Well, the time has come for me to finally make a desperate tilt at quitting cigarettes.
My history with smoking kinda goes like this; I started smoking at 21 and smoked over a pack a day until I was 29. At 29 I quit smoking after perhaps a year of truly contemplating quitting for financial and health reason. I finally butted out my last cigarette in 2001 and stayed free of smoking for a good 8 years where during that time I did not have a single puff of a cigarette.
Something happened around 2009, the most trivial, seemingly inconsequential little fling with smoking happened which made me slide right back into smoking. I had a cigar at a wedding. From there I poked around a friend who was a smoker pinching a cigarette here and there and within 2 weeks I was back to a packet a day. It was that easy to slip right back into smoking after 8 years of not having a single puff.
Having experienced what it is like to be a non smoker (and I say non smoker because the cravings stopped after about a year and I didn't think of smoking at all during the next 7 years) I had a good frame of reference to put into perspective the changes my body was going
through having returned to smoking. The congestion in the lungs, the shortened breaths, the stains, the bad smells, the gunky feeling on the teeth, the lessening regard by peers, the gas station runs when a packet runs out in the middle of the night, the expense, oh my the expense. $20 a packet here in Australia. Nothing cost me as much as smoking except for maybe the rent.
Even though I was well hooked to I urge anyone here who still is struggling with cigarettes to try a bit harder and come to grips with the sobering reality that as smokers who never quit, we have a 30 times greater likelihood of getting lung cancer and that says nothing about the increased rates of death causing illnesses such as stroke, other cancers and heart attacks from smoking.