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25 Disturbing Chemicals in Cigarettes – And Where Else They Are Found

by Nasia Davos

What’s inside your cigarettes and how do these chemicals affect you?

In this article, you’ll learn:

  • What chemicals are in your cigarettes
  • Where else you can find the same chemicals
  • If filters make cigarettes less harmful
  • The truth about “light” cigarettes
  • If tobacco with “no added chemicals” is healthy

And it’s important to know what are the chemicals in your cigarettes because most smokers have no idea what they smoke.

I didn’t know what was in my cigarettes when I smoked and I was shocked when I found out!

Also, knowing what’s in your cigarettes is going to help you see cigarettes objectively; not as a friend or a crutch– but see smoking for what it is, with clear eyes.

This article is not about health scares, it’s about facts. After all, you want to smoke it, at least know what’s inside.

chemicals-in-cigarettes

25 Chemicals in Your Cigarettes

Your cigarettes have 600 different ingredients and when you light up and the cigarette is burning, these ingredients combine to form more than 4000 chemicals!

Have you ever wondered why every product you consume has a list of ingredients EXCEPT your cigarettes?

From foods to household cleaning products, everything has ingredients and warning labels about toxic chemicals. Your cigarettes don’t.

Below is a list of the chemicals in your cigarettes.

Nicotine

You already know that cigarettes have nicotine inside.

Nicotine is a natural pesticide that protects plants from being eaten by insects.

A common question I get asked is “does nicotine cause cancer?”

And the answer is: we are not sure. Although nicotine is not considered a carcinogen at the moment, studies have found that it can promote the genesis of tumors and can create resistance in some chemotherapy agents.

You can learn more about nicotine and how it affects your body here.

But there are a lot of toxic chemicals in a cigarette besides nicotine.

1. Methanol

Methanol is the main component in rocket fuel.

2. Benzene

Benzene is in rubber cement, gasoline and manufacturers use it to make dyes. Also, benzene is linked to Leukemia.

3. Hexavalent Chromium

You can find this chemical in textile dyes, wood preservation, anti-corrosion products, and colors in paints, inks, and plastics. It is toxic, carcinogenic and when inhaled, it can cause lung cancer and cancer of the nose.

4. 2-Naphthylamine

2-Naphthylamine is a carcinogen and you can find it in dyes. Even though it has been replaced by less toxic compounds in making dyes, the tobacco companies still put it in your cigarettes.

5. Cadmium

You can find cadmium in battery acid and paint. Cadmium can contribute to cancer, cardiovascular disease, and osteoporosis.

Cigarettes have cadmium inside because the tobacco plant absorbs heavy metals like cadmium from the surrounding soils, so when you smoke it, it enters your body. Smokers have 4 to 5 more cadmium in their blood than non-smokers.

tobacco-plant

6. 4-aminobiphenyl

There are two ways you can come in contact with this chemical. One, by being around chemical dyes or two, by inhaling cigarette smoke.

Researches have shown that this chemical is responsible for bladder cancer in humans and dogs by damaging the DNA. And because of its carcinogenic effects, the commercial production of this chemical stopped in the United States in the 1950s. (But the tobacco companies still put it in your cigarettes.)

7. Vinyl Chloride

This is a gas with a sweet smell. It is highly toxic, flammable and carcinogenic.

8. Ethylene Oxide

Ethylene Oxide is the main component of fuel-air explosives. They put it in tobacco to make the tobacco leaves mature more quickly and kill fungi.

9. Arsenic

Arsenic is used in rat poison. The United States Agency for toxic substances and disease registry ranked arsenic as the most harmful substance in 2001. Arsenic is classified as a group A carcinogen. It doesn’t get worse than that.

10. Nickel

Nickel is in batteries, metal surface treatments, and pigments. It is a carcinogen and it’s linked to lung cancer. Workers exposed to nickel have shown a high risk of lung cancer and other lung infections.

