Posts Tagged ‘stop smoking’

Stop Smoking by Resolving Your Mixed Feelings

Friday, March 13th, 2009

Many smokers know all the reasons why they ’should’ stop, but still struggle making the decision to quit. They beat themselves up, complaining of a lack of willpower. But they are wrong, it isn’t willpower you need. Using willpower implies that you are fighting against something.

Smokers in this condition experience mood swings, cravings and irritability. That’s because they are sitting on the fence. As any smoker trying to quit knows, that’s a painful place to be. It’s much better to ‘jump off the fence’. When you reach the decision, quitting becomes effortless. But as we know, making that decision can be tough.

Hundreds of clients have told us that although they want to stop, they still enjoy smoking. For many smokers there are strong associations between smoking and pleasure, for example:

“A drink and a cigarette go together”

“I love to smoke in the morning with my tea/coffee”

“I enjoy a cigarette after dinner.”

For other smokers there are associations with stress:

“I feel anxious and I need to smoke”

“I know I’ll be irritable without my cigarettes.”

Some feel deprived at the thought of quitting:

“I miss my cigarettes”

“I feel deprived”

“I feel I have lost a friend”

“I’m afraid to let go.”

For some women with young children, cigarettes provide an escape for ten minutes. “This is my time.” Similarly, both men and women use cigarettes as a reward, as an excuse to take a break. For some, the thought of never being able to smoke again is terrifying.

Whatever your mixed feelings, you need to realise that they are just beliefs. But because your unconscious mind has to act in accordance with your beliefs, you experience conflict, the discomfort of being torn between what you ’should’ do, and what you feel comfortable doing… which is to maintain the habit… keep doing what you’ve been doing for years…in spite of the fact that it’s destroying your health, burning your money, becoming increasingly unsociable etc. etc.

So, for many people, arriving at the decision to stop smoking is hard. Here are the reasons why…

Have you ever wondered why most smokers take up the habit in their teens, between the age of 10 and 20? Ask any smoker and you will confirm this for yourself. Psychologists talk about this time of our lives as the ’socialisation period’, when we are extremely sensitive to being part of the group. Now, remember what it was like when you were at school, or at your first job. You desperately wanted to ‘fit in’ because the worst emotional pain we can feel during that part of our lives is the feeling of being ‘left out’.

Have you every heard of your mind being described as like an iceberg, with nine tenths below the surface? The conscious mind is the tiny one tenth part above the surface, the unconscious is the nine tenths below. As you know, the unconscious, which stores all of our memories, which breathes air into our lungs, beats our heart and carries out all automatic functions on our behalf, is designed to protect us from emotional, as well as physical pain.

During our teens, we start smoking to protect ourselves from emotional pain, to avoid being left out, to be part of the group. At that time there may also have been some peer pressure, “mummies boy”, perhaps a sense of rebellion, or wanting to look grown up or glamorous like that film star. This explains why, in spite of that first experience making us cough and choke and feel ill, we forced ourselves to smoke again and again until it become a habit.

Now years later, when you are considering stopping smoking, you get a feeling of panic, of anxiety, “how will I survive without a cigarette?”. These uncomfortable feelings are entirely caused by your unconscious mind which still (just as when you were a teenager) ‘thinks’ it’s doing you a favour by keeping you smoking. Your unconscious mind still ‘thinks’ it’s protecting you from emotional pain, not realising that years have passed and that now, with increasing legislation, stop smoking uk is becoming more and more likely.

The reason our approach is so successful is because we deal with the root cause of smoking. As well as breaking the old smoking habit with advanced hypnosis, we are resolving the unconscious conflicts and erroneous beliefs which have ’stopped you stopping’.

Specialist smoking cessation practitioners need to have the skills and experience to dissolve your conflicts, painlessly and easily. Many of our clients say, “It’s as if I’ve never smoked!” When you read some of the testimonials, it suddenly makes sense. It can’t be a nicotine addiction because, as your doctor will tell you, all the nicotine is out of your system within 48 hours.

You know of people who have stopped and then started again, months later. And you also know lots of people who have stopped and who still crave a cigarette, even years later. You also know of those who have gained weight when they quit. Why? It’s because the unconscious conflict wasn’t resolved, as it is with our approach. Client Daryl Hine from Buntingford told us:

“I was smoking right up to the point of walking in. The session was very interesting, both educational and engaging. Throughout the hypnosis, I was fully awake and yet fully relaxed. It’s a strange sensation. I’d classify it as a ‘pleasant, strange experience’. About an hour later I walked out of the session thinking, ‘That was interesting,’ but not feeling any different. I still didn’t believe I could quit. It wasn’t till days later that I realised that I hadn’t smoked and that it had worked.

