It was very easy, but I have always been this way with smoking.
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Smoking shisha hours on the weekend then nothing for months etc, for example. So finally I just said, OK, enough. When I quit I had been smoking non-stop for 6 months 5-6 cigs per day.
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I see. My wife was more like that, quit sometimes then started, then quit etc, not being as dependent as I was. I basically chain smoked for 10+ years (pack/day or shag tobacco). Then I quit. *bam* My body had to catch up with what my mind had decided, so to say. No notice.
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Replying to @IrisVanRooij @o_guest
Same here. Quitting had a strong effect body and mind. How easy was to lit one and relax! But then guilt is a stronger force!
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Replying to @twitemp1 @IrisVanRooij
I really restarted smoking because I was needed psychological support in many ways. It's very different to being a general smoker I think. Kind of like when US soldiers returned from Vietnam where they were addicts and they just stopped! Context plays a huge role.
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I used to smoke fewer than 10 per day on and off for years. Quitting every summer for example when I was back in Cyprus. Or if not quitting drastically reducing.
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That's why it was easy. I entered a period of my life where I'm much happier.
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Replying to @o_guest @IrisVanRooij
Bloody hell, now I am craving for one even though I cannot longer bear the smell!
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Here, think of a
or a
. Breath in, breath out.1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes -
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