I can't.....stop smoking........

Options
13»

Comments

  • hollyann
    hollyann Member Posts: 2,992
    edited January 2008

    Trix,  have you tried CHantix??  It works thru blocking the nicotine receptors in the brain.  You can still smoke while on it all you want, but it eventually makes the cigarettes taste bad and you really dont want them anyway.  I Used Chantix (it's prescript) and i quit in 6 weeks.  My last day of ever smoking a cigarette was Dec 30, 2006.    Good Luck and God Bless you.

  • NootiesMom
    NootiesMom Member Posts: 39
    edited January 2008

    Trix,

    I hear you, but like Lucy said Chantix, that is what I'm on and it is the best.  I smoked like a chimmeny for years and now I'm down to like 3 a day, hoping to be done with them for good soon.  I have been on the chantix for 2 weeks and I don't even know why I still smoke.  They taste gross.  I will put them down for good when I'm ready.

    Try it and go to this website to see more

    http://www.topix.com/forum/law/healthcare/TBP6PBH59IN2DVPTO

    Good luck

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2008

    My dad smoked for 40 years. He just quit using the Chantix!  So proud of him!!!!

  • AnnNYC
    AnnNYC Member Posts: 4,484
    edited January 2008

    Althea, you said:

    "The first ingredient to the mix is WANTING to quit.  And beating yourself up over having a habit that's bad for your health is NOT the same thing as wanting to quit.  

    Giving yourself rewards is very important also."

    That is so true -- I was finally able to quit (cold turkey last March, between dx and mast/recon) because for the first time I allowed myself:

    pride,

    congratulations,

    pats on the back,

    applause

    from myself and others everytime I had a strong urge for a cigarette but rode it out.

    I would call my sister or my best friend to say "congratulate me -- I wanted a cigarette so bad 10 minutes ago, but I didn't have it and now the urge has passed."

    In all previous attempts, I didn't even tell anybody, and all I let myself feel was tremendous shame for having a bad habit.  A bad habit that helps you escape bad feelings!  Like shame!

    So this time I rejected the bad feelings first!  And didn't need the smokes so bad!

  • KarenC
    KarenC Member Posts: 66
    edited January 2008

    Today my mom was diagnosed with lung cancer cause it was caught early were doing tests for something else and it was seen on her CT scan-biopsy later this week,surgery later this month. The doctor told her smoking wasn't the only cause for the cancer.

    Prognosis is good as it was caught early. For those out there quit smoking to lower your risk.

    Take care,

    Karen

  • jtrit1
    jtrit1 Member Posts: 3
    edited January 2008

    I have been quiting for about  7 months now, i started with chantix and went on my own. I'm down to about 2 cigs a day, last week none. but i went out with friends and they all smoke, and i'll smoke about 1/2 pack. this is good compared to what i used to smoke 1 pack a day, night out with friends 2 packs. my thought is that it will just take time to completely quit, because i still like to smoke. your not alone, good luck

    !!!

  • wishiwere
    wishiwere Member Posts: 3,793
    edited January 2008

    Does anyone have a site with information about wellbutrin and tamoxifen having adverse reactions?  My insurance makes you try wellbutrin frist then you can do chantix.  I tried years ago when it first was discovered to help with smoking cessation and it did absolutely nothing for me.  I have no record of that and would like to do the chantix, but I need information for the doc first!  Anyone have a site they can share where this report is found?

  • marejo
    marejo Member Posts: 1,356
    edited January 2008

    Just wanting to add my support and encouragement to you all.  I am an ex-smoker.  Ironically, I quit 15 years ago after having a lumpectomy and being told they couldn't be sure if I had breast cancer or not so they were going to send my "slides" to a large pathology lab.  Thankfully at that time I didn't but in June of '05 was diagnosed with breast cancer in that breast - same area.  So..........I'm glad it got me to quit.

    I've often thought of how it would be if I were still a smoker having gone through all I've gone through - 2 mastectomies - dose dense chemo x 8, 28 rads., and 1 year of herceptin.  Honestly, I don't know if I could have done being under all that stress.

    My heart aches for each of you as you struggle with this addiction and feel you would somehow be responsible for another cancer.  Honestly, I think we all try (or at least most of us do) to do all we can to prevent a recurrence AND we all fail at "perfection."  There is no such thing and we can all only do our best.  Ultimately,  our fate, (at least I believe) isn't in our hands anyway - it's in the Lord's. 

