By: Leon Jay
There are many urban myths surrounding the difficulties involved in stopping smoking. These myths contribute to the anxiety and subsequent delay in seeking help to quit. The problem is further exacerbated by a poor understanding of the real basis of the addiction and the frenzied marketing of inappropriate tools to help the smoker stop. Smoking and Stop Smoking are two multi-billion industries that benefit from hyping the difficulty of quitting. Here we discuss some of the most common myths and misunderstandings. We aim to offer a more useful in depth understanding of the problem and suggest a direction for a successful solution.
Myth 1: Nicotine Is Highly Addictive
Nicotine is a mildly addictive substance, and any withdrawal symptoms are nothing more than a mild anxiety that lasts for about four days. If nicotine was highly addictive, non-smoking family members of smokers would also suffer strong withdrawal symptoms. They too inhale enough nicotine passively to have an addictive effect, yet they are rarely aware of any withdrawal symptoms when they move to a non-smoking environment. This is because they have no emotional association to smoking.
Similarly people who work in smoky places have levels of nicotine in their blood high enough to cause an addiction, but they don't need to smoke when they get home, because they have no mental association with smoking relieving the mild nicotine-induced symptoms. The symptoms often referred to as nicotine withdrawal symptoms are associated with levels of anxiety and fear that the addictive behavior is used to cover. When the cover is removed the underlying anxiety is exposed. The smoking has been masking the underlying anxiety.
Myth 2: Habits Are Hard To Break
If you walked your dog every day along the same route, you might call it a habit. Perhaps one day the road is closed, as they are demolishing a house down the street. Do you find it difficult to walk a different route or do you keep going the same way despite the life threatening danger to both you and your dog? After all it is habit. Most people would just turn another way and carry on with their walk, without much lingering annoyance or concern.In a short time a new habit would form of taking their new route.
Similarly habit may make you reach for a cigarette with your coffee in the morning, but that is all it is, just habit. If you have stopped and no longer want a cigarette, it doesn't cross your mind to force one upon yourself. Habits are there to make life easier. They allow your mind to focus on what's important or new without becoming cluttered and confused. If a routine has no emotional charge then it is easily changed. It is only the emotional charge associated with a habit that keeps us from letting it go, no matter what the habit. Once the reasons the habit was formed are removed then there is no reason to continue it any longer and the habit will fade and be easily replaced at will.
Myth 3: Nicotine Withdrawal Is Usually Long And Painful
The 'withdrawal symptoms' you experience when you try to give up smoking are exactly the same physical and emotional symptoms as fear and anxiety: sweating, restlessness, irritability, insomnia and nervousness. They are the same symptoms because they are the same problem. It is simply another smoking lie that being smoke free needs to be mentally and physically painful.
True nicotine withdrawals simply put - a mild anxiety; the rest is an exaggeration by the smokers mind, fuelled by urban myth. This artificial anxiety induced by smoking, will last only 4 days if left to its own devices and if it is not re -triggered by smoking another cigarette. The reason people start again after quitting, is the subconscious memory that smoking once seemed to relieve anxiety, an illusion created by smoking in the first place. Any longer lasting symptoms of anxiety and fear are unrelated to the actual nicotine withdrawal, and are based on the underlying mental and emotional associations, which no amount of nicotine can alter.
Myth 4: Smoking Isn't As Harmful As The Media Makes Out
The Facts:
Your baby - 40 more likely to die in the first month after birth; 50 increase in respiratory infections, asthma & glue ear; 17 less likely to start smoking if parents don't.
Your children’s future - about 17 percent of lung cancer cases in non-smokers could be attributed to exposure to second hand smoke as children. An estimated 3,000 lung cancer deaths and 35,000 coronary heart disease deaths occur annually among adult non-smokers in the United States as a result of exposure to second hand smoke.
Your health - Smoking kills more Americans than alcohol, drug abuse, homicide , suicide, car accidents, fires and AIDS combined. Every eight seconds, someone dies from tobacco use.
Financial cost - at one 20 pack a day costing $10, in 1 year you pay $3,650 year, or $48,000 including unearned interest over 10 years. Add to this lost productivity and earnings at work (for you and your partner and other affected family members) due to smoking related illnesses and associated medical costs and your end bill is much steeper.
Medical costs - In the US, direct medical costs are about $16 BILLION each year, with an additional $37 billion in indirect costs related to death, disability, and premature death.
Accidents - smoking while driving increases your risk of car accidents.
House fires - Smoking is the major cause of fires in the United States. One-third of all apartment and hotel fires are caused by smoking and 17 percent of house fires are caused by smoking, resulting in 4,000 injuries and 1,500 deaths each year.
While there are a small percentage of people who smoke for many years and live a long and relatively healthy life, the vast majority do experience negative consequences both to themselves, to their family, socially, economically and environmentally. The odds are heavily stacked against you and your loved ones escaping undamaged - it's like playing Russian roulette with your family only there are five bullets in the six chambers instead of only one. You've got to ask - is this a risk I'm willing to take with my life? Is this a risk I'm willing to take with my family's life?
If you know for certain there was a 80 of your thoughts are subconscious and 90% are the same thoughts you had yesterday. So no matter how hard you try to think you way out of smoking there is a huge amount of thoughts and feelings you don't have any conscious control over. These thoughts are like dragging a dead weight up a steep hill behind you. Eventually you become tired and the weight drags you back down again. Using will power is in effect setting up an internal civil war where you are always the loser.
Nicotine replacement does not work as nicotine is not the thing you are primarily addicted to. Nicotine is only mildly addictive and the withdrawal symptoms wear off over about 4 days. So using nicotine replacement is only useful to the companies that manufacture these products. If this were really the case you would only need to cut down one cigarette a day until you no longer smoked. In many cases of light smokers they actually increase the level of nicotine in their body by using patches.
Hypnotic suggestion alone does not work often as a long term strategy. Hypnotic suggestions adds a new layer of unconscious thought patterns down in the mind, but does not eliminate the underlying root caused of the addictive behavior. Hypnosis can be a very powerful adjunct to a successful stop smoking program, but is not so effective as a stand alone technique.
What does work?
Only a technique that deals with the root causes of your addictive behavior will be completely successful in helping you give up smoking easily and permanently. A program has to have these elements to help even the most serious long term smoker quit:
• Willing participation by smoker
• Respectful honest attitude to smoking
• Intellectual understanding of the lies and myths about smoking
• Symptom relief during nicotine withdrawal
• Built in stress relief techniques
• Systematic exploration of emotional associations to smoking
• A simple appropriate technique to permanently change thoughts, feelings and beliefs that hold the smoking addiction in place changing the subconscious programming
This combination of elements allows you to approach the change process comfortably and deal with all the various aspects of this addiction until you are ready to quit without strain. Perhaps the biggest myth amongst smokers is 'I'll stop tomorrow'. As Henry Wight once said 'If you are ultimately going to do something important that will make a real difference… do it NOW'
Article Source: http://www.articlerich.com
Leon Jay is an enthusiastic advocate of EFT. He was first exposed to EFT in Cornwall, England where he studied to become an Advanced Trainer. Leon is an EFT Practitioner & Instructor based in New Zealand, where he lives with his wife & young daughter. Visit Leon’s website now for your FREE step-by-step EFT Complete Guide & Manual and 7-part Success Course.
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