It’s coming up for a year now and it’s been easy. No desire to smoke, feell better in myself. All the normal stress points have been fine and I’ve had no craving at all. Health wise I’m much better. I do a fair bit of exercise. I’ve saved myself a considerable amount of time at work, gaining an extra hour each day that I now use more productively. As well as time, I’ve saved a fortune because I had been smoking 25-30 a day. I’ve been a great advocate of the Stop Smoking Centre and I’m willing to talk to anyone about my experience.”

So if you have mixed feelings about stopping smoking, call us any time and we’ll be happy to chat or even provide a free consultation where we can resolve your unconscious conflicts.

Recently I followed up with just such a client, who had come for a free consultation, and she had stopped smoking - just by resolving her conflicts.

Dave Trevena
The Hertford Stop Smoking Centre
Freephone: 0800 093 9714
Down load our free report from:
http://www.stopsmokingcentre.co.uk

[tags]Stop smoking, Quit smoking, Addiction[/tags]

How Do I Stop Smoking

Monday, March 9th, 2009

How do I stop smoking you ask? There are tons of experts out there but I honestly feel from experience they are going about it all wrong. I know becuase I tried eveything else.
First off the only thing that will help you stop smoking is your own willpower and sacrifice. Here are a a couple of tips that I hope can help you as much as me.

1. Do NOT set a date. I know this flies in the face of what everyone else is telling you but trust me, you are better off not doing it. I have tried and I am guessing you have tried as well and yet here you are reading an article on how to stop smoking. Enough said.

2. Don’t Quit. Huh? What did he just say? Ok, so technically you are “quitting”, but I have not had a cigarette in over 3 years and to this day my word to anyone who cares is I’m taking a break and will have one when I feel like it. I really believe this and also really believe this is the conrnerstone of my success.
The minute you start telling yourself “never again” it wears you down mentally and you will never stop. The last time I had a smoke was February 2, 2003. I had no intention of stopping. I had my first smoke of the day that morning and when it came time to have another one, I said to myself, “nah not right now.” And I kept doing that all along, never quitting.

Well there are a couple of tips that helped me a bunch and will help you as well. Keep in mind, after 3 days of being smoke free the nicotine is gone from your system. Any craving you get after that is completely mental. Now blow off that cigarette until later. That’s what I am doing.

Rich Nashawaty has been smoke free for over 3 years and is convinced anyone can do it. http://www.usfreeads.com/527968-cls.html

[tags]stop smoking, quit smoking, stop smoking naturally[/tags]

Tips To Help Ease Your Struggle To Stop Smoking

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

Smoking cigarettes or using tobacco is a self destructive and a suicidal behavior. If you are a smoker, then you already know this simple fact. But just knowing and being able to do something about it are often two different things.

You are probably aware that millions and millions of people die from tobacco related disease each and every year. But knowing this has not caused more than a minor movement away from use of the deadly plant by the general public. In fact, children all over the world are being led into the same destructive path as their elders. At their young age, they started smoking their first cigarettes, and quickly became addicted to a daily habit.

The huge problem with smoking cigarettes is in the seemingly unbreakable habit of using them. Habits are built - or assembled if you will - over a period of time and are created by repetitious behavior. Without the habit, which creates the craving, tobacco has no power of its own. It is as harmless and of no consequence as any simple garden weed. It is that internal unintentional perception about the drug that makes it dangerous.

Removing this kind of habit from a human being is not so simple. It requires a complete program of steps, taken one at a time with care and commitment. With this type of program, ending the smoking habit will feel more natural and is actually easier, even less painful than starting it. The first place to start is with these simple questions: Do you really want to quit smoking? Are you ready to do it now? If your answer to either question is “no,” you will probably be unable to quit at all.

Here are some simple but effective quit smoking tips:

Tip 1: Think of yourself as a non-smoker.

One of the best ways to think like a non-smoker one is to picture yourself in your day to day routine without cigarettes. When people ask you for a cigarette, you tell them that you don’t smoke. When you eat in a restaurant, you choose the non-smoking section. You stop taking breaks at work to smoke. Conceptualizing yourself as someone who doesn’t smoke will help you make that vision a reality. It may sound silly, but positive thinking of very specific activities in your life can help you achieve your goals.

Tip 2: Drink more water.

Water can be very instrumental in ending your smoking habit. Water flushes out the body and any toxins quickly. Some people feel bloated for the first couple of days of drinking extra water, but you will quickly enjoy its benefits. Drinking extra water will cause you to urinate more often, thus eliminating the toxins caused by smoking more quickly, reducing the urge to smoke. On top of that, you will feel healthier and more energetic.

Tip 3: Quit smoking with a buddy.