More Chemicals in Your Cigarettes…

11. Polonium-210

Polonium is the radioactive element discovered by Nobel Prize winner Marie Curie, and it is known to cause cancer. It is used to power artificial satellites and in initiators of atomic bombs, in reaction with beryllium.

polonium in cigarettes

12. Beryllium

Apart from being used in initiators of atomic bombs in reaction with polonium, beryllium can also be found in coal slag. The International Agency for research on cancer lists beryllium and its compounds as category 1 carcinogens.

13. Formaldehyde

Formaldehyde is a disinfectant, it’s used to preserve dead specimens, and it is linked to lung cancer.

14. Tar

Tar is a carcinogenic chemical. When you inhale tobacco, this leaves tar in your lungs. Tar coats the cilia in your lungs and causes them to stop working. The cilia in your lungs are responsible for keeping your lungs clean and healthy. Because your cilia stop functioning properly, this causes cancer and other lung diseases.

Tar also harms the mouth, makes your teeth and gums black, and destroys your taste buds.

tar in cigarettes

15. Acetone

Acetone is the main ingredient of nail polish remover.

16. Cyanide

Cyanide is a deadly poison. Throughout history, people used this chemical to commit suicide.

Cyanide was also used to mass murder in the Holocaust in the gas chambers.

17. Acetic Acid

Acetic acid is an ingredient in hair dye.

18. Ammonia

Ammonia is a common household cleaner. We use it to clean windows and the toilet.

So why do they add ammonia in your cigarettes?

Because by adding ammonia, your lungs can absorb more nicotine, so your brain can get a higher dose of nicotine with each puff.

ammonia-in-cigarettes

19. Butane

Butane is a gas you can find in lighter fluid.

20. Carbon Monoxide

Carbon Monoxide is a chemical released in car exhaust fumes and it is a poisonous gas.

21. Led

Led is used in batteries and it is poisonous in high doses.

chemicals in cigarettes

22. Naphthalene

Naphthalene is an ingredient found in mothballs. It is used to create black smoke in simulated explosions, and it’s linked to cancer.

23. Methyl Isocyanate

This is a gas and its accidental release killed thousands of people in 1984 in the Bhopal gas tragedy in India.

24. Toluene

Toluene is used to manufacture paint.

25. DDT

DDT is a banned insecticide because it’s linked to liver cancer.

And what I just mentioned are only some of the thousands of chemicals that are in your cigarettes. Unfortunately, the list goes on and on.

Do Filters Make Cigarettes Healthier?

When cigarettes first came out, they were unfiltered because this allowed all the “flavors to come through”.

But when people started finding out that cigarettes cause cancer, they were worried, so Big Tobacco started putting filters to remove some of the tar.

However, this made cigarettes too bitter. So what did they do? They added even more chemicals to remove the bitterness.

The truth is that filters don’t make cigarettes any healthier, and they don’t remove nearly enough tar and chemicals. This is a marketing ploy to keep you smoking.

Are Light Cigarettes Healthier?

Lighter cigarettes used to be the cigarettes with less tar or less nicotine.

But this new name was misleading smokers into thinking that these cigarettes are healthier. So the tobacco companies were required by law to change their name to low-yield cigarettes.

Research shows that the risk of getting sick from smoking is virtually the same whether you smoke low-yield cigarettes or normal cigarettes.

And the thing is that when you smoke a low-yield cigarette, you inhale more intensely to get the same amount of nicotine that you used to get from a regular cigarette, so it’s not a low-yield cigarette anymore.

Is Tobacco with “No Added Chemicals” Healthier?

No added chemicals doesn’t mean chemical-free. For example, “natural” tobacco would still have the cancerous heavy metal Cadmium (see above) which the tobacco plant absorbs from the soil and it’s not added in the manufacturing process.

Normal tobacco has 4000 chemicals. Inhaling 1000 chemicals instead of 4000 does not make it healthier. It’s just a ploy to get you smoking without feeling “guilty”. At the end of the day, “natural” tobacco can even be worse because you still inhale fumes into your lungs, and you’re under the false impression it’s healthy so you don’t feel the urge to quit.

