungover😂 but its been about a year since he last smoked a cigarette and i find that the funniest way to quit

  • @mazda_miata_
    @mazda_miata_ Před 2 lety +11

    My grandfather and my childhood neighbor both died of lung cancer due to smoking. My grandfather was in his mid 40’s and my neighbor in her mid 50’s. I got sober and quit adderall and alcohol (for the most part) not long ago and that shit was hard as hell I still struggle with it, but I don’t need cigarettes as another battle

  • @inthelight4671
    @inthelight4671 Před 2 lety +35

    I personally stayed away from smoking, but my dad and my grandpa (mum's side) both used to be heavy smokers ever since their early 20's. They are both incredible individuals that managed to completely stop smoking the very first time they were determined to do so.
    My grandpa quit 16 years ago at the age of 60, after seeing the conditions of someone with lung cancer that was older than him in the hospital and the absolutely miserable condition that person was in. He was geniunely shocked and afraid that he will turn out like him (keeping in mind my grandpa was in the army for 20years). That person showed such level of suffering that the mere image of looking like that 10years down the down if he didn't quit, gave my grandpa the determination. He managed to quit after a week of dense snack eating with no external help, no counselling, no nothing. The man had such bloody guts he munched on some chips just called it quits after gathering his resolve. I had respect for him before but after hearing that, I was could be not prouder to have a such grandfather.
    My dad also quit 2 years ago. I was in a different city for university and only found out when I came back during semester break. He was suffering from frequent wake ups from coughs at night and it was starting to become serious. At one point he got so pissed off so that he just decided to quit. Then he came up with a quick and easy plan. He will smoke less and less over a month and would only keep that reduced quantity of cigarettes on him. Since he smoked pretty consistently like 2 after every meal, it was easier to predict. It was a bit hard at first, but with both the annoyance of bad sleep and wanting to save face in front of my grandpa (the legend) who was visiting us at that time, he successful quit after the month. Now my dads sleep is a lot better and he no longer coughs at night.
    Honestly I thought getting help would have made it easier, but the older males in the family clearly had balls of steel and once they are determined nothing can stop them. Neither seeked any professional help and was once and permanently successful. Through the warnings of my dad, I stayed away from even trying smoke and drugs, so luckily I won't have to pull the same guts my dad and grandpa did years down the line.

  • @lsdfun
    @lsdfun Před rokem

    The longest I've been able to quit was 2 years but the cravings always pull me back in eventually, going on 6 months no cigs right no but the urge to buy cigarettes is so strong, the first time i quit was because of LSD, quitting cold turkey is the way to go though if you really wanna stop.

  • @michaelmartinez9602
    @michaelmartinez9602 Před rokem

    I’ve smoked for over ten years and I easily switched from smoking to dipping .I started cutting down at first and realized how strong the smell was and within a few days I preferred dipping I really recommend dipping since there is non tobacco dips

  • @V1LL1N
    @V1LL1N Před 2 lety +146

    I smoked for 22 years and then finally became a non-smoker when I decided I didnt want die and that each cigarette was choosing death over life...and it didnt hurt that something sent a super sexy dude to randomly lecture me while he was smnoking weed outside and told me how he quit smoking cigarettes and I tried it and it worked, and I intentonally did it during the most stressful time in my life so that I could never use the excuse of stress to start again. 4 years ago this month, I became a non smoker. People trying to quit - dont forget how proud of yourself you could choose to feel when you beat one of the most powerful addictions in our experience...everyone MUST read the book by Alan Carr - it's pure TRUTH and arms you with the mental atrillery needed to combat "the nicotine monster". If I can do it, so can you!

    • @TWrecks09
      @TWrecks09 Před 2 lety +1

      I got the book, about half way thru it and trying to get off them.

