Friday, December 31, 2010

New Year's resolution: Time to go smoke-free

By Jennifer A. Kern, M.S., C.T.T.S.3
from the Mayo Clinic Smoke Free Blog ...

As attention shifts to a new year ahead, it brings about a focus on change, what we want to be new and different in our lives.

Most New Year's resolutions are sound in what they represent, but fall flat due to lack of planning and lack of actual resolve. Many wish for the change and set the intention to lose weight, exercise more or quit smoking, but without making a definitive decision, accompanied by determination and a doable plan, success will be evasive at best.

The result of broken resolutions is a betrayal of the self. Whenever you tell yourself you'll do something, and then you don't complete it, you erode your self-trust. You then have to make justifications for why you didn't follow through, which can show up as blame or pity. When you don't trust yourself in one area of your life, how can you really live authentically in other aspects?

Let 2011 be the year you choose to become smoke-free. It doesn't have to be on the first day of the year. Don't get attached to the date; just be resolved about the final outcome. If you slip, it's OK. Just connect to your resolve and start again as soon as possible.

Here are a few tips to help you get geared up for success:

* Plan, plan, plan. Know what you will do instead of smoking before your quit date. Get your supplies of both tobacco cessation aids, like the patch, and substitutes for your hands and mouth.


* Consider exceptions. You might feel like you can't quit, but think of a time when this wasn't true. You may have quit in the past or perhaps you can go all day long at work without a cigarette. Perhaps there was something else in your life you thought you couldn't do and you proved yourself wrong. Find whatever it is that shows you're capable and hold that image.

* Be purposeful. Dedicate yourself to you and your health. Grow your self-esteem and self-trust by following through over and over again until you achieve the success you want.

* Future focus. How will you feel when you conquer your tobacco addiction? I predict you'lll feel more confident, capable and have a deep knowing that you can accomplish anything you commit to. How will the rest of your life be impacted by this?

Make 2011 your time to finally resolve to be tobacco free and start living the life you really want!

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Merry Christmas ... and a Happier New Year!




1) WHAT'S RIGHT FOR YOU - Find out about all of the free NHS services available to support you as you go smoke free. There are lots of options across Hampshire located in easily accessible places, such as GP surgeries, pharmacies or community centers.

2) TAKE THE ADDICTION TEST – Are you an addict? Easy question and you know the answer!

3) MAKE A DATE – Consider 01/01/11 Research shows that the more prepared you are, the more likely you are to succeed in going smoke free. The first thing to do is choose a stress-free day to stop a few weeks from now. This gives you a day to aim for and time to prepare.

4) MAKE A PROMISE THIS CHRISTMAS - What better way to motivate yourself to stop smoking than to promise to quit for those who love and support you?

5) QUIT TOGETHER - The support provided by the Together Program may be perfect for those with a busy lifestyle. You have a friend for support, encouragement and advice including regular mail packs, emails, supportive text messages and phone calls.

6) SUPPORT AVAILABLE - Use nicotine replacement products or other stop smoking medicines to cope with the withdrawal symptoms.

7) COUNT UP THE SAVINGS - Just imagine when you go smoke free, how much extra money will be in your pocket – and spending this Christmas!

8 HEALTH TIMELINE - The first few days after you quit can be challenging but you'll be amazed at how quickly your body starts to recover. The benefits start almost immediately - Use our interactive timeline on the website to see how your body improves after you stop smoking.

After 20 minutes - Blood pressure and pulse rate return to normal…and you have saved 5.9p so far, so just keep going …

After 8 hours - Nicotine and carbon monoxide levels in blood reduce by half, oxygen levels return to normal…£1.42 saved – maybe not that much, but you can already feel the improvement in both pocket & body….

9. TAKE A DEEP BREATH - Use a carbon monoxide monitor to see for yourself how quickly your body recovers once you stop smoking. Local NHS Stop Smoking Services offer carbon monoxide monitoring as part of their stop smoking programmes – a great motivating tool to keep you going.

10. SPRING CLEAN YOUR HEALTH - Chuck out your ashtrays, matches and lighters and anything else you needed to smoke. Put potpourri where your ashtrays used to be – your home will smell fresher in no time at all.

11. CHANGE YOUR ROUTINE – Keep in mind that you have taken steps to positively improve your life in a variety ways by quitting smoking. Change your usual daily routine to counteract your old smoking triggers. Do something to help you relax such as taking a hot bath, exercise, or reading. Plan something enjoyable to do every day – you deserve it.

12. TAKE ONE DAY AT A TIME - each day without a cigarette is good news for your health, your family and your pocket.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Please DO Lead Me From Temptation ~

What a long depressing week ...

No need to go into it all here. But I did finally visit a Smoke Shoppe.

I went to the post office to overnight a very important letter. That was the only time in two days I had left the house. After leaving the post office I went straight to a 'New-American' run C-store and Smoke Shop.

When I entered the woman in line just ahead of me was bumped and pushed by three inconsiderate teenagers leaving the crowded little store. She turned my direction to show her displeasure with the youth.

I nodded in agreement and then just asked her if she had just one cigarette I could have. NO, that was why she was there. She wanted to know why I wanted just one and if I had already quit. Yes, I said I was well into my 500 days but had a really bad week.

She told me I should turn around and leave. She said she'd give anything to be in my shoes. (I doubt that, especially not this week). I know I almost had tears in my eyes. I just reiterated: I had a really bad week. But she was right, I should leave, the desire will leave me eventually.

I left -- Drove to the next c-store and craving wasn't gone. I pulled in. I pulled back out and went on back home. The craving and desire did finally leave me.

And I'm now (and Still) 537 Days Smoke Free!

~ MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYBODY ~

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Stress and Smoking ~

We all know pretty much what is required in order to stay healthy. Get plenty of sleep, drink plenty of water, eat the right kinds and amounts of food, drink in moderation, don’t smoke, and so on. We all know this, but very few of us get this right. Why? Well, in many cases, it may be due to stress.

Smoking is an example of something we may do that is unhealthy but may help us cope with stress. Most smokers take a break in order to smoke. The smoking is relaxing as they take time from their work or activities in order to “light up”. But what is really happening is that each puff is actually only relieving the tension caused in the body due to nicotine withdrawal. And that can be said for many addictions, including pain relievers, caffeine, alcohol, even food. Without these addictions, the stress would be even greater.

You see, these “addictions” and bad behaviors only multiply the adverse effects of stress. In order to fight your stress, you must first “peel the onion” to get through all the layers of behaviors that you have created to help you deal with your stress in the first place. The only way to succeed is to first gauge your level of stress and how you have been dealing with it until now. Then you can create an action plan to address each and every behavior that gets in the way of you living a full and stress-free life.