Why Your Pack Doesn’t List The Chemicals In Your Cigarettes?

I encourage you to think about why these ingredients are not on your pack. The warning labels that are already on your pack and show you what cigarettes do to your health, they don’t work.

Because we always rationalize “this is not going to happen to me”. This is a defense mechanism that allows us to keep on smoking.

Every smoker experiences cognitive dissonance: a conflict in your mind between wanting to smoke -because you’re addicted – and knowing it’s harming you.

And because your brain can’t live in conflict, it rationalizes that cigarettes can’t be THAT bad and that you’ll be fine. That’s why the warning labels on your pack don’t work.

stressed-about-cigarettes

On the other hand, seeing the ingredients that are in your cigarettes, takes away the illusion that there’s something magical in your cigarettes that helps you cope with life, socialize, and relieve stress. There’s nothing to it.

Every time you have a craving, think that chemists are having a meeting with the big tobacco executives and they try to figure out what chemicals to add in your cigarettes to keep you addicted. I don’t know if this sounds far-fetched to you but, truth be told, 600 ingredients didn’t end up in your cigarettes by accident.

What to Do

There are a lot of chemicals in your cigarettes, yes. But the good news is that your body starts recovering immediately after you stop putting these chemicals in it.

Our body is a genius machine. 20 minutes after smoking your last cigarette, your blood pressure has returned to normal. In 48 hours, your senses of taste and smell have started to improve. In 2 weeks, your heart attack risk has started to drop and in just 90 days, your lungs are healthier!

Every cigarette you don’t smoke matters and it’s never too late to stop – as long as you do.

So if you want to know how to quit smoking naturally in a way that works even if you have failed before, make sure you get the foundational video if the CBQ Method. It’s going to help you get started.

The CBQ method is a psychology-based method- it involves no drugs or medications. It has 4 quit smoking stages that are designed to remove the desire for cigarettes and change how you think about smoking and break the habit.

These 4 stages help you reprogram your brain so you can stop seeing cigarettes as a friend or as a crutch. Over the last decade, the CBQ Method has reached and helped millions of people quit smoking for good.

Get the Foundational video of the CBQ Method here

Filed Under: Uncategorized

How to Say No To Smoking Without Using Willpower – No Matter the Situation

by Nasia Davos

How can you say no to smoking without using any willpower?

Below I show you 3 little known ways to say no to smoking when someone offers you a cigarette or even when you’re alone and you think about having “just one.”

And NONE of them includes: hiding your cigarettes, avoiding smokers, or covering yourself with nicotine patches from head to toe.

Instead, they ALL show you how to use the power of your mind. 

Power you already possess but perhaps don’t know how to use to overcome this addiction. 

In other words, you’ll use mindpower instead of willpower!

The 3 strategies below will help you:

  • Prepare for and handle tempting situations
  • Feel more confident and in control
  • Find it easier to beat this addiction

Tip # 1: Visualize Yourself Saying “No” to Smoking.

This is going to help you prepare for high-risk situations before ever facing them so that when you do, you will remain smoke-free.

But what is visualization?

Visualization is when you see something in your mind’s eye. It’s a mental representation of yourself, other people, an object, an idea, or a goal. It’s like imagination or daydreaming but you’re focused on a goal. And your goal is to see yourself saying no to smoking.

For example, if feeling anxious and stressed is a very strong trigger for you, imagine yourself being in stressful situations, and instead of lighting up, you relax without smoking a cigarette.

Why does it help to imagine yourself overcoming temping situations?

Because your mind can’t really tell the difference between reality and imagination.

For example, when athletes visualize themselves training and when they actually train, what happens is that the same areas in their brain light up! The brain doesn’t know the difference, Because when you visualize something, your mind thinks you’re experiencing it.

That’s why when you visualize yourself facing and overcoming triggers, your mind thinks it’s actually happening. So when it does happen, you feel like you’ve been in the same situation before and conquered it. This gives you incredible confidence to say “no” to smoking.

