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This group is for quitters from Alberta both new and migrating from Alberta Quits allowing us to...
Repost: Stress after quitting
Another excellent Eric repost.
Have a good day
Cara
D7001
Stress After Quitting
From Eric7704 on 12/3/2009 12:53:55 PM
Stress can be a huge trigger for people quitting smoking and a lot of people believe that on some level smoking relieved their stress. It didn't. Smoking actually creates stress.
The whole business of smoking is relieving an anxiety that the previous cigarette created. AN ANXIETY THAT SHOULD HAVE NEVER BEEN THERE IN THE FIRST PLACE.
I'm sure...Repost: Stress after quitting
Another excellent Eric repost.
Have a good day
Cara
D7001
Stress After Quitting
From Eric7704 on 12/3/2009 12:53:55 PM
Stress can be a huge trigger for people quitting smoking and a lot of people believe that on some level smoking relieved their stress. It didn't. Smoking actually creates stress.
The whole business of smoking is relieving an anxiety that the previous cigarette created. AN ANXIETY THAT SHOULD HAVE NEVER BEEN THERE IN THE FIRST PLACE.
I'm sure everyone here knows that nicotine releases dopamine, but that it only part of the story. Not only did the brain have to turn it's own sensitivity down to naturally release dopamine, causing the smoker to rely a lot more on the cigarette just to feel "nicotine normal", much like a child at the mercy of their parents for an allowance. Nicotine also had the ability to fit the smoker's adrenaline locks.
As the effects of nicotine wore off and adrenaline was pumping through the bloodstream. The smoker was left with a subtle fight or flight feeling. A heightened anxiety. A empty feeling of insecurity and an uncomfortableness.
The mind and body were being fooled into thinking that something was wrong. Like the person was in some kind of danger, when in fact, there was no outside danger there.
So the smoker would smoke a cigarette and temporarily switch off this response and once again feel safe and comfortable.
One of the problems with stress, is that nicotine is a very unstable alkoloid. Stress though is an acidic producing event. What this does is it actually causes the nicotine to get pulled out of the bloodstream at an accelerated rate. This will quickly put the smoker into the first stages of withdrawal.
So when we smoked and were under stress. This only created a compounded problem of having withdrawal on top of what was initially creating our stress.
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So we smoked a cigarette. Relieved withdrawal and "felt better".
The problem is that after years or most likely decades, the line has blurred between releiving stress and withdrawal. we started to become brainwashed that on some level smoking relieved our stress. It didn't.
Nothing changed. The initial problem that originally created our stress was still there. It is just that we were now able to deal with the problem because we were no longer preoccupied with the compounded uncomfortable... Show more