Come along with me to the next section and let’s get started.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Not Even In Moderation, Study Finds ~

Think the occasional cigarette won't hurt? Even a bit of social smoking — or inhaling someone else's secondhand smoke — could be enough to block your arteries and trigger a heart attack, says the newest surgeon general's report on the killer the nation just can't kick.

Lung cancer is what people usually fear from smoking, and yes, that can take years to strike. But Thursday's report says there's no doubt that tobacco smoke begins poisoning immediately — as more than 7,000 chemicals in each puff rapidly spread through the body to cause cellular damage in nearly every organ.

"That one puff on that cigarette could be the one that causes your heart attack," said Surgeon General Regina Benjamin.

Or the one that triggers someone else's: "I advise people to try to avoid being around smoking any way that you can," she said.

Health highlights Nation of whiners shares every ache, pain
From raging sinus headaches to relentless insomnia to those weird toe cramps we get when we wear the wrong shoes, Americans are no longer suffering in silence about their aches and pains.

About 443,000 Americans die from tobacco-caused illnesses every year. While the smoking rate has dropped dramatically since 1964, when the first surgeon general's report declared tobacco deadly, progress has stalled in the past decade. About 46 million adults — one in five — still smoke, and tens of millions more are regularly exposed to secondhand smoke. The government had hoped to drop the smoking rate to 12 percent by this year, a goal not only missed but that's now been put off to 2020.

Thursday's report is the 30th issued by the nation's surgeons general to warn the public about tobacco's risks.

"How many reports more does Congress need to have to say that cigarettes as a class of products ought to be banned?" asked well-known nicotine expert Dr. K. Michael Cummings of the Roswell Park Cancer Institute, who helped to review the report. "One-third of the patients who are in our hospital are here today because of cigarettes."

Still, this newest report is unusual because it devotes more than 700 pages to detail the biology of how cigarette smoke accomplishes its dirty deeds — including the latest genetic findings to help explain why some people become more addicted than others, and why some smokers develop tobacco-caused disease faster than others.

There is no safe level of exposure to cigarette smoke, whether you deliberately inhale it or are a nonsmoker who breathes in other people's fumes, the report concludes. Nor is there evidence yet to tell if efforts to develop so-called safer cigarettes really will pan out.

But more recently it's become clear that some of the harms — especially those involving the heart — kick in right away, said Dr. Terry Pechacek of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

That means social smoking, the occasional cigarette at a party, can be enough to trigger a heart attack in someone whose arteries already are silently clogged, he said.

"Too often people think the occasional social cigarette is not so dangerous, when in fact this report says yes, it is," he said.

So is breathing secondhand smoke. When Pueblo, Colo., banned smoking in all public places in 2003, the number of people hospitalized for heart disease plummeted 41 percent in just three years, the report found.

Why? Cigarette smoke immediately seeps into the bloodstream and changes its chemistry so that it becomes more sticky, allowing clots to form that can squeeze shut already narrowed arteries, the report explains. That's in addition to the more subtle long-term damage to blood vessels themselves, making them more narrow. And no one knows how little it takes to trigger that clotting.

Kicking the habit lets your body start healing, Benjamin stressed: "It's never too late to quit but the sooner you quit the better. Even if you're 70, 80 years old and you're a smoker, there's still benefit from quitting."

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Don't Stress the Small Stuff ~

My new boss needs a new whipping boy ... So glad it can be me.

Couple that with two of my four kids leaving for bootcamp this week, my other two -- one across country, the other across the globe -- and I have to say I have a stress filled week.

Oh -- and my annual Christmas job at the Post Office. This is my second year there as a non smoker, which is a very good thing considering how cold it is outside.

Anyway, I was just sitting in my bosses office getting 're-directed' and all I could think about was how much longer would it be before I could go outside and have smoke. But then I kept reminding myself that I do NOT smoke!

The thought actually occurred to me -- the VERY DANGEROUS thought, mind you -- that I wonder if it'd be okay to run to the store and just buy ONE pack of cigs .. and then just smoke ONE or maybe TWO ............. We all know how that goes.

I'm an addict; with an addictive personality, obviously .... & just like any recovering addict, there is now such thing as 'JUST ONE" .... only the LAST one!

And that was over 515 days ago for me ... & STILL counting. Thank Goodness. :)

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

In The Navy ~

Captains Log: Day 515!

Over the past year and half I've relayed a numbers of stories on journey through my new smoke free life.

I've discussed cost savings, health benefits, stress, desires and triggers, the repulsiveness of stale cigarette smoke in clothes and other issues related to having finally 'kicked the habit' after nearly thirty years of smoking.

Did you know major life changes are the main reason for divorce and interruption of new healthy habits such as quitting smoking. Well, I'm already divorced, so no problem there but I'm still a relatively new non smoker. So my new life changes could pose a challenge for a delicate situation. I do not feel threatened just yet however.

In the past few months I've become a total empty nester .... I've gone from having three of my four kids around all the time to having everyone scattered across the globe. I know, this is what you raise them for, to leave home .... after all, the real problem is if they don't leave home! Still there when they're 30.

My oldest, the world traveler is now in Asia teaching English ... The youngest went to NY in the fall for his freshman year of college. NOW ... the two in the middle have just left for The Navy.

They will be in bootcamp for two months and then they both get to go to FLA for at least four months. Then ........ Who knows. My daughter wills stay in Pensacola for 10 months and my son will head to California, I think.

Anyway .......... if you're a smoker or an ex-smoker, you know it's times like these that normally your cigarette consumption would spike. The desire to relieve my anxiety with nicotine is not present yet, but I remain on guard.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Sunday, November 21, 2010

The Magic of Mondays ~

Staying Quit after the Great American Smokeout ~

"Monday is the January of the week,"
says Monday Campaigns President, Peggy Neu. "Our research shows that people see Monday as the day for a fresh start and are more likely to start diets, exercise regimens and quit smoking on Monday than any other day. It's a natural restart day to change old bad habits into positive new ones, or to get back on the wagon if you've fallen off."

I wish I had this idea during the maytimes I had tried to quit in the past but failed. Falling off the wagon, as it were, sometime during my success and not getting back on .... Procrastinating unil I just quit quitting!

Donald Distasio, Chief Executive Officer of the American Cancer Society, Eastern Division says, "We hope many more smokers will use the Great American Smokeout as an important first step towards living a smoke-free life. Stay Quit Monday is a good tool for smokers to use in reinforcing their commitment to quitting."

If you quit last Thursday during the GASO or know someone who did and are struggling to stay quit ... Keep The Magic of Mondays in mind. Recommit to quitting tomorrow and every Monday to come.

Good Luck -- FJW :o)


Thursday, November 18, 2010

The Great American Smokeout 2010

Is it Thursday November 18th already?