What if you can’t visualize?

Let’s do something together now.

Think now of your front door.

What color is it?

Where is the handle? On the left or on the right?

What’s the material of the door?

Is it a big door?

Does it have a mat or not?

Now see your hands opening the door slowly…

If you did this with me now, you created a mental representation of your door, so you visualized!

So starting today, visualize yourself saying “no” to smoking in every situation you can possibly imagine.

After an argument, when you’re with friends, where stressed, at work, when feeling overwhelmed or even feeling happy and celebrating something.

For example, imagine:

Being offered a cigarette by a friend and saying no. And notice exactly how you say it and what your friend says back.

Driving to the store, going to the counter feeling tempted to buy a pack, and not buying it. And you buy something else instead, what do you buy?

Seeing your partner’s or your friends’ cigarettes lying around and you are not taking one. What do you do instead?

Being at work and you see your colleagues smoking, how do you say no without feeling you’re missing out?

And include in your visualization, what you tell yourself for being able to say no to smoking and how saying “no” makes you feel.

I promise you, if your practice this, it’s can change everything for you. Because when you actually find yourself in these situations, it’s going to be easy to say no without using your willpower because you’re going to have experience.

Tip #2: Think of What Will Happen after You Smoke.

What do I mean?

What makes a cigarette seem tempting is thinking only about the next moment. The moment where you picture yourself just lighting up, the instant gratification.

A while back, we did an experiment.  We interviewed a group of ex-smokers who were happy about their quit and a group of ex-smokers who struggled.

So, one by one they came into the room, sat on a big wooden table and I put a cigarette in front of each of them and asked them, “do you want that cigarette?”

Those who were happy non-smokers said they didn’t want it and they didn’t have to use their willpower to say no.

But those who were struggling said, yes, they wanted the cigarette and they had to use their willpower to say no.

And then I asked, “what do you think when you look at that cigarette? What comes to your mind?”

Those who didn’t have to use their willpower, they thought how terrible they would feel after they smoke and they break their quit. They thought how guilty and regretful they’d feel afterward and how one cigarette can turn into many.

One is too many and a thousand is never enough

But those who wanted to smoke and had to use their willpower to resist it, they thought how they would feel right after taking the first puff.  And they rationalized that they could have just one cigarette.

As you can see, this is a very different way of thinking.

Those who use their willpower, they only think about the next moment and they rationalize why they can smoke. But those who don’t want to smoke and they don’t have to use their willpower,  they think what will happen after smoking. And they’re more realistic about it.

So I want you to use that lesson, and do what the people who don’t use willpower do:

To remove the temptation, don’t just think of yourself smoking, instead, create a bigger, a longer movie in your mind: think how you will feel 10 minutes after smoking, how 1 cigarette will make you crave it the next day, and how that could lead to you struggling to quit for years.

Think of the conflict and regret that comes after smoking a cigarette and how one cigarette can easily turn into a thousand.

Because the temptation goes when you think it through. The temptation goes when instead of thinking what you want right now, you think what you want for the rest of your life.

Tip # 3: Use Your Self-Talk

Your self-talk is probably the most powerful tool you have in your possession.

When you are addicted to something whether that’s nicotine, food, or alcohol – you have 2 minds:

  • your mind
  • and the craving mind.

Think of the craving mind as Gollum, that creature from Lord of the Rings. All it wants is its precious fix.

And the craving mind communicates to you in the form of a thought.

Because cravings are thoughts.

Cravings are just positive thoughts about smoking that create positive feelings about smoking.

CBQ Method Principles

Thoughts like: “I need a cigarette” or “a cigarette would make me feel better now” or “I can’t cope without it” whatever it is, they’re just thoughts.

And thoughts can’t hurt you, break you or make you do anything. But they can be very convincing if you let them.

So how can you manage those thoughts, so that they will not overpower you?

