Hi All,
I'm not on site very often these days, but check back in occasionally to see how you're all doing. So thrilled when I see someone has really "made it". Not smoking is definitely the new black - LOL. An old friend emailed with a request that I re-post an old post that she thought would help some members who are having some problems with depression. (The old links don't seem to work, so she couldn't pull it up through the search function.)The post is below. Hope it helps. Congratulations to everyone for every single day of freedom!
Not cravin', never cavin'.
Hummy
Help for anger and whining.
The SSC is a wonderful, life-saving site. The support here has been instrumental in my quit. Everyday I come on site and read great positive posts, people parading their stats, and posts where people from all over the world are helping someone in need. I also see many posts where members are complaining about their lives, their jobs, their families, and their anger. These posts DON�T bother me. Quitting smoking is quite difficult, and everyone needs a place to rant and complain. What does bother me is that, I worry that some are not learning to cope without smoking. If you don�t learn to manage your anger and your �woe is me� attitude without smoking, you�re going to end up losing your quit.
Some background: My first husband died of bone cancer when I was 23 years old. I am a 16 year cancer survivor �( dermafibrosarcoma protuberans � shoulder). I have never been totally without food; but at one point in my life, I owed 13 doctors/hospitals/clinics, was working 2 jobs and going to school full time, ate � can soup at night and saved the other half for the next evening. The history is only so that you�ll recognize that my life has not been a stress-free wonderland. On the other hand, I had a happy, carefree childhood, and am now married with two children who are my joy.
We have members on site who have coped with the death of a child, the illness and/or death of a spouse, or the death of parents. Some of us have lousy jobs, had horrible childhoods, or try to deal with nightmare marriages. Some are fighting COPD or other smoking related illnesses. We ALL have stress and tragedy in our lives. Learning to truly live without smoking is a skill we MUST learn.
Whining: So, if you are ranting and raving and crying on site because you�re going through withdrawal, you�re suddenly trying to cope with the trigger from H***, or your life just fell apart, THAT�S GREAT � NO PROBLEM � THAT�S WHAT WE�RE HERE FOR. However, if you look back at your posts and 90% of them are doom and gloom, you need to look seriously at the reasons. You may need professional help with depression, or counseling to help you get your life back into perspective. Maybe you�ve just gotten into the life habit of being a whiner. If that�s the case, get a grip on yourself and work towards a more positive attitude. No one can be �up� all the time. Actually, I don�t even enjoy being around �little Miss Sunshine� 24/7, because she doesn�t feel real. However, no one wants to be around �the voice of doom� 24/7 either. There are hundreds of books on positive thinking and getting yourself back on track. Most areas have free counseling services for people who need them.
Anger: I am rarely angry. I may be frustrated or aggravated, but like some people �don�t do guilt�, I don�t do anger. Terrorists make me angry. People who abuse children make me furious. Everyday situations with family, friends, co-workers, drivers, or sales clerks don�t make me angry. I don�t allow them to do so. YOU control your emotions. No one can make you react in a certain manner. Read and practice control, and you can learn to control your anger and channel it into some useful endeavor. You absolutely, positively don�t need cigarettes to control your actions.
Don�t feel like being positive? Then, get the anger out. Take Nostradamvs� advice: �Laying on my bed punching the crap out of my pillow til I was exhausted used to help�. Take Yoda�s advice: �Hit a flea market / garage sale (or if it is an emergency - your local dollar / pound store) and get a really cheap set of dishes (the cheaper the better), get a cardboard box, open the top and bottom, set it on a concrete floor (garage, driveway, sidewalk if you have understanding neighbors) take a dish out, drop it. Even in my worse rages - the sound and sight of three usually calmed me right down. Cheaper dishes are better as they shatter much more dramatically. The box contains the mess and sweeping it up can be a very Zen experience�.
Have young children and can�t get away? Take them to the park, the zoo, or for a backyard picnic. Raining outside? Take them to the library for story hour, check out a kid�s kitchen science book � you�ll have fun with them and probably learn something, too. Teens pushing your buttons? Walk into another room, lock the door, take a shower, or put on earphones and play classical music (or whatever makes you happy). Problems with hubby/wife or friends? TALK with them � not to them � with them. Didn�t work? Explain that you�re having a rough time at the moment and follow directions for Teens.
Great quote to think about:
�Beginning today, treat everyone you meet as if they were going to be dead by midnight. Extend to them all the care, kindness and understanding you can muster, and do it with no thought of any reward. Your life will never be the same again.� ~Og Mandino
or change it: Beginning today live every single day as if it is your last. � I try this one everyday. You�ll find that you have almost nothing to whine about, and that very little is worth getting angry over. Thing is, it could be true. This could be the last day we have to make a difference. So, if your anger or moodiness is getting out of hand, get help. If it�s gone beyond withdrawal and is hanging around like a stray cat, get help. Every single moment of your life is worth living. One of the reasons we�re quitting smoking is to have more of those moments. Don�t waste them on anger and whining. Those two aren�t worth your time anymore than smoking was.
Hugs,
Hummy
[B]My Milage:[/B]
[B]My Quit Date: [/B]5/5/2005
[B]Smoke-Free Days:[/B] 1025
[B]Cigarettes Not Smoked:[/B] 41,000
[B]Amount Saved:[/B] $6,662.50
[B]Life Gained:[/B]
[B]Days:[/B] 141 [B]Hrs:[/B] 5 [B]Mins:[/B] 2 [B]Seconds:[/B] 23
-
Quit Meter
$474,718.40
Amount Saved
-
Quit Meter
Days: 5842
Hours: 17
Minutes: 29
Seconds: 26
Life Gained
-
Quit Meter
45646
Smoke Free Days
-
Quit Meter
912,920
Cigarettes Not Smoked