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Tell Us Your Story.  Tell Us Your WHY!

Tell Us Your Story. Tell Us Your WHY!

Inspire others with your quit story!

 
My quit Started by Robert M Thursday, 17 June 2021 0 Replies
My Quit Started by Bob M Friday, 15 November 2019 0 Replies
View all discussions Displaying 2 of 2 discussions

Today I choose to stay quit by reading and joining the people here in day by day sharing and joining groups to continue fellowshipping in unity to nope one day at a time. I need all of you to stay nope and to keep believing that if you will stay nope this day only so will I because there is strength in numbers. That is my day by day quit story today. People needing others who nope just for today no matter what life throws in this day only we will stay NOPE together. One moment at a time. One... Show more

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Tell Us Your Story.  Tell Us Your WHY!
My quit

quit because I didn’t want to die from lung cancer as so many of my family did. I ignored all those possibilities for over 50 years but I finally had to admit to all the horrible losses I had suffered because I smoked. Lost opportunities in every way. Hurting the respiratory health of others, losing enough money to fund a huge retirement account (almost a million) and risking the tragedy of suicide. I did get cancer, but after a fun surgery experience, thank God I survived. Smoking is gone,...

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My why

Health is my main reason to quit.
At 38, I am getting closer and closer to the age my aunt had her first stroke. Which led to several other ones, then breast cancer, skin cancer and her death. It took a long time and her life was not at all pretty for at least 5 years. As hard as it was on her, her children and family had their own pains with it.
My father in law. Complications from smoking and leukemia. His first grandson (my boy) was 3 months old when he died.
My neighbour had face...
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Tell Us Your Story.  Tell Us Your WHY!
My Quit

I had chest pain for several months and finally went to a doctor. He put me in the hospital and they found I had a 91% blocked artery to my heart. They put a stent in and when I got out of the hospital the next day I never lit up again. When I quit, I was smoking 3 packs of cigarettes a day. Advice Muster up all the will power you have and use it. I think one of the best things you can do is take note of what makes you crave the most. No matter if its a place or something you do, take note of...

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Hopefully all of you who are taking the time to thoughtfully share your “Whys” have put at least this much effort and detail into your profiles under “about me”. Once people learn to navigate this site they will usually go there to see more about you when they a comment or question. Glad you are all here. 
     My Whys for quitting:   1. I had promised my family I would and I was long overdue. 2.  After 57 years of smoking, I was suddenly  developing that smokers raspy cough which really sounded like I...
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WHY...My Quit in my early days were pure hell...
Coughing up all that yucky mucus,
Full of Craves, headaches, sweats, Sleep deprevation. Stress. etc ..
Romancing the thought of just one puff constantly.
Triggers where ever smoking was involved on a daily basis.
All past tense...
So if there is anyone who is in the early stage of recovery from this addiction, hang in there, only time and abstinence from that first puff will keep you in balance from starting day one over..
It took me a very long...
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From my Q Profile:

About Me:
Okay, so after 71 days I thinks its about time that I write something here.

I`m 52 years old male, married to my college sweetheart. I have two grown up kids and a 3 year old puggle....The puggle is like our youngest child and he`s pretty spoiled.

I`ve tried quitting a million times. The last time was just under 100 days....So far I`ve made it to 71 days by taking it one day at a time....It`s really that simple....Just don`t smoke today (or this hour, minute,...
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My Whys for starting are not uncommon.  Although to date (Sun., 20 Oct. 2019), there remains one for which I still self-castigate.  This one I'll need to keep an eye on and keep under subjection for the rest of my life.

My Whys are a deep well.  I've yet to reach the bottom.  Primarily, I Quit and *finally remain* Quit, because it was/is the right thing to do.

When I was maybe 30-something, my Dad started asking me when I was going to Quit.  The response was always, 'When you do.'  We both knew we...
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Nick H and 63 others have joined the group Tell Us Your Story. Tell Us Your WHY! 5 years ago

I was 46 years old when I quit, and smoked for 37 years before I quit. Both my parents smoked, while she was pregnant my mom was actually told by her freaking DOCTOR to have "a cig or 2 to relax you" (!) Anyway, I got pneumonia all the time as a baby and at 3 years old I was diagnosed with asthma. Before I had an inhaler, my parents used to sit me up in the big recliner downstairs and make me drink cups of strong black coffee whenever I had an attack. They smoked in the house, in the car,... Show more

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I posted this on the Q in February 2018

My word is my bond Why am I still quit? Well because I love it! I love the freedom! But also because my word is my bondMy father always told me that “someone can take away everything from you, home, car, property, even your reputation through slander, but they cannot take away your word”. My word is my sacred bond. I pledge every night and I pledge again every morning to not smoke. My pledge is my word, it is my contract with myself and everyone here on the...
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I suffer from bipolar disorder and anxiety disorder, and I
started smoking in my teens as a way to “relieve stress.” I was hooked from
that first rush of dopamine into my brain, and I smoked between 1-2 packs a day
for 10 years. In 2003, I was desperate to rid myself of a habit that was making
me sick. (In my 20s, I already had a horrible smoker’s cough, and I had an
ulcer in my nose that wouldn’t heal.) I heard a commercial for a smoking
cessation hotline, and when I called they referred me...
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I smoked about a pack a day for over 30 years. I was getting very tired of being chained to cigarettes..my voice was starting to go, and I was developing a "smokers cough". I was approaching age 50, and decided I was going to be quit at age 50. A mandatory smoking cessation class, chantix, and alot of determination started it, at the smoking cessation class, a fellow classmate told us all about the Q, I was new at using computers, but I logged on, and have never left!! Quitting smoking was the best... Show more

I smoked for 40 years primarily because I didn’t think I could quit, I had a couple of half-ass quits early in my smoking career, but “I think I’ll have just one” ended those quits.

My best friend, Nancy, who happened to be my next door neighbor for 28 years, decided she was going to quit smoking and used Chantix to help her quit,  As I watched her remain smoke-free day after day the seed was planted that if Nancy could quit smoking, I could quit smoking. So, two months after Nancy quit...
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My why?
Well it may be a little different than some. Where I COULD breathe just fine. No coughing and I could afford them if I WANTED to. My WHY hit me in the head with a hammer one January night, standing in my front door way, freezing my ass off. Oh and my two smoker fingers that were hanging out the door in the elements. 
This hammer hit me and said, “You’ve been standing here shaking like a rattlesnake for the 20th time day.” WHY?! 
That made me do math. SOB I hate math. I added up the hours...
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You want to know why I hung up this habit for good? The reason that I can no longer smoke has to do with breathing...yes it's something we all do constantly even while sleeping. When you struggle to breathe it's no fun all. I used to smoke heavily and thought I could not give up the habit until I traded it for an oxygen tank. Yup that's me someone who can't go out without portable air. You don't want to land up like me as it does change your routine habit. Ask any of us who knows what it feels... Show more

I said this probably hundreds of times on the Q, I believe in all things you need to have a reason to do it if you plan on doing it well. And when you forget and want to do something different you have to ask “has my WHY changed?”. Mine hasn’t.

Like many others I started smoking at a young age, too young. I had no issues with smoking until I was in my 30’s, then the cough started. Into my 40’s the cough got progressively worse until I couldn’t even have a good belly laugh without coughing up a...
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