    • @SkateTutorials93
      @SkateTutorials93 Před 2 lety +4

      Did you use weed to stop smoking cigarettes? That works for me lol

    • @sylezjusz
      @sylezjusz Před 2 lety +1

      Props to Carr's book. Found about it a decade ago in some random thread on Reddit and thought it's a silly concept to quit with a book. But it worked, it was stress-free, and the problem completely disappeared from my life. The only side-effect is that you'll likely become an evangelist for the guy's method and recommend it to people you know or don't.

    • @Duskville
      @Duskville Před 2 lety +3

      death is beautiful choose cigarettes

    • @robertclarkguitar
      @robertclarkguitar Před 2 lety

      I have that PDF and read it 25 percent. I need to finish it and read again. I sit there and agree the whole time reading it. Like I already know. But I get back to smoking. I cannot say it doesn't work since I Did NOT yet read the whole thing. So thanks for reminding me. I have probably gone too far as I've damage already. However pack a day for many years from 87 til now.

  • @whitenoise509
    @whitenoise509 Před 2 lety +55

    My class in 6th grade got to visit a forensics lab for a field trip. We got to hold a healthy lung, and a smoker's lung. Having the actual thing in your hand to see and feel the difference is definitely impactful. It didn't stop me from smoking for over a decade, but it was interesting.

  • @Ivory_taxidermy7910
    @Ivory_taxidermy7910 Před rokem

    It is torture and it takes away your mental focus and sharpness for a while at least thats what I have experienced , I quit smoking 5 years ago was the hardest thing I have ever done and one of the best decisions I ever made. Was a smoker for 8 years.

  • @bennikk
    @bennikk Před 2 lety

    A few years ago i had a really bad hangover. I didnt feel like smoking that whole day, and the day after i thought "wow, im a whole day without smoking for the first time in years". So i just kept going. This was 6 years ago. I cannot imagine ever smoking, its so repulsive to me now

  • @Apophis392
    @Apophis392 Před 2 lety +161

    I once got a sinus infection where it was physically gross to try to smoke. I was very surprised after a few days that I didn’t seem to be withdrawing after smoking cigs every day for 3 years, so I decided to see how long I could go without. That was 4 years ago and I haven’t touched cigarettes since. I eventually got into vaping after that, but I quit all forms of nicotine 2 years ago.

    • @asongucollins5917
      @asongucollins5917 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/VF5GkihII7k/video.html they don't like you to see this ..Unbelievablee

    • @DreadedLad88
      @DreadedLad88 Před 2 lety +8

      I don't know what these other nonsense comments are down here, but congratulations on quitting nicotine... It's an unfortunately tough hurdle to jump.

    • @jtlpwilliem
      @jtlpwilliem Před 2 lety +2

      Same here, got a cold and made them taste nasty af for two weeks and decided to keep it going hahaha

    • @DarkPassenger
      @DarkPassenger Před 2 lety

      I stopped smoking because I always got sinus infections. It just got to the point where I hated every cigarette I smoked and quit cold turkey. It was tough at first, but got much easier. I haven't taken a single puff since the day I quit and it's been great.

    • @Apophis392
      @Apophis392 Před 2 lety

      @Dinglett it does. Why do you say “but I thought”?

  • @J.D.Mc.
    @J.D.Mc. Před 2 lety +15

    I quit smoking 14 years ago. The key is to inform yourself, Know what your getting into and tough it out. The most addictive thing about smoking is actually the oxygen. Every drag you take you fully empty your lungs and take a deep breath. You seriously oxygenate your blood. So know that your going to have headaches and body aches for 7 to 10 days.(ibprofin is your best friend) from there coughing up crap will happen for a month or 2. The physical habits is almost like a fidget, so i grabbed sugar free candies and popped one when i wanted to smoke. Its gonna take at least 30 days to break that habit and form a new one. Here's what i did. Knowing that the oxygenation of my blood was the most relaxing thing about smoking, when i felt the urge to smoke i would take 3 deliberate deep breaths. Like a drag of a cigarette. Inhale, hold, release. After 3 of those, occasionally more, i could feel the tension in my body relax and the urge subsidied. I forced myself to do this everytime i wanted to smoke. 14 years later i STILL do it. My son even asked me why i take 3 deliberate breathes when im stressed. I was shocked to be honest because it became such a normal habit of mine i didn't realize i was doing it. But i explained to him i had a bad habit once and kicked it to be a better example for him and formed a healthier habit instead. To which he was actually proud. I regret nothing. I honestly cant stand the smell of smokers anymore. 🤣
    For those thinking of kicking the habit, you can do it. Just know you in for a ride but im sure you've been through worse. You can do it! 💪🏼😎👍🏻

