Princess, one of the first things I realized, when I decided to quit smoking, was that it was very much about "identity"; that one of the biggest hurdles to overcome was to make peace with a nonsmoking identity.
I smoked for 35 years. That's a very long time to see myself in certain terms, only to change those terms so late in the game. And that's what I'm now doing. I'm 109 days into reconfiguring my identity... and making myself believe that this new identity is real... not just an experiment or a break from "reality"... or what has come to represent reality for me over many years.
There's still that voice in my head that says, "Who are you trying to kid? You know who you are? How long do you think you can carry on this charade?"
Often enough I still experience disorientation, awkwardness and frustration, because one core charactoristic of the person I've come to recognise as "myself"... is gone. And at times... I feel displaced by someone I really don't know. But it's really no different than what someone might go through who has sufferred from some physical abnormality... blindness, paralysis, etc. If your leg has been paralyzed for 35 years... and suddenly that paralysis is gone... even though you realize what a good thing that is, it's still going to be tough adjusting your identity and your references... your approach to living, to your new reality.
Quitting smoking is a wonderful thing. Life without cigarettes is wonderful. But... sometimes the frustration of having to adapt to it makes it seem like it's anything but wonderful.
That's the power of addiction. Whether it's heroin, booze or cigs... that's the power of addiction. That's the thing that can keep you trapped forever.
It takes time. We can't put any conditions on this. We smoked for many years, and it's going to take time before we're as comfortable being non-smokers as we were being smokers. Right now... many of us are "faking it til we make it". We're telling ourselves the truth... that we were never meant to smoke, we were never meant to live that way (if we can call that 'living')... but we fostered the illusion, for many years, that smoking was central to our experience of life... and that it was OK. That's a hard illusion to overcome.
But we will. You will. I promise.
Give it the time it takes, and in the meantime... you're making progress. Change is happening, little by little. Enjoy your life, smokefree. Insist on it, and act on it.
[B]My Milage:[/B]
[B]My Quit Date: [/B]3/6/2007
[B]Smoke-Free Days:[/B] 109
[B]Cigarettes Not Smoked:[/B] 2,725
[B]Amount Saved:[/B] $1,008.25
[B]Life Gained:[/B]
[B]Days:[/B] 17 [B]Hrs:[/B] 14 [B]Mins:[/B] 0 [B]Seconds:[/B] 36