    That being said, of course I believe that quitting would be beneficial to your OVERALL health and now I will pray for each of you to get the strength you need to give up this nasty habit.

    Hugs from one ex-smoker - one who gets it and has been their.

    Love,

    Mary Jo

  • wishiwere
    wishiwere Member Posts: 3,793
    edited January 2008

    Thank Mary Jo.  I have to admit when I first dx. I thought no one would help me quit (the docs I requested a script for kept passing it off), b/c they knew it was cancer and too far advanced to treat!  I was sure of it!  Theavens, it was only they knew I'd be dealing with a lot and it wouldn't be a good time to 1) attempt it, and 2) to start a new script  with everything that I would be taking.  I'm going to wait til I am through treatment, and start tamox and get settle on that, then this spring when I can be out in the gardens in spare time, I'll start the script and go for the gold!  THEN, I will be asking for your prayers for strenght! I know I can do it, just have to do it right THIS time! :D

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2008

    I quit in May..just on the patch.. my second try at it. I think it's because I really finally wanted to.  I've heard great things about chantix sp? tho.

    and if u have both gene mutations.. I really don't see how stoppping smoking will affect anything for the positive. I mean.. the stress of trying to quit is probably worse than just cutting back and enjoying life w/o all the stress ...kwim?? 

  • Ltb3105
    Ltb3105 Member Posts: 87
    edited January 2008

    I quit for ten years....yep, ten whole years....know when I went back?  A year AFTER my treatments!  Yes, I figured, what the hell, I quit for ten years and got cancer anyway (I have the gene, found out last year), but I wanted to ask you all something.

    I tried Wellbutrin, but had a nervous breakdown....I can't take that kind of antidepressant....had been taking SSRI'S for years, Wellbutrin is another kind of A/D and NOT for those who need SSRI's....who knew?

    About this Chantrix?  Will it negatively affect the Prozac I am on?  I am afraid to try anything else because I don't want to spiral out of control again....it was a nightmare:  insomnia, panic attacks, deep depression....took me months to get back on track....don't want to go there again.

    So, in the meantime, I'm going in the backyard for a smoke.

    Foot in mouth

    Laura

  • MarieKelly
    MarieKelly Member Posts: 591
    edited January 2008

    I'm a smoker too, so I know how difficult it can be to give it up. But here's a little added incentive...especially for those of you who have had radiation or are going to be having radiation sometime soon. This, among a few other reasons, is why I refused radiation after lumpectomy.

    http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSCOL26775720080122

    Smoking ups risk with radiation for breast cancer

    Tue Jan 22, 2008 1:50pm EST  NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Cigarette smoking dramatically increases the risk that a woman who has undergone radiation treatment for breast cancer will develop lung cancer later on, a new study shows.

    Radiation after mastectomy may be considered for some high-risk breast cancer patients, Dr. Elizabeth L. Kaufman and colleagues from Columbia University in New York City point out in their report. However, radiation can cause many complications, including increasing the likelihood that a patient will develop lung cancer 10 or more years after treatment, they add.

    An earlier, small study by Kaufman and her team had suggested that cigarette smoking could boost this risk even more. To investigate further, she and her colleagues looked at breast cancer patients included in the Connecticut Tumor Registry who had been diagnosed with the disease between 1965 and 1989. They compared 113 women who had developed lung cancer 10 or more years after their breast cancer diagnosis with 364 women who did not.

    Non-smoking women who had undergone radiation were no more likely than those who hadn't had radiation therapy to develop lung cancer, the researchers found. However, women who smoked but didn't have radiation therapy were nearly six times as likely to be diagnosed with lung cancer than non-smokers who didn't have radiation, while women who smoked and did undergo radiation therapy were at nearly 19-fold greater risk.

    Combined smoking and radiation therapy increased the risk that a woman would develop cancer in the lung on the same side of the body as her affected breast nearly 38-fold, while the risk of developing cancer in the opposite lung was more than 10-fold greater.

    The findings suggest, the researchers say, that women who have smoked and undergone radiation therapy for breast cancer should undergo screening for lung cancer using a scanning technique called spiral computed tomography. Furthermore, doctors should consider a patient's smoking history when discussing her breast cancer treatment options, they add, especially if radiation may offer only a "marginal" survival advantage.

    SOURCE: Journal of Clinical Oncology, January 20, 2008.

