Quit Smoking
Home - Quit Smoking

Smoke Away
Quit Smoking
With Smoke Away

Sponsor

HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
QUIT SMOKING INFO
Quitting Articles/Info
Quit Smoking FAQ
Methods for Quitting
Submit Your Method
In the News
Search This Site

CHAT, BBS, DIARIES
Message Board
QuitSmokingChat.com
QuitSmokingDiaries.com

PRODUCTS
View Shopping CartView Shopping Cart
Checkout NowCheckout Now

Check Order Status

Product FAQ
Gift Certificates

All Products
Audio Tapes/CDs
Bargains
Books/Magazines
Chantix
Cigarette Modification
Cigarette Substitutes
Dental/Breath/Oral Care
Educational/Teaching
Electronic/Computer
Exercise and Fitness
Hypnosis
Nicotine Cotinine Test

Nicotine Lozenges
Nicotine Patches
Nicotine Gum
No Smoking Signs
Nutrition/Herbal
Reward Yourself!
Smoke/Odor Removal
Smokeless Tobacco
Thought Changing
T-Shirts
Video Tapes/DVDs
Weight Loss

Zyban

Order Form/Help
Ordering/Shipping FAQ
International Shipping
Currency Conversion
Where Can We Ship?
Policies


MAILING LIST
Previous Issues
Get on Our List!
Subscribe Free to
The Quit Smoking Report
First name:

Email address:
FUN STUFF
Quit Smoking Cartoons
Top 10 List
i-quit-smoking.com email

AFFILIATE PROGRAM
Program Info
Sign Up Free

QUITSMOKING.COM
Contact Us
What's New?
SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend
Make Us Your Homepage

Policies

For the Media


E-Z Quit Artificial Cigarette
Quit Smoking With the
E-Z Quit Artificial Cigarette

Proudly Serving The
Internet Since
June, 1997


Link Partners:

How to Quit Smoking
Stop Smoking
Teeth And Gums
Sanibel Island
Submit URL
Smoke Away

 

Hidden Meanings Behind "Why Smoke?" and "Why Quit?"

© Copyright 2001 Fred H. Kelley
Email: fredk@quitsmoking.com
Web: http://www.quitsmoking.com
Phone: 770-346-9222
Fax: 770-475-5007
Mail: 3675 Glennvale Ct
Cumming, GA 30041

See the end of this report for reprint information.

High school and college literature classes are preoccupied with 
the hidden meaning behind the words on the page. Much of the 
students' time is spent examining what meaning the author was 
really intending to convey with the story. In fiction, the story 
is never what it seems.

In our own lives, our motivations and reasons for what we do are 
not always what they seem. At first glance, why we do things may 
seem simple. But upon closer examination, our motivations often 
have hidden purposes and agendas, driven by events and feelings 
in our lives. Often we are totally unaware of these forces that 
shape our daily decisions.

The decision to quit smoking is propelled or impeded by two 
basic questions: "why smoke?" and "why quit?" Answer these 
questions honestly and you'll make great progress toward 
quitting. Let's examine each in turn.

WHY SMOKE?

Do you smoke today for the same reason you smoked five years 
ago, or when you first started smoking? Chances are good that 
you started smoking for reasons totally different than why you smoke 
now. You started smoking to be cool, or to rebel or to fit in or 
just because you were curious. Now you would probably say that 
you smoke to relax or to think clearly or because you are 
addicted and can't stop.

Take a long hard look at why you smoke NOW. You probably haven't 
even thought about this. Dig very deep. Think. Examine your 
emotions as you imagine yourself craving a cigarette and 
lighting up. What "made you do it?"

Smoking is easier than quitting. Staying where we are is much 
easier and more comfortable than working on ourselves and moving 
to a different place. It's hard. It hurts. It takes work. It 
requires admitting painful things to ourselves.

Quitting smoking means admitting that you have been wrong all 
the years that you smoked. Quitting means admitting that you 
harmed yourself. Quitting means that you aren't cool just 
because you smoke. Quitting means that your parents were right. 
Quitting means that your husband/wife/kids/co-workers/society 
was right. Quitting means you wasted THOUSANDS of dollars on 
cigarettes and insurance. Quitting means that you'll have to 
learn how to relax naturally. Quitting means losing a "friend." 
Quitting means giving up your security blanket.

These are some of the hidden meanings behind quitting. Many are 
painful. They force you to admit you are wrong or are not 
superman. Most people hate to admit they have weakness. But 
admitting weakness might be called the first step in most any 
12-step addiction recovery program.

Examine why you smoke and you may find that you smoke not to get 
something, but instead to avoid or flee from something. This 
type of fear-motivated action (or inaction) is almost always 
detrimental to health and happiness. Begin to focus on desire-
motivated action

This leads us to:

WHY QUIT?

The reasons for quitting are voluminous: save money, improve 
your health, cut your risk of heart disease, lung cancer, and 
numerous other diseases, smell better, look younger, clean 
teeth, nice breath, live longer, etc., etc.

Make sure you know exactly what you want to get out of quitting. 
If cutting your risk of lung cancer is hard to visualize, then 
focus on something more concrete such as the money you can save. 
See the hundreds of dollars you'll save stacking up in a big 
bank vault. See bright clean teeth when you smile. These reasons 
for quitting should be YOUR reasons for quitting. They should 
pull you to them like a magnet. Find the magnets that motivate 
you the most.

One word of warning: Avoid the flipside of the question "why 
quit?" The flipside is not the question "why smoke?" Instead, it 
is "why NOT quit?" This is a dangerous question because it leads 
you down the easy path. Ask yourself "why not quit" and you'll 
likely answer, "because I can't do it," or "because withdrawal 
makes me crazy," or "because I can't relax without it," or 
"because I'm still young," or "because smoking isn't that bad 
for me," or "because I can quit anytime I want," or "because I 
only smoke a few," or "because I failed to quit before." These 
are dead-end answers that will never lead you out of the habit. 
They are lazy, defeatist, powerless answers. They are answers 
that allow you to put off quitting until the tomorrow that never 
comes.

To quit, you must take back control of your life from 
cigarettes. Take responsibility for your own health and 
happiness. It is you who puts the cigarettes in your mouth, and 
it is you who can take them out.

Ask yourself "why quit" and "why smoke" so that you can truly 
understand why you do what you do. Then begin to pursue the 
positive reasons that will help you to quit smoking, ON PURPOSE.


Permission to reprint or reproduce this article is granted as long as the following conditions are met:

  1. No changes are made to the article without permission of the author.
  2. Whenever possible, please notify the author of any reprints;
  3. The following byline must be included with the article:
** Article © Copyright Fred Kelley of QuitSmoking.com. Visit the web site at
http://www.quitsmoking.com for information and products designed to help you quit smoking.

 

Copy the HTML code for the resource information here:

 

Other articles are available for reprinting. Click Here.



Quit Smoking Info | Products | Order | Mailing List | Contact Us | Home

Add Us to Your Desktop

Affiliate Program

Privacy Policy | The Legal Stuff
Products mentioned are trademarks of their respective companies
© Copyright 1997-2011
QuitSmoking.com
info@quitsmoking.com

 

 

Site Design & Creation by Prosperous Internet
Get Internet Web Marketing Help

Shopping Volcano