  • @BraydenM014
    @BraydenM014 Před 2 lety

    Part of younger gen dealing with vaping addictions. Harder than fuck to deal without because you can slip it by in more places than cigarettes. But in my case and in many cases, it's the inhale that is addictive. The nicotine just sits in your mind and just keeps saying "you need it. It feels good, you like it, c'mon man you know you want it, just do it again, c'mon man you need thar shit." Don't get on vaping cause it sucks and quitting is the hardest thing I've tried doing
    Also really proud of everyone that did quit. You're all stronger than most people and I have upmost respect for you

  • @mikeberichon7169
    @mikeberichon7169 Před rokem +10

    I quit smoking after a 5 gram psilocybin trip.
    I haven't had one cigarette since.

    • @hotdogmilkk
      @hotdogmilkk Před rokem

      Same, was more like 4 g's but I had no plans of quitting and tripped balls and just thought well these are bad now. Smoked for 8 years lmao

    • @mikeberichon7169
      @mikeberichon7169 Před rokem +1

      @@hotdogmilkk congratulations my friend!

    • @hotdogmilkk
      @hotdogmilkk Před rokem

      @@mikeberichon7169 You too! Glad it helped you

    • @psychopanda6148
      @psychopanda6148 Před rokem

      @Richard nah

  • @frankzap6231
    @frankzap6231 Před 2 lety +72

    I had a big dose of mushrooms about ten years ago and came to the realisation that I didn't need cigarettes anymore.. haven't had one since.
    Not saying that's how it always works, or that it's a magic pill. I was just devoting a lot of energy and work into stopping anyway, then I got an extra push from a very positive experience. Thats why intention is important.

    • @thenameidk3168
      @thenameidk3168 Před 2 lety +1

      I took a bunch of mushrooms also and now I am certain this world is not real..I look at my hand and move my fingers..and it no longer feels like my body its like my video game character has a little lag now

    • @bluerangercc
      @bluerangercc Před 2 lety +2

      Took acid realised how bad my health was at the time and my first step is stop smoking next day I stopped cold turkey it's been 3 years since Ive had my last smoke psychedelics are a good eye opener

    • @Drathrin
      @Drathrin Před 2 lety

      @@thenameidk3168 we live in a dream state. youre not wrong.

    • @frankzap6231
      @frankzap6231 Před 2 lety

      @@thenameidk3168 how long ago?

    • @sonnydayz2118
      @sonnydayz2118 Před 2 lety

      Mushrooms are better than cigarettes, especially on a pizza or in a spaghetti. 🤣

  • @austiniscoolduh
    @austiniscoolduh Před 2 lety +18

    I’ve quit multiple times, with no problems. But the issue is, I always come back to it eventually, just because of the situation I’m in where I’m around a lot of smokers (rehab)

    • @kylekyle2868
      @kylekyle2868 Před 2 lety +1

      "I've quit multiple times" I feel you man

    • @bub305
      @bub305 Před 2 lety

      Using drugs in rehab, nice.