  • Voo
    Voo Member Posts: 18
    edited January 2008

    I quit smoking after my little brother died at age 34, and at the same time I had a bad mammo.  On March 10th, it will be 2 years for me.

    I did it with a LOT of mental preparation.  I used nicotine lozenges when needed, but nothing else.  I think most smokers looking to quit want some kind of magic bullet to do it easily.  I don't think that exists.  I also had free phone counseling (offered in New Jersey).

    Anyhow...this website was INVALUABLE to me in quitting.  I couldn't have done it without it. I mean that.  Please go there and just read it, it won't kill you.   www.quitsmokingonline.com  Read the text and at the very bottom of the page click on the link to the free online quit smoking course. 

    If I really felt tempted to smoke, I'd sometimes look at this site too:

    http://whyquit.com

    I smoked for 20 years, I know how hard it is, but honestly now that I'm quit for nearly 2 years I rarely think about it.  I very seldom miss it, and when I do, it's a fleeting feeling.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2008

    Hi Nan.....it's me crazydaisy....Viv. Geez man...I couldn't believe how large an area of DCIS you had! Lucky there weren't any surprises. That is encouraging for me! PS I'm in the smokers club to. Will I quit???.......not right now.......to much stress.

  • angie27
    angie27 Member Posts: 863
    edited February 2008

    When I found out in December that I had BC, my family and friends started attacking me about my smoking, they immediately linked it to my smoking, well I started to cut down a little bit, but the stress with cancer alone its killing me, its definetly something to consider , but I am not ready yet.

  • ADK
    ADK Member Posts: 2,259
    edited February 2008

    Angie -

    Now is not the time for you to quit.  To tell you the truth, there really isn't a direct connection between breast cancer and smoking.  You will quit when you are ready.  I am not ready yet. 

  • Trix41
    Trix41 Member Posts: 9
    edited March 2008

    Hey ladies!!!

    Sorry so long time no talk! My cousin hogs the computer!!

    Well, after reading all the posts and knowing y'all are my sisters...I did it. I went and bought the Chantix.

    And....so far....I'm done! I quit! I sucked it up...literally cuz the script $143......anyway, I felt like I might puke the first three days. Nothing major (like we are use too) just the watery mouth thing and then swallowing it back. On the fourth day, I started to feel like I didn't want one and then BAM!!!!!!!!!!! 5 days after....I did not want one and have not wanted one since!

    It's freaking miracle drug. I swear. I can't believe it. My roommate and I had some friends over for cards. She chain smokes when she's drinkin' which she was and she makes her boyfriend smoke cigars so she doesn't feel like such a loser smoking athough....she's on chantix too. She did it before I did. I wanted to watch her first and she was cutting way back I mean she defined the word chain smoker...blah blah blah...anyway, that nite, in all that temptation, I had one cig. I had maybe 10 more Saturday and Sunday and then Monday I went to lite up took one puff and was like yuck. I stamped it out and haven't had a drag since.

    Although now that I've given you guys the play by play and I had a Baileys! I really want one. But wait one minute.......deep sigh......the urge passes. Very strange drug. It has really worked for me but, I've got more motivation than my roomie...I have cancer.  I think my roomie will get there as soon as she gets over the shock of it working for me because we all know....she knows everything and does everything better than me! She won't let me prove her wrong! Ha! This time that will be a good thing.

    Go get Chantix! It works. I've got very little will power and it is working for me. For now and I am fighting forever...i don't want lung mets.

    I wish you girls good luck! I'll let you know if a few weeks if I'm still good to go or I collapsed under addiction.

    Love ya! Trix

  • AnnNYC
    AnnNYC Member Posts: 4,484
    edited March 2008

    You're doing great, Trix!!!  Congratulations!!!

    In one week it'll be a year since my dx -- in 3 weeks it'll be a year since my last cigarette! and they were costing $7 dollars a pack here in NYC, $50 a week, so that's about $2500 dollars! think of something nice you want to buy yourself (I think I spent mine on frickin co-pays and aromasin, but still...Smile)

  • snowyday
    snowyday Member Posts: 1,478
    edited March 2008

    I worry because I have a son who smokes, one day I was in a corner store and found a package called Nic-Not the are little holders you put on the filter of a cigarette. Funny he's using them and says they don't affect the taste but it's really making him think because you can see the tar build up you can use one for up to 5-10 cigarettes. So he smokes much less because he sees the tar build up in the filter thing.  So maybe anyone smoking if you could find them they might help. Good luck Pearl  The box is the size of a cig pack and is blue and white.