Encourage someone who always talks about quitting smoke to join you. It is much easier to give up a bad habit if you have a friend with whom to share sympathy and helpful tips. This “quit” buddy can help share your struggles because they know exactly what you’re going through.

Tip 4: Enlist support from others in your life.

Don’t try to quit smoking alone! It is best to let everyone know that you are quitting. Tell your best friend. Tell your girlfriend or boyfriend. Tell your mom. Make sure you let everyone know when you will be quitting so that you have people to hold you responsible if you are tempted to start again.

Tip 5: Count the days when you stop smoking.

Count the days you are smoke free. You can compare the number of days you last smoked to the present day. Make a point to always know how long you’ve quit smoking. Counting the days of not smoking will help convince you that you have quit for good. Most people will lose their cravings for cigarettes after about 3 days. If you are counting the days right from the start, then you will know when you can look forward to it becoming easier. In the beginning, it may seem like they will last forever. But after a few days, you’ll find that they continue to lessen and that it will get easier.

Tip 6: Be kind to yourself.

It isn’t easy to quit smoking, so be sure to reward yourself for your progress. Take yourself out to your favorite restaurant Buy yourself some flowers. You’ll find that you can now enjoy their scent for the first time in years!

If you have decided to quit smoking, but need help, be sure to visit Lisa Corwin’s Finish Smoking site for more tips: http://www.finish-smoking.com

[tags]stop smoking,quit smoking,stop smoking tips,quit smoking tips[/tags]

How to Stop Smoking

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

If there is one habit that is difficult to break it is smoking. Most smokers give up smoking for only two or three days; some give it up for a week; a few can stay off cigarettes for a month; but most return to cigarettes eventually. Very few stop smoking altogether.

One has to plan to stop smoking. The first step is to list the reasons on a paper as to why you want to stop smoking. Is it because your smoking is adding to the health problems of your loved ones? Is it because you are spending more money on smoking than you can afford? Or is it that your health has been declining? This will give you a reason to stop smoking.

You also need to make a chart of the benefits that can follow once you stop smoking. Your fitness levels will go up. The chances of your suffering from lung cancer or other grave illness will lessen. You will be able to spend more money on your family. Also, your family will not suffer the ills of passive smoking. Hang this chart in a prominent place. It will remind you every day of the need to stop smoking.

Decide on a date on which you would like to stop smoking. You can choose a day that holds a special meaning to you like a birthday or an anniversary. If you want you can choose the “No Smoking Day”. Inform your friends and family members about the quit date. Emotional support and guidance from them can make things easier for you.

Just making the decision is not enough. You need to be psychologically prepared to deal with the withdrawal symptoms. The first few days may be especially taxing and difficult. Avoid situations where the urge for a smoke is almost irresistible.

There are several ways by which you can manage the withdrawal symptoms. You can enlist the help of stop smoking support programs or opt for medication. Emotional and behavioral therapy forms the basis of these support programs. Most of the programs are built to cater to your needs especially. They are extremely effective and boast of a high success rate.

Nicotine replacement therapy is another method which can make quitting easier. It is available in the form of gums, patches and sprays. Every time you feel the urge to smoke you need to slowly chew the gum. On chewing a small amount of nicotine is released into the body and that will calm you.

You can also use Zyban to stop smoking. It is a prescription drug and creates a feeling of false well being similar to the one obtained while smoking. There are few side effects like nausea, insomnia and dry mouth associated with the medicine.

You also need to change your diet. Switch to fresh fruits and green vegetables on a daily basis. Most citrus fruits contain flavonoids that reduce your cravings naturally. Avoid alcohol and coffee. Drink lots of water. It cleanses your system. Join a fitness program if you fear weight gain.

Do not get carried away by emotional outbursts or other frustrations. It may lead to a relapse, something you definitely do not want.

Vincent Rudnick is a leading authority on effective methods to quit smoking. For more information and stop smoking resources visit: http://quitsmokingforevermore.com

[tags]quit smoking,stop smoking,smoking cessation,quit smoking support,best way to quit smoking[/tags]

Effective Ways To Stop Smoking Cigarettes

Friday, February 27th, 2009

A purpose is the eternal condition for success.

Every former smoker can tell you just how hard it is to stop smoking cigarettes. However, there are a range of stop smoking commodities that can assist you on your transition to a smoke-free lifestyle. Though there is no cure for smoking, there are a variety of smoking free videos, quit smoking aid groups and prescription and natural stop smoking aids that will make your endeavour to quit smoking cigarettes much easier for you.