The third Thursday of November that has for the past 30+ years dedicated to encouraging smokers to 'kick the habit'.

So many GASO days I either totally ignored or gave a half hearted attempt at quitting smoking ... Now, on this third Thursday of November, I am totally smoke free for the second year in a row!

It does feel like an accomplishment for me. So much so, I don't even think about me as a smoker anymore. There are times I wish I could have 'just one' but I know where that'll eventually lead!

Just this morning I was 'invited' into the boss's office, a place I've affectionately nicknamed 'The Wood Shed' .... Just like cracking open a 'cold one' a cigarette just seems to follow a good ass-chewing just as it does a Thanksgiving meal!

A rare time I miss the good ol' days. :))

Monday, November 15, 2010

500 Days Smoke Free ... Holy Smokes!!!

Who would've guessed 500 days ago that I could finally make it this far?

In some ways 500 days doesn't sound that long ... in other ways, it's a short lifetime ago.

Near thirty years of smoking about a pack and half a day and now I'm smoke free for good this time.

That's Fifteen Thousand single cigarettes at an approximate estimated savings of $4,000.00! That's a lotta lettuce in my little world.

My first goal was just to get through the first day. Next it was three days, three weeks, then three months. Make it to the New Year and beyond .... and then reach the coveted one year smoke free mark. Done!

Now, I'm nearing in on 2010 being an entire cheat free, smoke free, nicotine free year ... Before you know it I will be at One Thousand Days .... But first ....

I need to complete 501! --- One day at a time, Right??!!

~ FJW ~

PS: Only 2 days until the Great American Smoke Out ... Why doesn't someone from say ... Maryland or California ... write a post for me dealing with going smoke free for the first day of the GASO? My little blog could use some fresh blood. :0)

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Viva Las Vegas ~

Las Vegas is now replacing New Orleans as the most smoke friendly town I've been too in the last year and half ...

Here I am, just days away from my 500 day mile stone and I'm now at a point where I can't believe I used to be a pack and half a day smoker.

The smoke in every casino, hotel lobby and night club was nearly overwhelming to me. It was in no way enticing -- that's not to say I'm never tempted or never crave a cigarette -- it just says a room full of smoke is extraordinarily bothersome to me.

Things are way different than they were just 20 years ago when it comes to the acceptance and tolerance of cigarette smoke. And what seems to be the worst for me, something I used to hear non smokers complain about but never completely understood until the last year, is the smoke that permeates inside every article of clothing you wear out to clubs at night.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

FDA proposes graphic warnings for cigarette packs

From USA TODAY, today:

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is proposing that all cigarette packs and advertisements include highly graphic images like corpses and diseased lungs to underscore the negative health consequences of smoking.

"Today, FDA takes a crucial step toward reducing the tremendous toll of illness and death caused by tobacco use by proposing to dramatically change how cigarette packages and advertising look in this country," FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg says in a news release. "The health consequences of smoking will be obvious every time someone picks up a pack of cigarettes."

The proposed graphics include a diseased lung, a graveyard, a corpse in a casket, discolored and disfigured teeth as well as such textual warnings as: Cigarettes Can Cause Fatal Lung Disease and Smoking Can Kill You.

The FDA is seeking public comment on the proposed graphics and warnings through Jan. 9. 2011.

The agency will select the final labels in June after reviews of scientific literature, public comments, and results from an 18,000-person study.

Cigarette makers will then have 15 months to start using the new labels.

Smoking chimp rescued in Lebanon, sent to Brazil

BEIRUT (AP) — A 12-year-old chimpanzee is heading to a sanctuary in Brazil on Monday after animal rights workers discovered him smoking cigarettes to entertain visitors at a Lebanese zoo.

Omega, who weighs around 132 pounds (60 kilograms), has never climbed a tree or seen other chimpanzees and has a troubling smoking habit he maintained from picking up cigarettes that visitors threw into his cage.

"The chimp still regularly smokes ... if someone will throw him a cigarette he'd pick it up and go for it straight away," said Jason Meier, executive director for animal rights group Animals Lebanon.

Organizers of Omega's evacuation say it marks the first time a chimpanzee has been rescued in Lebanon, a country with virtually no animal rights protection laws.

In his younger years, Omega was used in one of the local restaurants to entertain people and was made to smoke cigarettes and serve water pipe to customers. After he grew stronger, he was locked up and taken to a zoo where for the past 10 years he has lived in a cage measuring 430 square feet (40 square meters).

Animals Lebanon has been pushing for Lebanon to join the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) and adopt laws that regulate the importation of primates. Lebanon, Iraq and Bahrain are the only Arab countries yet to sign the convention.

Chimpanzees and other highly endangered wildlife are regularly smuggled to the Middle East to be displayed in private zoos, hotels and for the pet trade.

Animals Lebanon heard about the zoo in Ansar, near the market town of Nabatiyeh, about six months ago. They have since successfully worked with the owner to close the zoo and find homes for the animals.

For Omega, home will be a sanctuary in Sao Paolo, Brazil where he is to be flown later Monday aboard an Emirates airlines flight.

Other animals found at the zoo, including seven baboons, a hyena and various bird species, are to be sent to new homes within Lebanon.

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Feds Want Corpses, Rotting Teeth on Cigarette Packages

(Nov. 10) -- From AOL HEALTH -- Images of corpses, rotting teeth and diseased lungs will take up half the space on a pack of cigarettes, under federal proposals unveiled today.

The graphic new labels are designed to scare smokers into quitting by showing what can happen to them. The warnings are required under a law passed last year that gave the Food and Drug Administration the power to regulate tobacco products.

The proposed warnings can be seen on the FDA website. Among the most brutal: a corpse with a toe tag; stained, rotten teeth in a mouth with a gaping sore; babies surrounded by cigarette smoke; and a set of diseased, blackened lungs shown next to a pair of healthy, pink ones.

"Today marks an important milestone in protecting our children and the health of the American public," said Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.

The FDA will seek public input on the proposed labels. Cigarettes cannot be sold in the U.S. after Oct. 22, 2012, without the labels, The New York Times reported.
"This is the most important change in cigarette health warnings in the history of the United States," said Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, according to the Times.

The new warnings cover 50 percent of the front and back of each pack, and 20 percent of the top of each cigarette advertisement, The Washington Post said.

Smoking rates have dropped significantly in the United States, but about 20 percent of adults and high school students smoke, and tobacco is the leading cause of premature and preventable death, the Post reported.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Coming Soon:

The Great American Smoke-out Day:

Two weeks from today is the third Thursday in November, 11/18, the next Great American Smoke-out Day sponsored by the American Cancer Society.

This special day is so named with the aim that people will not smoke or use any other tobacco products for just one day, and then try to quit all the tobacco products for good. It is also hoped that the quitters will be successful their whole live in abstaining from Tobacco products.

