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Tips to Quit Smoking. If you really want to quit smoking you must try and try never give up to trying many different ways to got it.
1. List your own reasons for quitting.
2. Choose a "low stress" time to quit.
Set a date and stick to it.
3. Build a support network around you. Ask for
help from your dentist, doctor, family, friends, work colleagues.
4. Use medicines that help your body get used to
life without nicotine: they can double your chances of quitting for good. Ask
your doctor, dentist, pharmacist about them first.
5. Seek tobacco-free environments to curb your
temptations: eg movies, theatres, libaries, restaurants.
6. Plan activities that leave no opportunity for
smoking.
7. Remove smoking paraphernalia from your home,
office and car.
8. Anticipate problems and have a realistic plan
to deal with challenges (eg if going out with smokers, practise what you are
going to say when you refuse a cigarette).
9. Exercise: not only can it make you feel better
about yourself and your decision to quit, it is hard to smoke when you're
cycling, swimming, or jogging.
10. Keep your hands occupied. Take up some manual
activities: woodworking, gardening, do the housework, keep some needlework or a
small book of puzzles or crosswords with you.
11. Practise the 4Ds when you feel cravings coming
on: Delay (craving will pass in 5 to 10 minutes); Drink
water(helps wash toxins from your body, keeps your hands and mouth busy); Distract yourself
(keep active, do something else); Deep breathing (inhaling and
exhaling deeply is soothing and relaxing).
Tips list is adapted from the American Dental Association's
Oral Health Topics.
And finally, the most important tip of all:
Persevere and don't let setbacks get you down. It is like learning to ride a bike: when you fall off, just get back on again and keep trying. There will be bad days, and there will be good days.
Remember, the majority of successful quitters did not stop on their first quit attempt.
Quitting smoking reduces heart attack risk to lifetime non-smokers' level - although giving up smoking cannot reverse damage to the arteries, it can bring down the risk of heart attack and death to levels found in lifetime non-smokers, researchers from New York Presbyterian Hospital and Weill Cornell Medical College reported.
And finally, the most important tip of all:
Persevere and don't let setbacks get you down. It is like learning to ride a bike: when you fall off, just get back on again and keep trying. There will be bad days, and there will be good days.
Remember, the majority of successful quitters did not stop on their first quit attempt.
Quitting smoking reduces heart attack risk to lifetime non-smokers' level - although giving up smoking cannot reverse damage to the arteries, it can bring down the risk of heart attack and death to levels found in lifetime non-smokers, researchers from New York Presbyterian Hospital and Weill Cornell Medical College reported.
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