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Veterans
In reply to the discussion: Ya know - After 3+ decades of smoking [View all]Canoe52
(2,963 posts)58. Posted earlier but wanted to say, it's easier to NOT have a cigarette now,
than when you first quit. For me the first 3 days was the hardest.
Next hardest was getting past the first 3 months.
At a year I knew I had it licked, but still didn't dare to even have a cigarette in my hand.
Good Luck!
I'm the guy who would wake up and have a cigarette in the dark, when I took a shower I kept an ashtray close by so I could take a puff while I showered and then have a puff after brushing my teeth.
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Tobacco manufacturers got permission to add smokes to the rations for soldiers
Marthe48
May 2018
#24
I don't remember what they cost back in my 1st enlistment (Joined in 82)
The Polack MSgt
May 2018
#44
It's one of THE most difficult addictions to kick, physiologically and psychologically.
TygrBright
May 2018
#7
Glad you can talk about a bout with cancer in past tense. Congrats back to you
The Polack MSgt
May 2018
#28
Spouse stopped smoking 20 years ago - cold turkey, with the help of Tic-tacs and jerky.
haele
May 2018
#21
You got to admit: you feel better now than you ever have in a long time. Butt, Smoke Pit.....
marble falls
May 2018
#18
For me it was over 50 years. You will have moments but they will become less frequent over time.
appleannie1943
May 2018
#50
I quit using Chantix and 5 months into the quit I stopped craving. I never want
applegrove
May 2018
#60