According to the American Cancer Society people who stop smoking before age 50 can cut their risk of death in the next 15 years in half compared with those who still continue to smoke.

Smokers who quit also reduce their risk of lung cancer – ten years after quitting, the lung cancer death rate is about half that of a continuing smoker’s. Some of the health effects of quitting are almost instant, too like heart rate and blood pressure drop immediately 20 minutes after quitting smoking and using tobacco products.

This is going to be my third GASOD that I will be smoke free!

Sunday, October 31, 2010

October 31, 2010

HAPPY HALLOWEEN!
~ Happy Halloween ~
btw: 69 Smoke free weeks!

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Boy, I Could Use A Smoke!

Everyone knows Smoking just goes better with some things more than than others.

Like our morning cup of joe, beer or any alcohol really, the bath-room break, lunch break, ohhhhh ..... After our Thanksgiving meal! Oh heck, I could really go on, couldn't I? Bet you can think of plenty of your own.

What's high on the list though is stressful situations. Like those times at work when you get frustrated and just say: "Man, I need a smoke", then run out side.

Stress, frustration, depression, anxiety ........ These are way more powerful 'triggers' for me. I can have a few beers or even enjoy my morning coffee without craving a smoke, but anxiety is the toughest time of all.

I swear I can smell a lit cigarette from a block away. Sometimes I think it would be easy to walk up to someone and ask to 'bum' a cigarette. Smokers are the best ... Even at $10 a pack most smokers will comply.

I've been severely tempted this week. Stress and anxiety; sitting idle at an intersection, a faint whiff of cigarette smoke comes through my window .... Oh Heavens, was I tempted.


I prevailed over my own weakness's however, I really would have like to have 'just one' but I did not. To paraphrase Jimmy McMillan:

The Cost Is Too Damn High!!!!!!!!!

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Sixty Eight Weeks ~

Yes, it's true ... 68 weeks, 475 days of not smoking. The minutes, days, weeks, months, just keep mounting up.

I have not forgotten the minute by minute of anxiety I suffered in the first few days, weeks, and even the first three months really.

I have always said I wanted to be a non-smoker, NOT an anti-smoker ... but I have to be honest here, I've become hyper sensitive to the stale smell of cigarette smoke in people's clothes. I wonder now how I lived like that for thirty years. And worse ... how I made my family endure it also.

Life is so different now than it was when I started smoking though. When I started I could ride my bike to the Vicker's Station and buy a pack for .50 cents. Seriously. And smoking was everywhere, inside and out. I guess we all just got used to it.

Today however, (not to say I never miss it because there are often times I do) but as for now, I'm enjoying the fresh air.

Monday, October 18, 2010

One Month From Today ~

The Great American Smokeout is an annual day set aside to encourage smokers to go 24 hours without smoking a cigarette. It is held annually on the third Thursday in November.

The most recent event was held on Thursday, November 19, 2009, and the next will be Thursday, November 18, 2010.

The American Cancer Society, or ACS, sponsors the annual event and provides assistance and resources to help smokers use the Smokeout as an opportunity to quit smoking for good.

On its website, the American Cancer Society offers promotional supplies for the Smokeout, including posters, stickers, t-shirt transfers and tent cards to help promote the day. Local resources are also published on the website to help smokers who want to quit find assistance in their neighborhood.

Local ACS offices are located in most of the United States and can give direction on how to promote a non-smoking environment at work as well as how to support friends and family members who are trying to quit smoking.

Great American Smokeout History
The idea for the Great American Smokeout was born in 1971 when Massachusetts resident Arthur P. Mullaney encouraged people to not buy cigarettes on one day and donate the unspent money to a local high school.

It gained ground in 1974 when a Minnesota newspaper editor led the effort to have a statewide Don’t Smoke Day. The movement spread to California in 1976 when the state chapter of the American Cancer Society held the event with almost 1 million smokers participating. The Great American Smokeout began to be held nationally in 1977.

Despite the widespread success of the national no-smoking day, however, the ACS says that more effort is needed to spread the message. On its website, the nonprofit group says that in 2005, 23 percent of high school students were smokers.

Quoting studies that show that high school students who smoke tend to continue smoking through adulthood, the ACS goes on to say that the Smokeout serves as “a powerful media platform to help further (their) work”.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Careless Smoking in Kansas Leads to Fire~

Just one more good reason to Quit Smoking!

A small fire in an Overland Park, Kansas apartment basement was blamed on careless smoking

Overland Park and Lenexa, Kansas fire crews responded to a call before midnight a the Louisburg Square Apartments in Overland Park. Crews extinguished the fire quickly. There were no injuries, and all residents were able to return to their apartments.

According to the Overland Park Fire Department, investigators believe a carelessly discarded cigarette burned through a bedroom floor and into the apartment basement. One of the residents in the damaged apartment told investigators that he awoke in another room, smelled smoke and found a fire in the bedroom where his wife was sleeping.

The fire department recommends smokers to smoke outside if at all possible, completely extinguish cigarettes in sand or water before discarding and never smoke when tired or drowsy.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Rejuvenating Lung Cells ~

Lung cancer normally takes many years to develop. Incidence tends to peaks between the ages of 55 and 65 years. The changes in the lung however can begin almost as soon as a person is exposed to carcinogenic chemicals.

Soon after exposure begins, a few abnormal cells may appear in the lining of the bronchi (the main breathing tubes). Gradually as you continue your exposure to these substances, more abnormal cells appear. Some will become cancerous and tumour forming.

If you stop smoking however, the risk of lung cancer decreases. Year on year, abnormal cells are replaced by normal cells. After ten years, the risk drops to a level that is one-third to one-half of the risk for people who continue to smoke. Quitting smoking greatly reduces the risk of developing other smoking-related diseases, such as heart disease, stroke, emphysema and chronic bronchitis but there are many more benefits to quitting smoking.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Sixty-Six Weeks and Counting ~

I know I haven't written in a while ...
I have to be honest, I'm running out of things to write about.

I've been completely smoke free for Sixty-Six weeks now ... 462 Days today! No cigarettes, no cigars, no pipe tobacco, no chewing tobacco, no cheating what-so-ever.

That doesn't mean I don't think about it though. I actually do, some days more than others. Sometimes when I'm having tightness in breathing I think about the years I've wasted smoking cigarettes and doing irreparable damage to myself.

Other times, like most recently, when the whether is really nice, I think I might enjoy sitting outside with a soda during the day or an adult beverage in the early evening and indulging in a drink and a smoke ... Yes, there are times when I miss it still.

But -- just so you know, if you have yet to quit smoking or have quit and are still struggling with cravings ... These 'pleasant thoughts' I might have on occasion do not rise to the level of a 'craving'!
Fear not of your worried it will never get easier, it does. And it doesn't take sixty-six weeks to do so!

