Best advice is what a colleague told me.
Tell yourself, 'I won't have this one, I'll have the next one'. It kills the current craving as your brain is happy you'll have one in 2 and a half mins (or whatever the gap is between cravings), but like tomorrow the next one never comes.
Also, as a smoking cessation lady told me,
'There is no such thing as a nicotine level so it cannot drop after food'. It's just your brain demanding a fix; remember this is really a battle of wills and you need to treat it as a war. This is also the reason so many ex-smokers become so obnoxiously anti-smoker - they are still fighting a battle.
I quit 3 and a half years ago, and like Brillo and some others tell you, it's a war that never really goes away - there are times you really really want that cigarette
Tell yourself, 'I won't have this one, I'll have the next one'. It kills the current craving as your brain is happy you'll have one in 2 and a half mins (or whatever the gap is between cravings), but like tomorrow the next one never comes.
Also, as a smoking cessation lady told me,
'There is no such thing as a nicotine level so it cannot drop after food'. It's just your brain demanding a fix; remember this is really a battle of wills and you need to treat it as a war. This is also the reason so many ex-smokers become so obnoxiously anti-smoker - they are still fighting a battle.
I quit 3 and a half years ago, and like Brillo and some others tell you, it's a war that never really goes away - there are times you really really want that cigarette

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