Quit Smoking Tips

A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step. Lao-tzu, Tao-te Ching

You may feel like you will never possess enough commitment power to quit smoking cigarettes. However, trying to stop smoking is just like all things else in the world. It takes practice. Very few individuals stop for good on the principal try. Each time you try to stop, it will get a little easier, especially if you are knowledgeable of some of the best ways to quit smoking.

These days, there are a variety of goods on the market that can assist you to stop smoking cigarettes. There are laser smoking restraint treatments, acupuncture cessation smoking methods, and even a smoking cessation shot. You can also see your physician to obtain a stop smoking antidepressant. These medicines help to relieve stress and to also cut down on your cravings, serving you to stop smoking faster and more permanently.

A person with some doubt but taking action is better than one with no doubt taking no action. Michael E. Angier

If you are interested in nicotine interchange methods to help stop smoking cigarettes, you might consider purchasing the patch or nicotine gum. The patch is just a patch that you apply everyday that delivers a stable amount of nicotine into your system. Rather than dealing with nicotine withdrawal symptoms such as irritation or hunger, the patch allows you to gradually wean yourself off of the drug by gradually reducing the amount of nicotine every week or so. The patch has proven to be one of the best ways to quit smoking.

Nicotine gum is another method that can help you to stop smoking cigarettes. Nicotine gum works greatly like the patch, except that you can control the amount of nicotine you are receiving. Every time you have a cigarette hunger, you can reach out for a new chunk of gum rather than a cigarette. If you strictly follow the directions that go along with these nicotine gum stop smoking products, you will discover that your cravings are drastically reduced. Rather than spending your entire day fighting your cigarette cravings, you can feel a bit more normal while you are trying to stop smoking.

A real decision is measured by the fact that you’ve taken a new action. If there’s no action, you haven’t truly decided. Anthony Robbins

No matter what stop smoking methods you use to stop smoking cigarettes, you can rest assured that it is worth it. You will have much more energy once you boot the routine, and you will also save a lot of cash. All of these benefits pale in comparison, however, to the fitness benefits you will giving yourself and the people around you.

I hope you have gotten some good quit smoking advice from this article and that you are able to use them.

Steve Hill discusses the quit smoking process. Learn the facts before you decide which quit smoking product to buy. Read more no-bull stop smoking articles and information at: quit smoking and smoking cessation

[tags]quit smoking, stop smoking, how to stop smoking, smoking cessation, quit smoking using hypnosis[/tags]

Should You Stop Smoking

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

BENEFITS OF STOPPING TO SMOKE

The benefits that are obtained when stopping to smoke are multiple and immediate, and as the old Chinese aphorism says:

“The man that can conquers itself, is worth more than the one that has conquered a thousand times a thousand armies”

The benefits of stopping to smoke are many, and they embrace many aspects among which we can highlight:

It improves your health, it improves your body aspect, and it improves your economy HOW DOES YOUR HEALTH IMPROVE

Stopping to smoke only 20 minutes, recovers the normal level of the arterial pressure, the heart frequency and the feet and hands temperature.

8 hours after stopping to smoke we begin to have a better lung oxygenation normalizing the monoxide of carbon and oxygen levels.

After 24 hours it diminishes the risk of a sudden death.

After 48 hours you begin to recover the senses of smell and taste

72 hours later, the breathing function is normalized

1 to 3 months later, your physical capacity will be increased, that is to say that you will be less tired

9 months later the risk of infections will decrease and the bronchial drainage will improve

Only 5 YEARS after stopping to smoke, the risk of suffering a lung cancer will be similar to that of the non smokers

10 years later the risk off having mouth cancer, throat cancer, esophagus and bladder will low to one half

Only 15 YEARS after having stopped to smoke you will have the same risk of having a coronary inadequacy that a person that doesn’t smoke.

HOW DOES YOUR BODY ASPECT IMPROVE

Your breath, hair and clothes will stop having tobacco scent.

Your car, house and work place, will stop to have tobacco scent

Your fingernails and hands will stop to have yellow color

Your skin will improve in all senses, it will change the coloration becoming rosier (the skin of the smokers is grizzly), it will improve its smoothness and become more hydrated, and as a consequence of that you will have less wrinkles

HOW WILL YOUR ECONOMY IMPROVE

Obviously this point depends on the quantity of cigarettes that you consume daily, but a person that smokes during 30 years a package per day, does not spend less than 15,000 dollars in cigarettes, plus lighters, matches, ashtrays, burnt clothes, treatments against the asthma, treatments against the allergy, bronchitis and cold treatments, etc.

Some companies prefer to hire non smokers, because the smokers get ill more frequently and they cause more maintenance expenses, since the scents of the cigarettes should be eliminated, and the residuals of the smoke stick in the curtains, carpets and cloths in general.

