I hope you've managed to stop for nearly a week now.
As the saying goes, it's easy to give up smoking – I've done it lots of times.
Actually I think I did it three times before the definitive one. I played tricks on myself. One time, it was not yet obligatory but I could see the movement at work was in that direction, it was increasingly frowned on (in the same institution where I can remember earlier years a meeting was your traditional 'Smoke-filled room' - not literally because the ventilation was good, however people including the high-ups smoked smoked freely, some even famous for it) I decided, maybe following moving into a new office, I will not smoke in this office. And somehow that was not difficult to hold to as long as I was in the office. And smoked in the lunch hour out of doors. And sometimes during working hours I would sneak out for a smoke outside. People did not fail to notice. In many places you still see this, outside shops or offices one or a group of diehard smokers smoking because it is not allowed inside.Didn't affect my smoking at home.
Another technique I used we as using was using nicotine tablets to compensate for the withdrawal,and some programme of phasing out. Was pretty unpleasant really, but I stopped – for some months. Relation of mine went on a course of some kind of group therapy, this was totally successful and he has given up for years without relapse, mind you reinforced by the fact of having a constant cardiac health risk that makes itself felt sometimes.So if there is a technique like that that works for you by all means use it.But I feel also that the techniques can distract from the essential, are you can blame the techniques if it doesn't work, the technique has failed, not you. Thus I finally decided essentially it is like phinds says,
Never mind techniques the, real point is YOU JUST GOTTA STOP! AND STAY STOPPED! So, reinforced by some health things, e.g. I was not going to be able I would be useless to have a dental transplant without stopping, then there were other pathologies I didn't even know about, I just stopped. As everybody says, the first week or 10 days is the hardest, that is first base, and you are not longer thinking about it all the time. First month another stage. But you have to continue that you have to know that even long term YOU ARE ALWAYS AT RISK of a relapse. The thought has not a few times come to me 'a cigar would be nice and just one wouldn't do any harm'.
. But I know it wouldn't stop there.I've dealt with this, among other ways, by imagining it. Then I realize I wouldn't enjoy the first one much,Most people don't enjoy their first cigarette, smoking is a learnt thing. I would have to smoke three or 4 to start enjoying it again, and then I would be hooked.