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Single Laser Treatment to Quit Smoking?

By Ronnie Koenig From AOL Health

Innovative Laser Therapy, a New Haven, Conn.-based company is claiming on their website that you can quit smoking from just one hour of low-level laser treatment targeted at acupuncture points on the body. During the treatment, lasers are pointed at areas on the face, hands and wrist. This is supposed to relieve withdrawal symptoms and prevent cravings.

"When you smoke a cigarette, you artificially tell your brain to release endorphins," Frank Pinto, the owner of Innovative Laser Therapy said in a Reuters Health article. "The laser basically stimulates the nerve endings to tell the brain to release a flood of endorphins," he said.

The laser allegedly gets the smoker over the three- to five-day hump of withdrawal symptoms. The company also claims that the treatment targets points that will suppress appetite so patients can avoid the weight gain associated with quitting smoking.

Innovative Laser Therapy cites a 2008 study published in the Journal of Chinese Medicine where U.K. researchers found that smokers that had four laser treatments over two weeks were more likely to quit than those who had just three treatments.

Those in the three treatment group had better success rates than a control group that was given fake laser treatments.


But many in the scientific community feel that this is not sufficient data to support laser treatment as a proven smoking cessation tool, and it has not yet been approved for this purpose by the FDA.

"The study on four treatments versus three treatments is not all that convincing,” says Dr. Len Horovitz, internist and pulmonary specialist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. “I have a problem with something Frank Pinto said which is that endorphins are released when you smoke. That’s not exactly true.

"What happens is that nicotine goes to the endorphin receptors. It's not a natural release of endorphins like you get from exercise. So his statement is a little unscientific," he told AOL Health.

Pinto started his company after he successfully kicked the habit after one round of laser therapy from a clinic in Florida. His company charges $350 for a one-time treatment that takes less than an hour and offers free extra treatments to patients who continue to struggle over the following six months.

"The laser treatment has been compared to acupuncture, which also targets points on the body to help the person quit.

There’s nothing that implies that the use of these lasers is all that special," said Horovitz. "I've done acupuncture on patients -- you hit the Shen Men point on the ear. I’ve seen success in people who are already motivated to quit. Personal motivation is the most important factor."

Horovitz is also concerned that the laser treatment would not address the psychological side of smoking and the ritual of lighting up.

"Statistics show that a combination of using the patch daily in one of three strengths in combination with nicotine chewing gum, and then going to a lower strength is the most successful route," he said. "But remember that smoking is not totally a physical problem. There’s the psychological component. There’s the option of going to a support group or therapy to address this."

Horovitz said that it is possible to quit smoking in just one hour. "A one-hour serious talk with yourself could work. It is possible to just stop. It's not like eating where you have to do it to live. You don’t need the pills and the gum,” he said. “I tell patients that there is a life without smoking."

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Trapped Miners Allowed To Smoke ~

No word yet on whether or not alcohol will be allowed ...

Tomorrow, Monday September 27, 2010, I will be smoke free for 450 days! I really have to confess I am proud of this accomplishment. Further, I am very confident that I will make it another 450 days and beyond!

However, if I ever do find myself in a situation like the ones the Chilean miners are in now, I think I may be tempted to have a few cigarettes, just to curb the boredom if nothing else!

The 33 men trapped deep inside a northern Chilean mine were given permission to smoke a couple of weeks ago after improvements were made in their air ventilation.

The miners will share two cigarette packs a day through the small shaft from the surface, after nicotine patches failed to curb their cravings.

The trapped miners have become national heroes since they were found alive on August 22, 17 days after a mine cave-in in the remote Atacama desert.

They are trapped about 700 metres below the surface.

Rescuers have installed a multi-functional plastic tube that lets the miners get water and air, and have permanent telephone communication with the surface.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Does Acupuncture Help in Quitting Cigarettes?

As you already know, I used hypnosis for my most recent and most successful attempt at quitting smoking. However, others looking for a way to beat the habit have been using acupuncture for several decades now —
but does it actually work?

According to those who endorse it, the technique helps stimulate the release of endorphins and other brain chemicals, blotting out cravings and easing the symptoms of nicotine withdrawal. A 2006 survey by the Mayo Clinic found that about 27 percent of smokers looking to quit had tried acupuncture at least once, and many others said they hoped to try it in the future.

Most studies, however, suggest they could just as well try something else. One of the most extensive studies, published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, looked at more than a dozen past studies, most comparing acupuncture with sham, or fake, acupuncture and other control conditions. The scientists who led the study found that acupuncture and similar interventions — acupressure and electrostimulation, for example — were better in the short term than no treatment at all, but that over all they were not very effective.

Still, other studies show that more than three-quarters of smokers will relapse a few times no matter what. And because the effects of different techniques vary from one person to the next, most scientists recommend combining interventions, particularly those that involve behavioral modification and nicotine replacement.

THE BOTTOM LINE

Most studies have not found acupuncture very effective in helping smokers quit. I personally believe what ever method you choose, if you really want it to work it will!

Saturday, September 18, 2010

The Black Sheep of the Family ~

"Wake me up early, be good to my dog and teach my children to pray .... "

Yes ... I saw John Anderson Live a couple of weeks ago ... At one of THE most smoking friendly venues I've been to since the Eighties!

I'm always surprised how much second hand smoke bothers me now -- but I have to say I seem to be equally as surprised when it doesn't bother me at all. In fact there are times when I kind of like it.

This was an outdoor event, so smoke was freely flowing all around the fairgrounds ... But I do remember the days when you were completely free to light up just about anywhere inside an enclosed arena!

Life has changed a lot since the eighties.
(Probably for the better) ...

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

NYC Mayor Moves to Ban Smoking in Parks, Beaches

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg today announced plans to ban smoking in some of the Big Apple's most famous outdoor locations, including Central Park, the boardwalk at Coney Island and part of Times Square.

New York City Health Department officials are considering banning smoking in all city parks and beaches as part of Bloomberg's new public health initiative."The science is clear: Prolonged exposure to secondhand smoke -- whether you're indoors or out -- hurts your health," Bloomberg said in a statement. "Today we're doing something about it."

The new rules would forbid smokers from lighting up in all of the city's public parks and beaches, a definition that includes the pedestrian zone of Times Square, where a Camel cigarettes billboard once blew fake smoke rings at passers-by.

The city banned smoking in bars and restaurants in 2003, a move that faced strong opposition at the time. Now, crowds of smokers are a common sight outside the city's many nightspots.

In July, City Health Commissioner Thomas A. Farley said that smoking was the leading preventable cause of death in America's biggest city, taking the lives of 7,500 New Yorkers ever year. That's more than AIDS, drugs, suicide and homicide combined, The New York Times reported.

