Stop Smoking Atlanta GA

Simply wanting to stop smoking is a large part of the battle to succeeding. Often knowing that cigarettes are destroying your health is not enough incentive. Read this article to learn more about stopping smoking.

Local Companies

Covenant Community Inc
(404) 881-4660
623 Spring Street NW
Atlanta, GA
Saint Jude's Recovery Center Inc
404-874-2353
139 Renaissance Parkway NE
Atlanta, GA
Grady Health System
(404) 616-3970
48-50 Coca Cola Place SE
Atlanta, GA
Tangu Inc
404-523-4599
159 Forsyth Street SW
Atlanta, GA
New Start Drug Treatment Center
(404) 370-1508
30 Warren Street SE
Atlanta, GA
Southside Medical Center Southside
(404) 627-1385
2685 Metropolitan Parkway Suite C
Atlanta, GA
Alliance Recovery Center
(404) 377-7669
209 Swanton Way Suite B
Decatur, GA
DeKalb Addiction Clinic
(404) 508-6430
455 Winn Way
Decatur, GA
Dekalb Community Service Board
404-294-0499
450 Winn Way
Decatur, GA
Georgia Therapy Associates Inc
(404) 349-6655
2797 Campbellton Road Suite C-3
Atlanta, GA

 

Simply wanting to stop smoking is a large part of the battle to succeeding. Often knowing that cigarettes are destroying your health is not enough incentive. You don't want to think about all the health problems that smoking can cause.

After all, between the physical addiction to nicotine and the psychological addiction, the whole person, mind and body, is craving the next cigarette. With that strong pull encouraging you to the next smoke, the thought of getting cancer, having a heart attack, or hurting your unborn baby might not be enough to make you decide to stop smoking.

That your health doesn't deteriorate with the first cigarette encourages you to believe that smoking is not dangerous. Tobacco takes twenty to fifty years to damage your body with cancer or heart disease.

For a young person who is encouraged to start smoking at fifteen or seventeen that seems like a lifetime away. The sad thing is, by the time the damage is done it can be too late to quit smoking. They can end up dead of a heart attack at forty-five or dying of lung cancer at fifty.

How does one succeed in stopping the mind and body from continuing this addiction? You must deal with the body and the mind separately but at the same time. In other words, deal with the physical addiction with one technique and the psychological addiction with another technique all at the same time.

It's actually easier to deal with the physical addiction. There are patches, pills, and gums that you can use if you need them. Your doctor will be able to help you in this area by recommending products that can help your body lose the desire for a cigarette.

The psychological addiction is more complicated to overcome. Everyone would rather experience pleasure than pain, and trying to stop smoking will produce pain. To the smoker, cigarettes produce pleasure.

Some smoke to have something to do, or because they believe it will calm their nerves. They might associate smoking with a pleasurable experience, such as smoking with friends at the bar or while they play poker. They aren't smoking because they feel the need for the nicotine, but because they associate smoking with a good time.

So how does one overcome the psychological addiction? Some professionals suggest filling up the time you would normally be smoking with some other activity. The activity needs to be a positive one or it won't work.

Have the activities planned out. Know exactly what you are going to do in place of smoking and be prepared for it.

Include times of regular exercise, meditation and breathing exercises. Believe you can stop smoking and surround yourself with people who will encourage you to succeed.

Most importantly, get rid of the idea that life isn't worth living without cigarettes. That thought must not be allowed. Change that thought to "life is worth living without cigarettes." Instead of thinking that cigarettes are good, replace the thought with something like "cigarettes are killing me."

By changing your thoughts about cigarettes from positive to negative you will change your beliefs about them. When your beliefs change, then you lose the psychological craving for them and it's easier to stop smoking.

About the Author:

Carol Stack enjoys writing. She lives with her husband, children, and various dogs and cats in the United States. She has a web site dedicated to her grandmother who smoked for over 45 years before quitting. The site is located at http://www.onlinestopsmokingtips.com where she encourages people who want to stop smoking.






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Featured Local Company

Covenant Community Inc

(404) 881-4660
623 Spring Street NW
Atlanta, GA


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