/me wants to be a robot again, without feelings, without thought, just
doing what she is programmed to do.
today is kitchen cleaning day and maybe my room after. I got lots of
boxes yesterday. A notebook and a camera. Oh yeah and my ipod to turn
on the music.
The strange part is that now its so much harder not to smoke than
during the more stressful weeks. At least it feels like it. There is
the rewarding part after getting things done. I used to devide my day
by taking a break every two hour and have a smoke.
oh well I just needed to rant I am off to cleaning my kittchen and
maybe go out and buy some food.
PolarBear
just showing that my meter is still intact
two months, one week, five days, 14 hours, 39 minutes and 56 seconds.
736 cigarettes not smoked, saved $301.80 to pay for her Wii.
Every two hours, come here and post.
Robo-Bear....
(((((Carmen)))))
I can relate to that break/reward thing. I smoked for 25+ years. I
also have ADHD, and I used cigarettes as a coping mechanism for my poor
little brain. When I'd get frustrated, distracted, or over-stimulated,
I'd step outside and have a cigarette. It would take me 6 cigarettes to
clean two bathrooms on my house cleaning day. (YIKES! That's the first
time I've counted them up!) When I was working on my computer, it would
be even worse! I would have stopped in the middle of this email if I
got to a place where I couldn't think of the right words or wasn't sure
what comes next. This email would have taken me 30 minutes to write.
I thank GOD that I had enough sense to put those death sticks DOWN! It
took me a long time to learn to do things without them. I didn't quite
know what to do with myself... For some tasks, I had to learn to
complete them in their entirety without taking a break (I mean, who
needs 6 breaks to clean a couple of bathrooms?). With others, I found
more constructive things to do that still allowed me to walk away from
the task at hand for a minute or two (okay, so I do take a "pause" when
I'm doing the bathrooms!), like checking the mail, making my bed,
loading up the breakfast dishes in the dishwasher, entering a recipe in
my database, sticking a picture on one of my scrapbook pages I have in
progress....
I'm not saying any of it was easy...rather, just the opposite. Learning
to live without cigarettes is one of the hardest things I've ever done.
But it has also been one of the most rewarding. My body rewards me
EVERY DAY. And my sense of well-being has improved so much that I find
it difficult to describe.
I know it's very hard right now. But just keep to it. Keep thinking of
alternative things you can do INSTEAD of smoking. Try and think of
things that make you feel good, or things that are productive or
healthy. If you start filling all those breaks with those kinds of
things, eventually it will feel like THAT is what you're supposed to be
doing, and you won't even be thinking about the cigarettes at all. It
takes time, but I SWEAR that's the way it happened for me....
Cindy
Smobriety comes to: 1Y 8M 0W D 22H 40Mns $-Saved to date: $2393.37
Cigs not smoked: 12118
FlatironMike
One year, six months, three weeks, six days, 13 hours, 8 minutes and
11 seconds. 11490 cigarettes not smoked, saving $3,447.03. Life saved:
5 weeks, 4 days, 21 hours, 30 minutes.
Cindy..... this is good stuff.....
Thanks David, but I can't take credit for it. I've just paraphrased
what everyone else here has said a dozen times! :) I learned it all
from you guys! :)
Cindy
Smobriety comes to: 1Y 8M 0W 2D 19H 35Mns $-Saved to date: $2400.78
Cigs not smoked: 12156
No..... I'm talking about the experience sharing part....