"New York is the national leader in creating healthy cities and promoting a healthy lifestyle," said City Council Member Gale A. Brewer, who is introducing the new legislation. "That's why we're pushing to get butts off the beaches."

Sponsored LinksStill, the battle is not over yet. The 51-member City Council needs to hold hearings on the proposed legislation before it even takes a vote.

Opposition to smoking bans can get serious. In 2003, a New York bouncer lost his life after an argument about smoking. The bouncer, Dana Blake, asked a bar patron to put out his smoke. A fight ensued, and Blake was stabbed as he tried to throw them out, The Independent reported.

"It's a senseless murder because of this stupid cigarette law. That's the reason this guy was killed," the victim's brother, Tony Blake, said at the time

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

John Boehner and Tobacco: He's Not Ready to Give Up Smoking


House Minority Leader John Boehner has two ties to the tobacco industry. He gets a lot of political support and money from it, and he smokes a lot of cigarettes. But putting the political aspect aside, Boehner made one thing clear Sunday: he's not ready to give up the habit.

In an unusual twist for one of the Sunday newsmaker shows, politics did in fact take a back seat to the personal, when Bob Schieffer, host of CBS' Face the Nation, asked Boehner about his smoking and whether he, as a national leader, would give it up "set a good example for the country."

Boehner said it's a "bad habit" but he's not ready to give it up.

Schieffer admitted he was not an objective questioner on the subject, having developed bladder cancer seven years ago (he is now cancer-free). He blamed the cancer on his heavy smoking. A native Texan, Schieffer has said he began chewing tobacco at 16 because "I hung around rodeos and played baseball."

Boehner is a heavy smoker (The Hill newspaper says his brand is Camel Ultra Lights), and perhaps one of the cruelest cuts he suffered at the hands of House Speaker Nancy Pelsoi came in 2007 when she banned smoking in the Speaker's Lobby, an area right off the House floor.

Schieffer asked how Boehner squared taking money from the tobacco lobby given the widely-acknowledged health hazards posed by cigarettes and the 435,000 deaths a year attributed to it.

"Tobacco is a legal product in America," Boehner said. "The American people have a right to decide for themselves whether they want to partake or not. There are lots of things that we deal with and come in contact with every day, from alcohol to food to cigarettes, a lot of the things that aren't good for our health. But the American people ought to have the right to make those decisions on their own."

Schieffer countered: "They have a right to shoot themselves if they choose to, but I mean, shouldn't we do something to try to encourage them not to? I mean, do you think that's a good example? "

"Well listen, I wish I didn't have this bad habit - and it is a bad habit - you've had it, you've dealt with it, but it's something that I choose to do, and you know at some point, maybe I'll decide I've had enough of it," Boehner responded.

Schieffer proposed: "If you should become Speaker, you could set a good example for the country by saying 'I'm going to stop smoking.' Maybe you could get the President, I understand he smokes too, maybe the two of you could find a way to try to stop smoking. That'd be kind of a good thing, wouldn't it? "

Boehner said he appreciated the suggestion, and when he and Schieffer turned back to politics, Boehner said that, for the Republicans, "winning the House is still an uphill fight."

Sunday, September 12, 2010

U.S. Smoking Rate Still Stuck at 1 in 5 Adults ~

Published September 07, 2010 FoxNews.com

ATLANTA – U.S. smoking rates continue to hold steady, at about one in five adults lighting up regularly, frustrated health officials reported Tuesday.

About 21 percent of U.S. adults were smokers in 2009, about the same percentage as the year before, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The smoking rate — which fell dramatically since the 1960s — has basically been flat since about 2004.

Teen smoking, at nearly 20 percent, has not been improving lately, either.

Health officials believe they've lost momentum because of cuts to anti-tobacco campaigns and shrewd marketing by cigarette companies.

The new report suggests that more than 46 million American adults still smoke cigarettes"It's tragic," said CDC director Dr. Thomas Frieden, who calls smoking the No. 1 preventable cause of death in the United States. He estimates that smoking kills 1,000 Americans a day.

Some experts were particularly disheartened by a CDC finding in a second report that nearly all children who live with a smoker — 98 percent — have measurable tobacco toxins in their body.

Experts say tobacco taxes and smoking bans are driving down rates in some states. But nationwide, they say progress has been halted by tobacco company discounts or lack of funding for programs to discourage smoking or to help smokers quit.

The annual smoking report was based on government surveys. The second report looked at levels in the blood of cotinine, a chemical from tobacco smoke, in a total of more than 30,000 nonsmokers between 1999 and 2008.

Overall, detectable levels of cotinine dropped over the 10 years — from about 52 percent to 40 percent. That may be due in part to more smoking bans in workplaces, restaurants and other places.

But there were several bits of bad news in that report, too:

- Most of the decline came about 10 years ago.

- More than half of U.S. children ages 3 to 11 are exposed to secondhand smoke, and the CDC says there is no safe level of exposure.

- There's been virtually no improvement for children who live with a smoker, noted Matthew L. Myers, president of Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, a Washington-based research and advocacy organization.

Although the statistics are largely unchanged, advocates said the reports are important. They plan to use the data to pressure national, state and local governments to do more against smoking.

"Without bold action by our elected officials, too many lives, young and old, will suffer needlessly from chronic illness and burdensome health care expenses," Nancy Brown, chief executive of the American Heart Association, said in a statement.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

9~11 ~ A Tribute ~

Take a moment to go back and read

Remember 9/11 Prayer ~

from one year ago today.

God Bless America!

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Michael Douglas' Cancer is Probably Smoking Related ~

Hollywood icon Michael Douglas' years of smoking and drinking is the probable culprit for his throat cancer diagnosis, according to one doctor who said the Wall Street star's condition is likely curable.

"That combination is, unfortunately, a recipe for development of a throat cancer," Dr. Kenneth Hu, co-director of the Head and Neck Institute at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York, told "Good Morning America" today. "I think the fact that he's getting radiation means it's curable."

News of a tumor in Douglas' throat was released Monday. People magazine is reporting that the star known for his gravelly voice will soon undergo eight weeks of chemotherapy and radiation.
"It tells you that it's probably an intermediate stage cancer," said Hu, who is not involved with Douglas' treatment.

The two months of treatment, he said, will likely preserve Douglas' voice box though he may be noticeably more hoarse by the end. More aggressive treatment, he said, such as surgery, carries a much more significant risk of permanently damaging the voice.

Hu said Douglas will have to stop smoking, if he hasn't already, for the treatment to work properly.

"Smoking probably caused the cancer," he said."But smoking during the radiation makes the radiation less effective."

"I am very optimistic," Douglas said in a statement.