WHAT DO YOU NEED TO STOP SMOKING

A plan to stop smoking is only successful if it contemplates three aspects:

You should know very well what is it to be tobacco addict, and which are its consequences.

You need a training or help to face the abstinence.

You need to be absolutely motivated when attempting it

If one of these three aspects is not contemplated, the plan has few probabilities of success.

The percentage of people that are able to stop smoking by their own means is of only 5%, reason why it is always convenient that you accept the help of the ones that know how to do it.

Another thing that will increase the success possibilities, is that you supplement your plan with some substitution system as chewing gums, nicotine patches or antidepressants (if the doctor prescribes them)

Keep in mind that the strong desire to smoke will be more intense the first days after leaving the cigarette, but it will diminish every week, and to the fourth month you will hardly feel it. DAMAGES THAT THE CIGARETTES PRODUCE

The nicotine is an addictive drug, and as every drug it generates dependence and it enslaves the smoker for the rest of his life.

We all have to die some day, but half of the smokers die as consequence of his bad habit, and they live about 20 years less than the non smokers.

The tobacco contains almost contains 50 chemical substances recognized as cancer producers.

Almost all the of the lung cancer cases take place among the smokers

The tobacco is related with great part of the digestive, breathing, heart and vascular illnesses.

The lowest sectors in the society, dedicate to the purchase of cigarettes, a money that is indispensable to allow a better life to all their family.

The women older than 35 years that smoke and take birth-control pills, are in the groups of high risk of suffering heart attacks, cerebral spills and clots in the legs veins. As likewise they can suffer spontaneous abortions and to give to light underweight babies.

HOW IS THE SMOKER’S ADICTION

Any fairly learned person knows that smoking is harmful for the health, and the unavoidable question is:

If they know that to smoke harms them, why do they do it?

They do it because they are addicted to the nicotine, that is a very powerful drug that is in the tobacco.

The addiction to the nicotine is as strong as the one to the cocaine and to the heroine.

We can understand then that a person that is addicted, can find serious difficulties to be liberated of his addiction, but.

If everybody knows that to smoke harms, why do they begin smoking?

The reasons why people begin to smoke are varied, to begin we should consider that people get this wrong habit at a very early age, where we are vulnerable in many senses, but the most common reasons are:

The bad example of someone of the family that smokes

To try to look of more age than we have.

To show more security and maturity.

Because all the friends do it and we fear to be different

The publicity it induces it

The sportsmen, actors and people that we admire do it

etc.

There are many the reasons why you can begin, but there’s only one consequence for it: you will join up that human mass that is unable to appropriately take care of their own health, and the health of their dear beings. Vicious people that many times try to stop smoking but can’t do it.

The addict to the cigarette doesn’t like to be considered an addict like the one that consumes cocaine or other drugs, and he usually denies the graveness of what he does, or give a thousand excuses to justify his consumption, since the drug mines his willpower.

Then he says things like:

To smoke is a pleasure

I don’t feel that it harms me

To smoke tranquilizes me

To smoke removes my appetite

I am not a vicious one

I can leave the cigarette when ever I want to

It is not going to harm me

I will leave it later on

Everybody dies of something

etc.

These addicts will spend their money daily in poisoning their health, their family and the environment, and they will follow doing it even when the cigarette has affected seriously different parts of their organism.

We also have to highlight that these physical addicts to the tobacco, also suffer other two addictions:

The psychological addiction to the cigarette

The social addiction to smoke in group

WHY IS IT SO DIFFICULT TO STOP SMOKING?

To stop to smoke is difficult because of the nicotine. The nicotine is as addictive as the worst drugs, and it is a product that is a natural part of the tobacco.

With the course of the time, the smoker becomes physical and psychologically addict to the nicotine, and to be able to stop smoking he needs to be liberated from both dependences.

Every time that you smoke, the nicotine penetrates the lungs and from there it goes to the sanguine torrent that carries it to the whole body, it does not only affect the lungs but also the heart, the circulatory system, the hormonal system, the metabolism, the brain, the maternal milk, the amniotic liquid, the placenta and the babies of the pregnant ones.

As all drugs, the nicotine produces a pleasure sensation, and it is this sensation the one that makes the person want to smoke again, and to need more cigarettes as it affects nervous system (what of course increases the nicotine quantity in blood). Finally, once achieved a high level of nicotine in blood, the smoker needs to smoke to maintain that level.

When a vicious one tries to abandon the drug from which he depends, it suffers what is known as the abstinence syndrome. This syndrome is characterized by diverse physical and psychological symptoms.

Psychologically the smoker feels that he lacks something, it has suffered a strong change in his behavior, and for that reason sometimes to feel better, he needs to substitute the real cigarettes with plastic cigarettes and other things.