    • @austiniscoolduh
      @austiniscoolduh Před 2 lety

      @@bub305 cigs are practically encouraged in rehab

  • @petergreene9312
    @petergreene9312 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I got one left and im debating if i should snap it or smoke it in the morning

  • @Koperowsky
    @Koperowsky Před 2 lety +42

    I was smoking for several years, quit just because I wanted, I was ready for it mentally. I spent time with myself before I went sleep and with my thoughts whenever I was thinking about smoking I had ready thoughts from that night and hunger dissapeared. Never used any plasters, no help no talk with anybody. Everything is in your mind, depends how strong psyche you have in my opinion.

    • @garazaadsf6921
      @garazaadsf6921 Před 2 lety +1

      I smoked for a year when i first started college. the addiction grew to the point where i would smoke a whole ass pack an hour before my exam.
      stopped and failed once
      the second time i stopped i relapsed many times when i was drunk
      the third time i stopped i never smoked since and never plan to again

    • @km0764
      @km0764 Před 2 lety

      For sure

    • @EarthtonesCymbals
      @EarthtonesCymbals Před rokem +2

      Everything is not in your mind. We also have a body.

    • @mhlengimbokazi4106
      @mhlengimbokazi4106 Před rokem +1

      @@EarthtonesCymbals yes but your hands or feet will never tell you what to do.

    • @EarthtonesCymbals
      @EarthtonesCymbals Před rokem +2

      That is a fact but the mind/body relationship cannot be denied.
      That's all I'm saying.

  • @JDarko5o
    @JDarko5o Před 2 lety +8

    my mother has been sober from any addictive substances now for about 22 years. she says she would kill to smoke a cigarette. anytime she smells the smoke or sees someone smoking she is incredibly envious. the urge might never go away. props to my mom for fighting it.

    • @Bhearu
      @Bhearu Před rokem +1

      @@hi-dl4kw You can frame it that way but like it or not smoking feels lovely, the problem is its a rly nice time that destroys your body over a long period of doing it, if it didn't feel nice people wouldn't do it lol

  • @jonkaldi1
    @jonkaldi1 Před 4 měsíci +1

    i used champix meds too quit smoking my 8th year this year ,,to stay away from starting again trick is to quit drinking as well

  • @Texaslife98
    @Texaslife98 Před 11 měsíci

    I never was that big on smoking actual cigarettes.. but the vaping craze got me HOOKED. I’m telling you this addiction has been the hardest to quit and I’ve quit hard drugs before.
    It’s been 4 months since I last vaped and I’m still as angry as the exact day I quit.
    Constantly angry, so depressed, anxious, can’t sleep, it feels like you’re being tortured.

  • @andycig2993
    @andycig2993 Před 2 lety +13

    50 year smoker. I had given up on trying to quit.
    Started vaping in 2014 and haven't looked back.
    I can breathe again.

    • @rickster1217
      @rickster1217 Před 2 lety +3

      Because you are not a quitter 👍

    • @jonasmeyer708
      @jonasmeyer708 Před 2 lety +3

      @@rickster1217 well he quit on quitting

    • @engineerepixlele2845
      @engineerepixlele2845 Před 2 lety

      Bought a juul for my dad to quit cigs.. He just ended up vaping at home and smoking at work lmao. Made him worse. Probably cuz he himself doesn't want to quit.

    • @dang7748
      @dang7748 Před 2 lety +6

      People really think cigarettes and vaping are on the same level. Hell no.. vaping is 1000x better. I’m happy for you.

    • @SafetyLucas
      @SafetyLucas Před 2 lety +2

      @@dang7748 For real. People who say vaping is just as bad as cigs clearly haven't done the research. Even a lot of the articles about it are based on assumptions and peoples inherent bias. And several of the research articles about it test scenarios that are completely unrealistic. Like the one's that say heating vape juice can create formaldehyde. Like yeah, at temperatures and pressures well beyond what any vape could possibly get to. It's really an incredible technology.

  • @romanp3677
    @romanp3677 Před 2 lety +117

    I quit 16 years ago a day before my wife moved in 🥰 wasn't too hard it definitely was harder to deal with her 😂😂