Douglas has openly struggled with his smoking habit in the past, but it has not been confirmed that his penchant for cigarettes is linked to his diagnosis.
Hu said tobacco infiltrates most of the body, causing tissue to inflame and repeated alcohol use serves to chronically irritate the area. Put together, the two drugs create a breeding ground for cancerous cells to develop.

"Michael Douglas, as recently as four years ago has admitted that he was struggling with his smoking situation," People magazine staff writer Blaine Zuckerman said. "Smoking has been a part of his life."

In 1996 Douglas told ABC News that the 20 years of abuse "needed to be corrected and checked."

Douglas' diagnosis comes ahead of the premiere of his latest movie, Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, due to open in theaters Sept. 24. It's unclear whether his treatment will affect the promotion of the highly anticipated follow-up to 1987's "Wall Street."

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Doing The Math ~

Sixty-One Weeks & Still -- Living Smoke Free!

**Blogger's Note:
Attached are photos from my latest road trip.
a) Entering U of R campus
b) Home of the Yellow Jackets
c) A Canadian Moose
d) The Falls at Night
FJW

During my most recent journey I spent a long time in the car, driving round trip to Rochester, NY., Niagara Falls, both America and Canada. During my car time, if I'm not smoking a few packs of cigarettes along the way, what am I supposed to do?


Mathematics Calisthenics, of course!

**Blogger's Second Note:
Below math is based on these two variables. a) I used to go into the store and buy one pack of 'good' smokes and one pack of the 'cheap sh**' (the employees were in the habit of asking me: "One pack of each?") then alternate between smoking a premium and a cheap azz one ...
and b) This cost estimate is pre Obama Cigarette Tax Hike.


14 Months Living Smoke Free equals 61 Smokeless Weeks; that’s 427 days of NOT smoking!

At approximately 1 1/2 packs of cigarettes each day it would seem I have thus far NOT smoked 12,810 cigarettes - Let me type that out for effect:

Twelve Thousand, Eight-Hundred, Ten Cigarettes!

(One More Note: Notice you don’t put an “and” in whole numbers when you type them out – just in case you were wondering)!

With the estimated cost at the time of my quitting of right around $8.00 a day, I have saved myself: $3,416.00

Again, spelling it all out:
Nearly Thirty-Five Hundred Dollars!

I can’t speak for everyone, but in my world that’s alotta lettuce!

I’ve written once of the ‘residual’ cost savings from kicking the habit – all the savings in addition to merely the cost of the cigarettes – I will have to revisit that topic again soon. But for today, as I continue Living Smoke Free, let me summarize:

14 Months (Tomorrow)
61 Weeks (Today)
427 Smoke Free Days
12,810 Cigarettes Saved
$3,416.00 Kept in my pocket!

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

The Five Stages Of Change ~

I've tried quitting before, but it didn't work. Why not?

I've asked myself that very question so many times ... of course the answer was simply the lack of perseverance or will power. To quit smoking, one must be ready emotionally and mentally.

Some people are more ready to quit than others. Here are five stages of change that most people go through to successfully quit smoking.

Stage One:
Pre-contemplation. You don't want to quit smoking, but you may try to quit because you feel pressured to quit.

Stage Two:
Contemplation. You want to quit someday. You haven't taken steps to quit, but you want to quit.

Stage Three:
Preparation. You take small steps to quit such as cutting back on smoking or switching to a lighter brand.

Stage Four:
Action. You put a plan for quitting into action. You make changes in your actions and environment to help cope with urges to smoke. You cope with urges to smoke by following the plan and remain smoke-free for six months.

Stage Five:
Maintenance. You have not smoked for one year.

Now, after so many attempts at quitting, for the first time I have reached the fifth step -- Maintenance. It feels great! My goal now is not only to maintain by smoke free living but hopefully assist a few others along the way.

Remember:
Smoking again (relapse) is common. In fact, 75% of those who quit will smoke again. Most smokers try to quit three times before being successful.

Monday, August 30, 2010

2571.5 Trip Miles ~

It was a long round trip drive in a short amount of time.
But a fun and interesting adventure it was.



Niagara Falls was exceptionally cool ... and that coming from someone who's been to the southern tip of Africa. Niagara is every bit of an awesome sight to see. I highly recommend the journey to anyone who hasn't been.

A long road trip with not one cigarette. Of course, if I haven't had one in over 420 days there's no reason to think I would start on this vacation ... Except when you realize long car trips are great opportunities for smoking! What else is there to do in the car? But, I passed. No cheating what-so-ever.

Odd though ... just last week I wrote about the smoking dreams happening less frequently and this week, while in NY, I had two very real smoking dreams in a row!

The second dream even had me contemplating how to write about the 'set back' in my blog and whether I start my entire count down over? Do I confess to my failings and just move on? or have a back slash in my quit days?

Example: 420/1 and start the whole thing over after the back slash ...

I woke so disappointed I had to sit up and shake myself awake and realize it was only a dream and I could lay back down to enjoy the rest of my night and the next day of my STILL smoke free life!

Monday, August 23, 2010

Road Trip ~

Rochester NY ~ Ready or Not, Here I Come ~

My last child is going off to college.
I'm leaving today on a 7 day road trip to drive him to New York State.

I don't anticipate this being your typical College Road Trip, since we are Father and Son.
That being said, it WON'T be the driving adventures of my youth,
Smoking All The Way!

I swear, it was absolutely no big deal to drive half way across the country to New Orleans, burning an entire package of smokes along the way!

Of course, once you're in NOLA, still a very smoking friendly city, total cigarette consummation doubles.

Yes, I believe this to be a much tamer drive ...
And I'm sure my son will enjoy the smoke free ride!

Wish me luck ~

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Still Dreaming ~

They are getting less and less and further and further apart ...

But on occasion, I still have a cigarette smoking dream.
And the are still so very, very real.

Last night I was in a grounded airplane ... waiting for someone to let us all off the plane.
(Go figure -- is there a worse customer service industry??)

Finally, off the plane I was able to 'bum' a cigarette off another grounded passenger.
I smoked, and puffed, and enjoyed my first cigarette in 415 days!

"Sheeeet" ... I thought, so long and now I have had just his one. This one cigarette. One single smoke ........ "Now, I have to start my smoke free count all over again."
Shoot!! (censored, of course).

I am up for quite sometime before I realize it was all just a dream and I actually do not have to start all over .... I just have to continue plugging away .... one day at a time.

PS: Thanks Kate in MD :)

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Good Morning, Maryland ~

59 Smoke Free Weeks!
Still reason to celebrate!

(a) I can't believe I've made it this long.
(b) I can't believe I rarely even miss it anymore.

Thank you Pam for your input, congratulations and encouragement.