Physically, when stopping to smoke they can feel many different symptoms like:

Irritation

Anxiety

Lack of concentration

Depression

Insomnia

Headaches

Fatigue

Appetite increase

Regarding the appetite increase, I need to highlight that it is more a myth that a consequence, since in those cases that the appetite increases, the increase that takes place is really light, and it disappears in little time.

When the symptoms of the abstinence syndrome come, if the person lacks enough motivation and doesn’t practice some kind of anxiety control, he starts smoking again, until he recovers enough nicotine to do not feel those symptoms.

How much is it necessary to smoke so that the abstinence symptoms come?

It is enough with having smoked a significant quantity during some weeks

When will the symptoms be presented?

The symptoms will be presented a few hours after having smoked the last cigarette, and they will reach their intensity pick in 2 to 3 days.

How much time can we have abstinence symptoms?

This depends on each person and of the quantity of nicotine in blood that each person has gotten used, but the physical symptoms usually last from some days to several weeks, while the psychological symptoms can last during several years.

THE PASSIVE SMOKERS

The addicts to the tobacco not only poison and mortgage their own lives, but rather they also produce a serious contamination of the environment, and they put in risk the health of those who surround them.

The mothers that smoke have high possibilities to have children with asthma, especially if they smoke during the pregnancy. And they also have bigger risk of having smoking children, and children with sudden death, otitis, colds and bronchitis.

METHODS TO STOP SMOKING

There are many methods to stop smoking, and among the better known ones I can mention

the acupuncture

the magneto therapy

the hypnosis

the mind control

To which should be added the necessary psychological support to face the abstinence syndrome.

And that can be carried out with:

Psychotherapy

Relaxation and Mind Control

Help to the smoker phone lines

Family Support

Friends

Programs to stop to smoke

And possibly a therapy will be needed for the substitution of the nicotine with nicotine substitutes like:

Nicotine chewing gums (they can be bought without recipe)

Nicotine Patches (they can be bought without recipe)

Nicotine Pills (they can be bought without recipe)

Aerosols (recipe is required)

Inhalers (recipe is required)

When is it the best moment to begin a nicotine substitution therapy?

The best moment to begin a nicotine substitution therapy, is when you begin to stop smoking.

What nicotine substitute is better?

The statistic gathered so far don’t indicate that anyone is better than the other ones, the substitute that you must choose depends on your choice and habits, but it is important to highlight that all present some kind of inconveniences, reason why even when you choose one of those that don’t require recipe, it is always advisable to consult a doctor, who might even prescribe you some antidepressant, besides the nicotine substitute.

But repeating what I already said before, to be able to stop smoking, it is necessary to have knowledge about what the tobacco addiction implies (this web page has been written for it), and it is also needed help and an appropriate motivation.

My CD #7: “Deja de Fumar” can help you with both things.

If you decide to stop smoking it is good that you remember what Mark Twain said:

“To stop to smoke is easy, I have already done it a thousand times”

For that reason, if you want to stop to smoke and you don’t want to go through Mark

Stop Smoking with EFT

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

You probably know someone who has successfully quit smoking with hypnotherapy or hypnosis. But how about EFT? As a hypnotherapist with 5 years’ experience helping others quit, I can see a future when EFT will be the mothod of choice. So why EFT and what is so special about it?
EFT is short for Emotional Freedom Techniques. It involves gently massaging certain acupressure points whilst repeating phrases designed to free you from a bad feeling. In this case, the bad feeling would be the smoking craving. Hence the “Freedom” part of the name.

Whether smoking cravings are purely emotional or not is subject to debate. I have certainly pushed the boundaries of this method for many physical conditions, and as a trained biochemist, I would seriously challenge anyone to define the dividing line between the emotional and the physical. As a matter of fact, many acupuncturists recommend acupuncture to allow the body to rebalance itself after quitting smoking. And the acupressure points that we use in EFT are the endpoints of the main acupuncture meridians. Only instead of using needles, we stimulate these points by a tapping sort of massage. We tap, usually with two fingers, on the area, thereby stimulating these meridians.

So what is different about the effect of having EFT from the effect of having acupuncture? Well, with EFT, your mind is asked to bring up a bad emotional state so that the acupressure will release you from that bad emotion. It is like the mind is the office cleaner, who goes into the office unobtrusively and takes out the rubbish/garbage for the council/municipality cleaners to take away. These workers in turn come and remove the refuse and it is no longer in your office. Your office is then clean.

