I loved someone who didn't like my smoking habits. So I quit on his birthday as a birthday gift. He was very happy then and I'm very healthy now. 
they work for me but i was a mild smokerHave her try e-cigarettes. They are smokeless.
You certainly are.I loved someone who didn't like my smoking habits. So I quit on his birthday as a birthday gift. He was very happy then and I'm very healthy now.
+1Regardless of the harms of smoking, you started dating her as a smoker, it seems kind of controlling to be asking (expecting) her to quit. That almost never ends well.
+1she will not quit until she wants to quit, period. Been there done that....nothing you can do to change her
Bingo! It's her gig, no one elses.she will not quit until she wants to quit, period. Been there done that....nothing you can do to change her
I am going to have to disagree with you hear and say that it is in fact not dangerous to quite smoking cold turkey at all. That's purely made up by smokers that want to smoke , same with the heroin thing. The actual fact is that less people successful quit smoker compared to those that try to quit heroin. If this woman decided to quit smoking there may be a day or 2 cravings as the drugs leave her system but that's it. Smoking is 99.9 percent mental and .1% physical.Believe it or not, going cold turkey is dangerous. Try and be supportive and see if she will try nicorrette. But she has to want to. She can go cold turkey with nicorette but it is still hard. it is the hardest hting i ever did in my life but i reallly wanted it desperately for myself. If it really bothers you, you may have to exit. She has to want to do it for herself, because it is really really difficult. They say it is harder than coming off of heroin.
That's not been my experience, but I've seen other people handle quitting far better than me. YMMV.Smoking is 99.9 percent mental and .1% physical.
I think Shake is right even if he skewed the ratio a bit. But it's mostly mental the same way climbing a mountain is. Once they decided, even handicapped people have done Everest. It was the decision that made the difference.That's not been my experience, but I've seen other people handle quitting far better than me. YMMV.Shakeandbake said:Smoking is 99.9 percent mental and .1% physical.
The addictive properties in tobacco leave the system rather quickly and the so called craving that is felt is purely mental after the first 48hrs or so. The problem is that the smoker has convinced him/herself that they need a crutch or something and think that the tobacco will cure this craving when it deed the tobacco creates it in the first place. It is a vicious cycle that can only be broken my not smoking. This is why I say that it is almost completely mental because its a smoke and mirrors show but the mind is convinced that the smoker actually gets something from smoking , which they do notI think Shake is right even if he skewed the ratio a bit. But it's mostly mental the same way climbing a mountain is. Once they decided, even handicapped people have done Everest. It was the decision that made the difference.
Smoking is terrible for you. Why dont you quit??!You know what smokers hate? Being told to quit! We know the facts and dangers, so we don't need to be constantly reminded of them