I haven't posted in two weeks now. I think that's the longest I've gone without a post since I started nearly 415 days ago.

And I think I have about two followers out there anymore ... Cali and N.E. .... sometimes Barb from FLA.

I haven't decided to keep this going or not ...

Should I go for 1000 days?? That'd be over 3 years ... or should I just let my humble little blog die a slow and lonely death?
Someone please help me decide .... FJW

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Day 400 And Still Blogging ~

Yes ~ If I'm still blogging, I'm still Smoke Free too!

When I first started I was sure I could make it if I really tried ... What I wasn't sure of was how long it would drive me absolutely NUTs. The best answer to that is it gets better each and every day.

What surprises me now is how bad my breathing still is. It IS a lot better from a year ago but it's still very bad, especially on high humidity days ... like the ones we've had here in the mid-west for the last few weeks.

So .... What I really want anyone who happens to see this and hasn't given up smoking yet ... Keep in mind that each passing day you continue you are doing your lungs irreparable damage and it's going to be harder and harder to recover from.

I know it's hard, but it's worth it. At least give it a try.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

July 31st ~

56 Weeks -- 392 Days --
And my second Smoke Free Birthday in a row!!

I haven't been Smoke free for two consecutive birthdays since my 14th & 15th birthdys. (I don't know whether to be proud or ashamed).

I'm really not sure who's logging in to see my humble blog but I do know not too many people do. Every so often someone will leave a somewhat inspiring comment but every one seems to drop out sooner or later. Usually sooner.

So now my dilemma is: Since I started this blog predominately as my own therapy to counter my urge to smoke and desire to quit ... do I need to keep it going?

Do I drop out?
Close up shop?
Leave out here but quit posting?
Look for someone to take over my blog as their own therapy?
Change the Subject?? Politics? Humor? Health (ie: Crohn's Disease)?
Or continue, just posting once a week or twice a month?

I do not know ... I would ask for advice but so few read this ... But as for now ...

Happy (Smoke Free) Birthday To Me !

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

'Yuck -- I Can't Believe I Ever Smoked'

~ Hypnosis to Stop Smoking ~
By Amber Greviskes
Blogger's Note: Reprinted totally without permission from AOL Health ~

Rebekah Phelps, a 47-year-old former smoker from Reston, Va., who had smoked a pack a day for more than 30 years, tried quitting cold turkey, gradually tapering off, leaning on friends and going it alone, before she stopped smoking altogether with the help of hypnosis. After finding a reputable hypnotist through a recommendation, Phelps booked an appointment.

Despite fears that this was a spooky, new age and perhaps dangerous and invasive treatment, she found a quiet office. The hypnotist walked her through several activities, including a visualization activity in which she pictured herself at a particular moment during her day when she usually smoked. She was supposed to visualize herself peacefully not smoking and being repulsed by those around her who were smoking. She was told to wake up, feeling more refreshed than she had in a long time, and to begin her life as a nonsmoker. She did both.

Phelps has been smoke free for about five years and hasn't yet craved a cigarette.

"Of course, I think about it sometimes, but I usually think, 'Yuck, I can't believe I ever smoked,'" she said. "It almost seems like 'that' period was another person or another lifetime ago."

It's not unusual for people to experience success when they choose to quit smoking using hypnosis. According to The Hypnosis Network, multiple-session hypnosis has a 66 percent success rate, higher than any other smoking cessation method available. That's important information for the 70 percent of adult smokers who would like to quit smoking. Ninety-five percent of those who attempt to quit smoking without using a program or supportive aid will fail.

Hypnotism, however, isn't usually one of the first stop-smoking methods that people choose. There are simply too many myths behind the practice, such as only the weak-minded can be hypnotized, the hypnotist has complete control over the hypnotized or that the hypnotist can make a person do things they wouldn't normally do.

However, a typical hypnosis session is nothing like a scene from the movies, in which you stare at a watch swinging back and forth. Although hypnotists can perform their services in different ways, most will begin a session by explaining the process and answering any questions. Some hypnotists will then let you have your final cigarette, instruct you to toss out remaining cigarettes and guide you into a state of hypnotic relaxation. The hypnotist will describe situations in which you might be tempted to smoke but instead turn down the cigarettes. After you emerge from hypnosis, you will spend time talking about your experience. You will also receive mantras to recite if you are tempted to smoke in the future, so you can perform self-hypnosis.

Seth-Deborah Roth, who has been a hypnotist for 10 years, said that hypnosis is successful because it allows the hypnotist to deal with the emotional part of quitting by convincing the smoker that her worst fears about quitting won't come true. The hypnotist will also give the smoker positive suggestions like, "I am a non-smoker," "I am proud of being a nonsmoker" or "Nothing feels better than being a nonsmoker" that she can turn to whenever cravings hit.

Hypnosis can give those who are trying to quit a boost in confidence, motivation and strength. It also helps explore solutions for dealing with nicotine withdrawal symptoms and cravings.
"People won't accept suggestions that they're not opened to," Roth said. "Usually they want to quit but are afraid they can't. Later, they're amazed when they don't want cigarettes, but hypnosis lets you deal with the reasons that you're smoking."

Although hypnotism works best with people who are determined to quit, even those who are hesitant can find success. Linda Castellani didn't want to quit smoking. She liked the way the first hit of a newly lit cigarette tasted. The smoke screen and the sword-like cigarettes were her protection from people, and she smoked constantly.
"If I was awake, I was smoking," Castellani said. "I smoked at my desk, in my car, at restaurants, even if other diners protested."

And despite the pressure from her co-workers, who were alarmed by her coughing, and her parents, who offered her $5,000 to quit, she couldn't stop -- until she tried hypnosis.

"I don't know why I tried hypnosis," Castellani, an Almeda, Calif., resident said. "I had my doubts about how well it would work, so I figured that if I didn't stop, I could point to my attempt, chalk hypnosis up as a failure and wait until the next thing."

Instead, she smoked her last cigarette on her way into the hypnotist's office and, after 10 years, finally quit her habit. Both women were able to find credible hypnotists who were able to help them quit, but other consumers are not as lucky. Finding a credible hypnotist can be a challenge. There's no hypnosis governing body and no single licensing procedure. One can become certified in a weekend-long course or in a certification program that requires at least 100 hours, during which the future hypnotist attends lectures, shadows a certified hypnotists and practices various techniques.

Roth recommends looking for someone who works as a full-time hypnotist and has experience working with smokers. Several organizations offer directories of hypnotists in various areas including American Hypnosis, the National Board for Certified Clinical Hypnotherapists and Hypnosis Today.

Additional Blogger's Note: I used Hypnosis to quit nearly 13 months ago. I can't say I NEVER have cravings but so far I have had success! You can click on my Hypnotists web page in the left margin of this blog.