And why use EFT instead of hypnotherapy? Because the effect of helping your physical body as well as your mind makes for a very strong combination. Although you can have EFT in hypnosis, this entails the practitioner speaking at a slower rate than using standalone EFT. With standalone EFT, because the practitioner can carry out the treatment at a much faster pace, they can get more done in the same amount of time. In other words, the treatment with EFT reaches further and goes deeper.
I estimate that within the next five years, EFT will have replaced hypnotherapy as the method of choice for quitting smoking. And when ex-smokers-to-be ask for a recommendation to help them stop, they will be asking for a good EFT Practitioner. I look forward to that day.

My name is Suzanne Zacharia and I am committed to spreading the word about health options. I believe that the more and better options one has, the more choice there is. A virus caught along with 5 other students at university at the end of 1986, along with medical negligence, meant that I got smokers lung at a relatively young age. In desperation for help with my symptoms and quality of life, I turned to complementary therapy, and this is the 10th year I have outlived one doctor’s prognosis.
I am now a complementary therapist, author and trainer specialising in “energy” therapy. My company is called New Age London, more details via the links below.

http://www.NewAgeLondon.com

http://www.EFTLondon.co.uk

http://www.EFTCourse.co.uk

[tags]stop smoking,london,EFT,hypnotherapy,hypnosis,quit smoking,smoking,hypnotherapist,W1,UK,acupuncture[/tags]

Stop Smoking - This Works for Three out of Four Smokers Part 2

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

Quitting Smoking

Your resistance is diminished after a couple of drinks - so ask your drinking friends not to offer you cigarettes, and try staying away from alcohol for a week or two.

Cigarettes help us to relax - cigarettes are a stimulant, and it may feel like they help you to relax, because they satisfy the craving. Learn to relax properly and do some self-hypnosis on yourself by listening to a stop smoking CD. Sit down somewhere comfortable, and tense, then relax your muscles, and breathe deeply.

You love the first cigarette of the day, with your tea or coffee - at these times gargle with mouthwash and clean your teeth. Have a glass of fruit juice when you wake up, and notice the fresh feeling in your mouth.

Stopping Smoking - Comparison of the Different Technique

1. There are specialist smokers’ clinics, and support groups, which can improve your chances of stopping smoking. These clinics and groups generally run over a period of about six weeks, and take you through the different stages of smoking cessation.

2. Hypnotherapy helps a large number of smokers to quit - it is one of the most effective ways to stop smoking. In 2005, a study of 72,000 smokers from Europe and the US, reported in the Journal of Applied Psychology, showed that hypnosis came top as the most effective therapy in helping people to stop.

Hypnotherapy takes away the urge to smoke - instead of making you feel you are giving something up.

Hypnotherapists generally have a success rate of 75% with smokers who seek treatment - often in a single session of 90 minutes.

Hypnotherapy is now very common, and is readily accepted. If you approach this treatment with a genuine desire to stop, the programme will work for you.

We all know consciously that we should stop smoking, and by using visualisation, post hypnotic suggestions, hypnotherapy and a CD of the session - it helps take away the need to smoke, and most people only need to visit us once.

3. Nicotine replacement therapy, such as patches, gum, nasal sprays or inhalators, used properly, can double your chance of stopping smoking. The idea is that replacing nicotine in the body, will allow the smoker to be weaned off cigarettes.

4. Zyban - 2 months course. This works on the brain to help break the addiction. It is in tablet form, and is not suitable for people who suffer from, or have ever suffered from fits. You should always go to your doctor and ask about this treatment.

5. Acupuncture is also a technique widely used to help people stop smoking - it can be very effective.

6. Nutritional supplements help support the system and can make quitting cigarettes easier. Take 1,000 mg of vitamin C and 100mcg of chromium picolinate each day.

If you feel you are dependant on nicotine and want to stop smoking, you can use a variety of approaches and strategies, however we urge you to consider hypnotherapy - as it’s a very safe, relaxing, and powerful approach.

To learn more about stop smoking hypnotherapy please visit the HypnoSpot web site: http://www.HypnoSpot.co.uk

[tags]stop smoking, hypnotherapy, smoking cessation, hypnotherapy plymouth, hypnotherapy devon[/tags]

Stop Smoking Nine Quitting Techniques You May Not Have Tried Yet

Sunday, February 15th, 2009

Nicotine is a major threat to your health, along with other substances in tobacco smoke and ingredients in tar and gases associated with smoking. And it doesn’t matter what they say about low-tar, low-nicotine and ’safe’ cigarettes. They are all detrimental to your health. ‘There is no such thing as a safe cigarette’, America’s Surgeon General Julius B Richmond said. The main thing is to stop smoking altogether, although if giving up gradually helps you accomplish this aim, then fine, that’s the way to go.