What you shouldn’t do

You shouldn’t resist those thoughts because what you resist, persists. And when you resist your craving thoughts, they become stronger.

Also, it doesn’t help to scare yourself or make yourself feel guilty. Because when we feel scared or guilty, we tend to go back to the illusion of comfort that smoking gives us.

What to do

Acknowledge the craving thought.

When your craving mind tells you “you need a cigarette right now” reply back to it and say, “thank you for sharing but you’re wrong, I don’t need a cigarette.” Or you can say “I heard you, sssh now.”

Just have a small conversation. And then let the thought go. Because if you have that small conversation and acknowledge that the thought is there, it is going to be easier to let it go.

Thoughts come and go all the time in your mind, so don’t hold on to the craving thought, just say to yourself, “next thought, please” and your brain will listen, your brain will provide you with a new thought.

You have a stream of thoughts at any moment, so why focus on the one thought that makes you feel bad? Just because your craving mind proposes a thought and seeks your attention, it doesn’t mean you have to listen and entertain that thought.

And the great thing is that the craving thoughts will eventually fade away.

What happens when your friends, your partner, or colleagues tell you to smoke?

When that happens, you have two people to reply to: 1) that friend, and 2) the craving mind. And many times, when a friend tells you to smoke, you can become defensive or feel pushed, or even worse, give yourself permission to smoke.

So just remember that those who smoke, would like to be non-smokers and tell yourself and others “I don’t smoke anymore” or “I am not smoking today”. And if someone insists, just be a broken record. Say “I don’t smoke anymore”, a thousand times, as many times as you need to.

So, to sum up:

Visualize yourself saying no to smoking in different situations.

Think what will happen long after you smoke that one cigarette.

And use your self-talk and reply back to the craving mind.

All the strategies I shared come from the CBQ Method so I hope you apply them to say no to smoking without using willpower whether you’re alone or with other people.

If you want advice and support to quit smoking and remain smoke-free, make sure you join our Facebook support group for more tips and advice about the CBQ method.

Join here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/cbqmethod/

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Will I Ever Stop Thinking about Smoking?

by Nasia Davos

When will I stop thinking about smoking?

Many times you message or email me and you tell me: “I quit smoking, I’m a happy non-smoker, I don’t want to go back but I still think about cigarettes. Is this normal? Does it mean I’m not over smoking?”

Maybe the same thing has happened to you.

You’ve quit and you’re wondering when you will stop thinking about cigarettes or you worry you’re not over smoking because it’s still on your mind.

You may even notice you think about smoking even more now that you quit.

So is this normal?

What does it mean?

And when will these thoughts end?

Is it Normal to Think About Smoking After You Quit?

Yes, it’s very normal to think about cigarettes more right after you quit.

As with any event, the memory of the event is intense right after it happens. But with time, the memory fades.

For example, if you break up from a relationship, take a divorce, or stop a friendship, you tend to think about this event more right after it happens because the brain is biased.

Well, smoking is like breaking up from a bad relationship.

So right after you break up with your cigarettes, you will think about it more because your brain is biased towards smoking. Your radar is wired to pick up on smoking-related thoughts, memories, and triggers, and focus on them.

It can be thoughts about cigarettes, smoking, or even thoughts about not smoking and how great it is that you’re smoke-free. You’re generally more likely to have smoking-related thoughts.

It’s neither good nor bad. It’s just your mind that’s focused there.

When You Will Stop Thinking About Smoking

There are two factors to consider here.

1. How you think about smoking

Does thinking about smoking means wanting it?

Absolutely not.

There is a difference between thinking about smoking and wanting it or missing it.

It’s how you think about it.

For example, I think, talk and write about smoking all the time without ever wanting it.

Why?

It all has to do with the associations you have with smoking.

Remember, a thought is just a thought. It cannot hurt you, break you, or make you do anything. As long as you change the meaning you give to those cigarette thoughts, they won’t bother you.

If you think about smoking as something that’s good for you, you will crave it.