  • angie27
    angie27 Member Posts: 863
    edited March 2008

    Hi, Marykelley,

    I have a question for you, I had a lumpectomy 2/27, I will meet with the oncologist 3/7, I also want to review and research my options for treatment as far as radiation is concerned, I am very worry about the smoking and also some other side effects .  what grade is your cancern?, can you please tell me more about, this type of decisions.

    thanks,

    Angie

  • anneshirley
    anneshirley Member Posts: 1,110
    edited March 2008

    Trix--congratulations.  If this doesn't continue to work, or for anyone else with same problem, I stopped through self-hypnosis. I was smoking four packs a day for decades.  I found a medical doctor who was qualified to teach me the technique.  I practiced it for four months, a few times a day, and then stopped on the American Heart smoke-out day.  It was absolutely painless.  I didn't think once about having a cigarette (honest).  That was in 1987, and I'm still off twenty years later and without once having the desire to go back.  But again congratulations.  It's not easy.

  • jacky101
    jacky101 Member Posts: 1
    edited March 2008

    hello everone i am so happy to have fell upon this site i do not have breast cancet but i am just a few months out of treatment for non hodgkins and a large mediastinal tumor i quit smoking the night before treatment and quit for awhile but for some reason i just cant stop  i didnt get any help from the cancer center i am only smoking about 3 cigarrette a day but i am afraid with stress that i will need more i am trying but not getting to far

  • WendyInCalif
    WendyInCalif Member Posts: 172
    edited March 2008

    This is called creative smoking - don't inhale.  Or, if you must, only inhale twice on one cigarette, the first puff and the last.  Smoke outside, also stay out of the smoke, so you won't be surrounded by cig smoke that you inhale.  Until you are ready to quit, this will help. My cough has gone away with this method. 

    I also only smoke 1/2 a cig at a time also.  I hate my habit, too :)

    Things like this will take us up to the point where they are more of a nuisance, along with the health consequences, huge cost, unattrative antisocial habit, than they are worth. 

    I think not feeling bad about smoking is important right now. 

     Enjoy them cuz you know one day you'll be saying good-bye to them.  There were a great friend at one time but now, they take more than they give. 

  • Sociologist
    Sociologist Member Posts: 237
    edited March 2008

    WOW!!! I've been on the boards since August and I was waaaay to embarassed to even say I still smoke after the bc! I'm allergic to Welbutrin and the Chantix (unless the extreme flu symptoms are just a side effect). I've tried several times to quit since the surgery in July but after a couple of days I get so frustrated and light up!

    I know I have to quit but I also know it's an addiction (I teach classes on Drug Abuse and cigarettes are harder to quit than heroin!). How stupid is this...I was 35 before I started smoking, the night before my first college math test (cigs didn't help; failed the test anyway!).

    I wish everyone the best in this battle and for those of yall that have quit, rock on!

    Margaret

  • Sharon67
    Sharon67 Member Posts: 154
    edited March 2008

    Margaret, so we meet on another thread!!! Now we can both keep our dirty little secret. I feel sooo bad that I sneek a few cigarettes here and there because dh stopped drinking and smoking both at the same time Dec. 18th. He said he finally did it for me as well as himself and has not cheated once!!! Me on the other hand, quit with him because of the bc, but a few weeks ago when I had to go to Atlanta with him, he was gone all day long and I was at the hotel, and before I knew it, I bought a pack and hid them outside in a courtyard. How bad am I???? I know I should not be doing this, but it calms my nerves, and I don't drink and I am trying not to gain anymore weight. I gained one dress size, and Wednesday I finally started back to work. Thank goodness for stretch jeans!!!! Anyways, hope all is well. Talk to you soon.

    sharon

  • JeanLouise
    JeanLouise Member Posts: 21
    edited March 2008

    I'm an ex-smoker.  It took me a LOT of unsuccessful tries before I was finally successful.

    The way I finally succeeded was to separate the psychological addiction from  the physical addiction.  Over a period of time, I got rid of all of the psychological triggers, but let myself smoke as much as I wanted... just not WHEN I wanted.  For instance, I did not allow myself to smoke in the car.  If I really, really, really needed a cig that bad, I would pull over, get out of the car, and then smoke outside the car.

    Finally, it was time.  I was very uncomfortable for a few days, and got the edge off by using smokeless tobacco.  It was NO fun but remember that it WILL pass. 

Categories