Change Your Lifestyle
to Quit Smoking
One of the reasons that quitting smoking seems like such a
daunting task, is that for many smokers it requires that the
smoker makes some lifestyle changes. Smoking, unlike many
other types of addiction, is both legal and in many cases
socially acceptable, and for that reason quitting smoking
requires a tremendous amount of willpower. Unless you are
one of the rare, lucky smokers who are able to quit with
relative ease, it's not always a good idea to rely on your
willpower alone. Putting too much faith in your willpower is
going to place you in many situations where you're facing a
lot of temptation, and if you give in to this temptation it
will be hard to try to quit smoking again: once you lapse in
your attempt to quit smoking it affects your self-esteem and
ability to try again.
It is for these reasons that it's important you help
yourself by making some lifestyle changes when you decide to
quit smoking. Especially in the early stages of your attempt,
you should avoid social situations that are going to present
you with a lot of temptation - don't hang out in bars with
other smokers, for example. It's also a good idea to try and
become more active. Most smokers will notice that when they
first try to quit they experience feelings of anxiety and
restlessness, and becoming more active is a good way to deal
with this. The changes you should make to your lifestyle
when you first quit smoking needn't be major ones. What you
are trying to do is break some of the associations you have
with smoking. For many people the most difficult aspect of the
smoking addiction is the psychological one - the way in which
you've incorporated smoking into various aspects of your life.
If you've been smoking for a long time, it's likely that there
are many situations in which you smoke without even thinking
about it: when you're waiting for a bus, when you're coffee in
the morning, etc.
By changing your lifestyle and beginning to do things that
are new and different for you, you will be slowly building a
list of activities that you don't associate with smoking: you
will be gradually breaking the psychological addiction. In
many ways, when you quit, you can begin to think of a new
phase in your life - a "post-smoking" phase, and you can make
the transition easier by creating a "post-smoking" lifestyle:
one in which you exercise more, and socialize in different
ways.
By changing your lifestyle you'll create a whole new set of
associations that have nothing to do with smoking, and as a
bonus you'll begin to feel a lot better. Exercising more
will make you not only look better but feel better as well,
and will provide you with some concrete merits to being smoke
free.
No one wants to lose their friends, or completely change
their lifestyle, and by no means does quitting smoking require
this. Making a few small changes in your habits, however, will
greatly increase your chances of success. |