If you think about smoking as something you used to do but don’t do anymore, you won’t crave it.

For example, let’s say you quit smoking and you’re drinking your coffee as a non-smoker. At that moment you’re very likely to have a craving thought like “oh I used to smoke with my coffee”. This is just a memory, nothing more.

But if you associate this memory with feeling deprived and not enjoying your coffee, you’re going to crave smoking at that moment.

Instead, if you tell yourself it’s normal to have this thought, it’s going to be very easy for you to let it pass and you won’t feel deprived.

So when you encounter a trigger or a situation where you used to smoke, reassure yourself that it’s okay to think about smoking. It doesn’t mean you want to smoke, it means you’re healing. It’s part of the adjustment process.

We can’t always control our thoughts but we can control what we focus on, we can control the meaning we attach to our thoughts. And the meaning we attach to our thoughts affects our experience.

So it won’t matter how long you think about smoking because if you change how you think about it you’re not going to crave it.

2. Time

With time, all craving thoughts will become less and less frequent until you rarely think about smoking anymore.

You’re not going to wake up one day and suddenly stop thinking about smoking. This is going to happen gradually.

But one day you’re going to think to yourself “Did I think about smoking today?”

And you’ll realize you didn’t! And you’re going to feel so excited about it.

How to stop thinking about smoking faster? How to speed up this process?

The more you let the craving thoughts pass mindfully without fixating on them the faster your brain will know that those thoughts are not worth focusing on.

Also, observe the dialogue that happens in your mind when you think of smoking and even write it down. Transferring a thought from your mind to a piece of paper or your phone, makes the thought weaker and helps you assess it better.

So thinking about smoking more is normal right after you quit. Thinking does not mean wanting and when a cigarette thought comes up, reassure yourself it’s normal to have it, let it pass without fixating on it, and if the craving thought persist, write it down and share it with someone.

Taking control of your thoughts is a core part of the CBQ method.

If you want to learn more about the CBQ Method and get support on your quit smoking journey you can join our Facebook support group. The CBQ Facebook community has thousands of amazing members who are in the process of quitting smoking or have already quit. Being in that group can really help you, plus we share tips and advice every day.

Join here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/cbqmethod/

Filed Under: Nicotine Withdrawal, Uncategorized

Why Some People Find Quitting Easy and Others Struggle

by Nasia Davos

Have you ever wondered why some people find quitting easy while others find it hard?

Why some ex-smokers are happy while others feel deprived?

What are they doing differently?

What Happy Non-Smokers Have in Common

Over the years, my team and I have interviewed thousands of smokers and ex-smokers from all over the world and from all sorts of different backgrounds to find the patterns that make people find quitting easy or hard.

And happy non-smokers who find quitting easy have 1 thing in common.

And it’s NOT:

  • How much they smoke or how long they’ve been smoking
  • About how much stress they have in their lives
  • How much willpower they think they have
  • Or their physical addiction to nicotine. Because everyone who is nicotine-free for 5 days or more, they’re done with the nicotine addiction. However, there are millions of people who relapse and crave cigarettes even after the nicotine withdrawal is over.

So what happy non-smokers have in common is that they overcame their mental addiction.

The mental addiction is how much you believe you need smoking, how it makes you feel, and how ingrained it is in your life.

So happy non-smokers break up with their cigarettes. They realize that they’re better off without smoking, and they don’t want to be limited by their addiction anymore.

Yes, they have hard moments, but they know that one cigarette equals a thousand, and it’s just not worth it for them because being addicted is not a good place to be.

3 Ways to Know if You’ll Find Quitting Easy

Let me show you 3 ways to know when you’re mentally free from smoking, and you’re going to find quitting easy.

And if you notice you’re not doing these 3 things, use this article as a guideline so you will do things differently moving forward and find quitting easy.

1. How You Handle Your Craving Voice

When you’re addicted to nicotine, or to anything, you have a craving voice. Or else, a craving mind. Think about this craving mind as a miserable and needy creature that all it wants is its precious nicotine.