To Help You Stop Smoking Altogether or Significantly Cut Your Intake

* Natural cures to help you stop smoking include: calamus (chew the root to destroy desire for nicotine); chamomile (take three to six times a day to help you relax).

* Smoke only half of each cigarette and make a promise to yourself to leave the other half untouched for a definite period.

* Each day, postpone your first cigarette by half an hour or so until there’s no time left in the day to light up!

* Have a charity box where you donate a dollar for each cigarette you smoke.

* Don’t stock up on cigarettes. Buy just one packet at a time and wait until it is finished before buying more.

* Try chewing gum instead of smoking.

* Buy something nice for yourself for every day or week you go without cigarettes.

* Learn relaxation techniques. This is especially recommended for anyone who smokes to relieve tension.

* Take saunas and steam baths to help detoxify the body.

Avril Harper is a researcher and writer on numerous health topics CURRENT HEALTH ARTICLES. Check out other current health articles on yoga, cosmetic surgery, staying young. http://www.current-health-articles.blogspot.com

[tags]stop smoking, smoking, nicotine, cigarettes, quit, quit smoking, habit[/tags]

Stop Smoking Now!

Friday, February 13th, 2009

My wife just walked by and said, “What are you doing?”

I said, “I’m writing an article on smoking. I’m against it!”

Smoking is a habit that is hard to break. Some years ago I stood by with a man’s son and watched his father gasp for air as he passed on to the great beyond. He had quit smoking, but too late. His vital capacity was too far gone.

Vital Capacity is determined by measuring the amount of air you take in with each breath. In the test you take a deep breath and then blow it out into a device that tells your doctor the volume of air dispelled. The more you smoke, the lower your vital capacity. This limits your activity when your lungs no longer expand enough to take in sufficient vital oxygen from the air that has only about 19% to begin with. That’s why my friend’s father was breathing pure oxygen in the hospital. Still, he could not get enough oxygen to save his life. We had said our goodbyes to a good father and a good friend.

Cigarette smokers double their risk of heart attack. They are at even more risk from sudden cardiac death. Stroke kills more young smokers than nonsmokers.

The American Cancer Society said some years back that when you stop smoking:

Within 15 minutes: Blood pressure, pulse rate, and body temperature of hands and feet return to normal.

Within 8 hours: Carbon monoxide level drop to normal and oxygen level increase to normal. (Carbon monoxide is a deadly poison.)

Within 24 hours: Heart attack risk decreases. Now isn’t that good to know? You will be able to say, “I quit smoking yesterday and I’m probably not going to have a heart attack today.”

Within 48 hours: Nerve endings start regrowing and your ability to smell and taste increases. Did you know that cigarette smoking stops nerve growth? Neither did I.

Within 2 weeks to 3 months : Circulation improves, walking is easier and LUNG FUNCTION increases up to 30%. Now, that is a great benefit, isn’t it?

Within 1 to 9 months: Coughing, sinus congestion, fatigue, and shortness of breath decrease. Cilia regrow in the lungs with increased ability to handle mucus, clean the lungs, and reduce infection. It takes a while if you’ve been smoking a long time, but the relief must be wonderful. My friends that have quit say it certainly is.

Within 1 year: Excess risk of heart disease is half that of a smoker. That’s good.

Within 5 years: Lung cancer death rate of a FORMER one-pack-a-day smoker decreases almost one-half. (Stoke risk is reduced to that of a nonsmoker after 5-15 years.) Risk of cancer of the mouth, throat, and esophagus is half that of smokers. I’ve had friends that had to speak with a device or from thier stomach after cancer surgery on their throat and esophagus. It’s very sad to see that in light of that it could have been prevented. Some comunities have stopped chewing tobacco companies from giving chewing tobacco away at rodeos where it easily can get into the hands of children. Can you think of anything worse than mouth cancer?

Within 10 years: The lung cancer death rate is the same as nonsmokers. Precancerous cells are replaced. Risk of death from cancer of the mouth, throat, esophagus, bladder, kidney and pancreas decrease. Did you get that? Precancerous cells are replaced. With good cells, I presume.

Within 15 years: Risk of coronary heart disease is that of a nonsmoker. So now you are back to normal.

The other night I saw a young woman on television who said that she stopped smoking for financial reasons.

Think about it.

If you put $600 dollars each year into a stock mutual fund, annuity, or other financial instrument that generates 5% annually, you will have over TWENTY GRAND after 20 years. That’s if you add it in one chunk each year. The $600 figure assumes that you are spending $50 each month on cigarettes. I know that many are spending a lot more.You will have more if you invest $50 monthly rather than saving until you get $600 at the end of the year.

Okay! I know human nature. You won’t save the money.

YOU WILL SAVE YOUR NECK!

I read on the internet that Phillip Morris