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Quit Guide: Staying Quit

Sticking With It


Keeping Your Guard Up

Your body has changed since you began to smoke. Your brain has learned to crave nicotine. So certain places, people, or events can trigger a strong urge to smoke, even years after quitting. That's why you should never take a puff again, no matter how long it has been since you quit.

At first, you may not be able to do things as well as when you were smoking. Don't worry. This won't last long. Your mind and body just need to get used to being without nicotine.

After you've quit, the urge to smoke often hits at the same times. For many people, the hardest place to resist the urge is at home. And many urges hit when someone else is smoking nearby. Look at your Craving Journal (PDF) to see when you might be tempted. Then use the skills you've learned to get through your urges without smoking.

Fighting The Urges

Review the tips in this guide to help you fight the urge to smoke. These tips are meant to help you stay a nonsmoker.

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Staying Upbeat

As you go through the first days and weeks without smoking, keep a positive outlook. Don't blame or punish yourself if you do have a cigarette. Don't think of smoking as "all or none." Instead, take it one day at a time. Remember that quitting is a learning process.

Keep Rewarding Yourself For Not Smoking

Now that you aren't buying cigarettes, you probably have more spending money. Use our savings calculator to find out just how much!

Now that you aren't buying cigarettes, you probably have more spending money. Use our savings calculator to find out just how much!

    (MM/DD/YYYY)   Calendar  
     
$
   (U.S. average: $5.31)

 

Think about starting a "money jar" if you haven't already. Put your cigarette money aside for each day you don't smoke. Soon you'll have enough money to buy a reward for yourself.