Betty White's
not quite my typical saturday night
why was i on the computer at such times...
laaame
you were on the computer because you're pathetic
wanna go on a date with me?
also, many people's choice's are gather together to celebrate the most eloquent of anniversarie's, and or marriages.
I would probably bone you at a wedding or something.
I mean, nasty, funny smelling boning is what after wedding parties are all about.
wooah
hater
i was actually reading a bit about bound feet, and there seems to be a suggestion that the inward curved toes formed the perfect little cavity for a penis.
i am intrigued, to say the least.
but they also mentioned that at least in certain places and at certain times men never wanted women to remove their foot coverings. even though they were petit and elegant in a way that pleased men and the vanity of those who had these feet, their features were still conidered to be unattractively deforemed. they also had a tendency to stink due to all the inaccesible folds.
even though there was risk of infection including gangrene and the women were in pain for life, incredibly they could still carry out tasks required for manual labor such as climbing mountains, walking long distances, etc.
petite feet
feminine step
oh boy lol, how wasted are you there?
Nicotine withdrawals are all in your head. If you feel like shit after quitting chances are you aren't going to quit for very long.
Well, part of the addiction are the sensory stimuli from the other aspects of you addiction.
In the case of cigarettes, these include the holding the cigarette in your fingers, lifting it up to your lips, and taking a long... long... drag...
I mean, I can help you with this, but you end up becoming addicted to cigars...
There are only physical aspects to the withdrawal if you go about quitting with the wrong mindset. Trust me, every withdrawal symptom is caused by your mental state. It doesn't surprise me that you tried quitting this way before and started smoking again, just like your going to eventually end up smoking again this time too.
It really annoys me when people say they have successfully "quit" before.
If you have to "quit" again, you failed at it the first time.
Semantics. To willfully go through the withdrawal period and get past it for a significant period of time is to successfully stop smoking. I actually thought I'd be ok smoking cigars (not sycld cigars) after 8 months being clean; I was wrong because it led to cigarettes again. Probably on/off the wagon is better terminology though.
Also gina, agreed lol.
lol "willfully go through the withdrawal period"
You realize there are people who've smoked 80-100 cigarettes a day and have quit with absolutely no withdrawals at all right? Its all in your head
And sorry but quitting for a period of time only to go back is not successfully quitting at all. It just shows you're still a slave to nicotine and you're brainwashed into thinking that's actually an accomplishment.
well if you make it to the point where you've beat the addiction (gone through the withdrawal, go through a period of time where stimuli such as seeing another smoke or being in a smoky room do not incite a craving), I would call that quitting.
Which I've done, but I started up again for lame reasons. Still, the fact that I would sit around chain smokers and feel no desire to smoke means, to me, that I beat it. Because I started it up again (cigars during celebration periods, which didn't immediately land me back in cravingland, smoking to help stay awake on the drive home (it was 19 then 21 hrs of driving in a 48 hr period)) doesn't mean that i didn't quit the first time.
i didn't want to any more, really. i started getting active by running a whole lot, and the smoking really got in the way of that, and i was pretty frustrated with myself at that point in my life. i decided (and managed) to break all the habits i didn't like about myself and get out of the rut that was oshawa factory life, although this new discipline took a big downturn in the partycamp life that is tree planting
I read all these posts backwards and found out you're talking about cigarettes.....
quit being a fucking pussy. withdrawal from cigarettes? THERE IS NO SUCH THING
Well of course you say that now. I still don't believe you.
Look at this difference. Coq was starting to work out. Cigarettes were getting in the way of that. He was already trying to make a lifestyle change which was being interfered with by cigarettes, so he stopped. You on the other hand are forcing yourself to stop, and trying to help that process by working out more.
He quit cigarettes because he started working out (among other things like the fact that he was trying to completely turn his life around)
You started working out because you quit cigarettes
Big difference. I have to stop now though or else I'm going to have to start charging you for a therapy session and that's just not my style.
well i mean you don't withdrawal like you do off of harder drugs you stupid drug addict, but you do have some symptoms that are associated with quitting cigarettes. like eating more. coughing up stuff. and mood swings.
however cigarettes are both a physical and mental addiction so most of these do not pop up if you're honestly mentally serious about quitting
the only thing i ever had withdrawal for was vicodin and i was sick/throwing up for a day because i took about 180 pills in a month.
The only withdrawal symptom I could see being universal is irritability, or mood swings as you said. No matter what mental state you're in when you quit your body is still going to crave nicotine for awhile, which causes people to be irritable. The eating more thing just comes from the habit of smoking. If you're craving a cigarette, you're likely to compensate by eating more, chewing gum, putting a pencil (or dique) in your mouth, or other simple things like that. All of which are poor substitutes and usually lead right back to smoking, because you shouldn't have to substitute it with anything in the first place. That's where the weight gain myth comes from, because when people crave a cigarette they'll compensate by eating. The coughing stuff up thing I don't really get because if you're a smoker you're going to be coughing stuff up to begin with.
Yep. Its not even a willpower thing, its a just a "these things are worthless and pathetic, so why am I smoking them? I'm done with them" kinda thing.
tl;dr merry christmas
I'm pretty sure it's still a willpower thing, but for smokers who don't really have willpower, it's a big step to take. It's like physiotherapy where someone is regaining strength in an arm and starts out with 1lbs. weights to lift and feels the strain of having to do so, even though everyr other healthy (and most unhealthy) people don't regard it as a challenge at all.
The first steps are always the smallest and the toughest
well i only meant that after about 90 days, your lungs become a lot cleaner. not to how they were before you started smoking but they do get a lot cleaner. i guess some of the gunk that was in your lungs comes up. it happened to me when i quit a few years ago (except i started up so i guess saying "quit" doesn't count) :/
*snigger* oh but you are
YO HO YO HO
ceci n'est pas une signature
only pussies quit
Willpower shouldn't have anything to do with it honestly. Its ridiculously easy to quit once you're in the right mindset. Thinking that you need strong willpower to quit smoking means you're in the mindset that you're making some sort of sacrifice by quitting. Like you're giving up some important thing that you want or need. If you think about it as a willpower thing you're only making it more difficult on yourself. I'm not saying the willpower method doesn't work at all, in some cases it does, but there are much easier ways to go about quitting.
I wouldn't compare it to physiotherapy at all though. Quitting is so much simpler than that, and like I said thinking of it as anything more than that is just making it more difficult on yourself.
Makes sense.
Nothing but business
business at the dick factory lolololol
Bookmarks