| It's a
common problem: You are trying your best to quit
smoking but everyone around you still smokes. If you
have a spouse or other family member who smokes, you
are exposed to smoking every day. If your co-workers
smoke, you probably have smokers around you at least
five days per week. If your friends smoke, you'll be
exposed to smoking whenever you get together to have
some fun.
So how do you
maintain your resolve to quit when everywhere you
look you see someone lighting up? How do you deal
with the personal conflicts that can develop when you
quit but your family, friends and co-workers don't?
First, you must
acknowledge the fact that you may be all alone in
your efforts to quit smoking. This solitude may be
frustrating and counter-productive but you must
accept the fact that the people around you are not
going to quit smoking just because you are. In fact,
they may try to coerce or encourage you to start
smoking again. When you quit you may be placing
pressure to quit smoking, however unintentional, on
the people in your life . They may resent it or be
frightened by your quitting. Their natural, perhaps
unconscious, response may be to make quitting more
difficult for you.
So prepare yourself
for the loneliness you may feel when you quit.
Prepare yourself for the backlash that you may
receive from the smokers around you. Be prepared to
forgive and forget.
Next, take time to
talk to the smokers in your life. Ask them for a few
minutes to discuss the fact that you are quitting
smoking. Sit down and let them know how very
important quitting is to you. Tell them that you
need their support and ask them to be considerate
whenever they want to smoke. Make sure they
understand that you are quitting for you, not for
anyone else. Make sure they understand that you do
not expect them to quit because you are quitting.
Invite them to quit with you but make it clear that
quitting must be their own decision.
Lay out some ground
rules that everyone can live with, regarding where
and when they will smoke. Make it clear that you
don't expect them to totally change their smoking
habits, but that you need cooperation to help you
quit. Set clear times and locations for them to
smoke, or make sure you have someplace you can
comfortably retreat to, should the smoker in your
life need to light up. Make sure you have something
to distract your attention, in another room, if
someone is smoking near you. Start a new hobby or
have a book on-hand, whenever you have to get away
from the smoke.
When you get together
with friends, you may find that the activities you
participate in naturally involve smoking. Try going
to a bar or bowling alley without having smoke all
around you (unless you live in an area where smoking
is banned indoors)! You may find it necessary to
adjust the types of things you do with your friends,
to help you avoid being placed in a smoking
situation. Try activities that are outdoors, or that
involve exercise. Go places where smoking isn't
allowed. If your friends are truly your friends,
they'll understand and want to accommodate your
needs.
Avoiding smoke at
work may be difficult if your workplace allows
smoking indoors. If necessary, request that your
work area be moved to a non-smoking portion of your
office. You may also ask to have your entire office
declared "smoke-free." Consider getting an
air filter to help remove the smell of smoke where
you work.
If you have grown
accustomed to your smoking breaks and the smoking
buddies at your workplace, you face another type of
withdrawal besides nicotine withdrawal: friendship
withdrawal. Chances are, if you've worked someplace
with a designated smoking area for any length of
time, that you have made quite a number of friends
or smoking buddies. If you're going to quit smoking
successfully, you're going to have remove yourself
from the smoking area. Naturally, this means
removing yourself from the friends you've made.
Realize, however, that just because you don't smoke
with these people, you don't have to stop being
friendly. Let your smoking buddies know that you are
quitting, and that you won't be joining them any
longer. But also let them know you wish to continue
your friendship. Exchange phone numbers if
necessary, and try to get together for lunch or
other times convenient to both of you.
Quitting smoking even
when other people around you are smoking doesn't
have to be difficult and a strain on interpersonal
relations. Take some time to create an atmosphere
where everyone knows that you are quitting and that
you need their cooperation to succeed. At the same
time, be considerate of the other smokers, giving
them their own freedom to smoke when they so choose.
Working together with family, friends and
co-workers, you can quit!
** Article © Copyright Fred Kelley of QuitSmoking.com. Visit the web site at
http://www.quitsmoking.com
for great information and products designed to help you quit smoking.
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