And the craving mind communicates to you in the form of a thought. It’s going to tell you anything to get you to smoke!

Cravings are just positive thoughts about smoking that create positive feelings about smoking. Craving thoughts create the desire for cigarettes.

Thoughts like “I need a cigarette right now” or “a cigarette would make me feel better” or “just one puff won’t matter”. Every smoker has those craving thoughts.

But when you’re mentally free from smoking, you’re able to handle those thoughts.

And there are many ways to do that.

You can ignore them. Imagine someone is talking to you and you don’t want to hear from them. When the craving mind tells you, “You need a cigarette right now”, just ignore it, say “okay, I heard you. bye”.

Challenge those thoughts. When the craving mind tells you “I need a cigarette right now”, think to yourself, “do I really need it?”

Let the thoughts pass mindfully. Or replace them. I explain how to overcome mental cravings here.

What you don’t do when it comes to your mental cravings is act upon them or believe the craving thoughts.

Remember there is a craving mind talking to you. This gives you the power and the choice to not act upon this thought.

That’s what it feels like to find quitting easy.

And none of the common methods out there teaches you how to be mentally free from smoking or how to handle your craving voice.

That’s why if you use nicotine replacement, vaping, or pills without working on your mental dependence, you will find quitting hard.

If you go cold turkey, quit gradually, take herbs or natural remedies and you don’t work on your mental dependence, you will find quitting hard.

If you do hypnosis without consciously working on your mental dependence, you will find it hard. But if you first set your mind free from smoking, you will find quitting easy.

And when you’re no longer mentally dependent on smoking, you have no anxiety, no irritation or deprivation, and you’re not jealous of other people smoking.

Because when cigarettes are out of the question for you, the nicotine withdrawal symptoms won’t even bother you. Because the mind is free, and the mind affects the body.

Even though most people are worried about the withdrawal symptoms, the withdrawal is not worse than a common cold and can actually be good for you.

2. How You Think About Smoking

There is this misconception that being mentally free from smoking and having no desire for cigarettes means that you never think about smoking. This is not the case.

The truth is that you actually think about smoking more right after you quit because your brain is biased.

But thinking is not wanting.

What matters is how you think about smoking.

When you’re mentally addicted, and you find quitting hard, you think of smoking as something you want right now. Otherwise, something bad will happen to you.

You’re going to have a nervous breakdown, feel stressed, or be irritable.

But when you’re mentally free from smoking and find quitting easy, you see smoking as something you used to do and choose not to do it anymore.

And you see cravings as just thoughts and memories – without having the compulsion to act upon these thoughts.

In 1971 during the Vietnam War, 20% of the US soldiers were addicted to heroin. So the government created an organization called Special Action Office of Drug Abuse Prevention to track those soldiers when they returned to the US and help them.

And what they found is that only 5% of those soldiers relapsed back to heroin within a year of coming home and 12% relapsed within three years.

So 90% of heroin addicts stopped basically overnight. No withdrawals, no deprivation. This is an incredible success rate especially, for heroin – one of the worst addictions.

How did these soldiers achieve that?

Because when they came home, they changed their environment, and their reasons for using were gone. They changed everything: how they saw their addiction, their context, their frame of mind, and their routine.

So how you see things, how you think about your addiction, will determine whether or not you find quitting easy.

3. You’re Not Using Willpower

What’s the difference between using willpower and mind power? Between willpower and overcoming the mental addiction? Like how do you know you’re not using willpower to quit smoking?

When you’re using willpower, you want to smoke, you see a benefit in smoking, but you have to deny yourself the cigarette you desire.

But when you’re mentally free from smoking, you simply say I don’t do this anymore. You talk yourself out of smoking.

When you talk yourself out of smoking, you don’t need to use any willpower to not smoke.

Because think about it. Do you need any willpower to resist eating rat poison, ammonia, or acetone?

Of course not!

Why? Because they’re harmful and disgusting chemicals.

Well, tobacco has inside arsenic that’s used in rat poison, ammonia that’s used in toilet cleaners, and acetone that we use to remove nail polish. And the only reason why you want to smoke is not to taste those chemicals. You want to smoke because you believe it offers you something. That’s the mental addiction.

So when you see smoking for the poison it is, a sum of chemicals, you don’t want it anymore. So you don’t need to use willpower to resist it because there’s nothing to resist.

To Sum Up

Why some people find quitting easy while others find it hard is because those who find it easy overcome their mental addiction.

And you know you’re done with the mental addiction…:

  • from the way you handle your craving voice.
  • because of how you think about smoking.
  • and because you’re not using willpower. Instead, you talk yourself out of smoking.

So I hope this was helpful and showed you a way to move forward.

As I mentioned before, we interviewed thousands of smokers and ex-smokers, so we took what the people who quit happily and successfully did right, and put it in a method that everyone can use to quit easily.

That method is the CBQ method. Over the last decade, the CBQ Method has reached and helped millions of smokers all over the world. It’s the same method I talk about in my TED talk, and it helps you overcome the mental addiction and find quitting easy because you take control of your mind.

The best way to get started with the CBQ Method and learn how it can help you quit smoking, is to get the CBQ foundational video.

The foundational video gives you an overview of your quit smoking journey from start to finish. So this is for you if you’re just starting your quit and need a plan or if you have already quit and want to stay on track.

Get the Foundational video of the CBQ Method here.

And if you want more support and great quit smoking tips, you can join the CBQ Method Facebook support group. The CBQ Facebook community has thousands of amazing members who are on the same journey as you. And my team and I post tips every day to help you quit smoking and remain smoke-free. Looking forward to seeing you there!

Join the support group here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/cbqmethod/

Filed Under: Uncategorized

How To Overcome Mental Cravings

by Nasia Davos

Knowing how to overcome mental cravings is part of the third stage of the CBQ method: Change your smoking pattern.

Here’s what you need to know so you can overcome cravings easily.

What Are Mental Cravings?

There are two types of cravings: physical and mental.

The physical cravings are a twitch, a hunger feeling in your stomach when your body is low on nicotine.

The mental cravings are just positive thoughts about smoking that create positive feelings about smoking.

CBQ Method Principles

Thoughts like “I need a cigarette right now.”

“A cigarette would make me feel better.”

“If I don’t smoke, I won’t enjoy my day.”

Or “Just one puff won’t matter.”

All these are craving thoughts.

But remember, thoughts can’t hurt you, break you, or make you do anything- but they can be very overwhelming if you don’t know how to handle them- and I’m gonna show you how in a second.

How Long Do Cravings Last?

Physical cravings last around 3 minutes each. The physical cravings go away 3 to 5 days after you stop smoking because, by that time, almost all nicotine is out of your body. So if you stay nicotine-free for 5 days or more, you’re done with the physical addiction and the physical cravings.

Mental cravings are a bit different. Because they are thoughts, they can last for hours, months, and even years if you don’t handle them. Mental cravings go away when you change how you think about smoking.

So every mental craving will last for as long as you entertain the thought of smoking. For example, if you have a mental craving like “I need a cigarette right now,” and you start thinking, “yes, maybe I do need it.” And then you start picturing yourself smoking the first puff and feeling relief… then you’re putting fuel to the fire, and you are prolonging the mental craving.

You Have A Craving Mind that Causes Your Mental Cravings

Think of your craving mind as Gollum from Lord of the Rings. If you haven’t watched the movie just imagine a miserable and needy creature that all it wants is its precious fix.

And the craving mind communicates to you in the form of a thought like “I need a cigarette right now” or “a cigarette would make me feel better.”

Why Do You Even Have a Craving Mind?

The reason you have a craving mind is that nicotine has hijacked your brain and makes it believe that you need nicotine to survive – just like you need food.

For example, when you eat, your brain releases dopamine, which makes you feel rewarded, so you want to eat again. The brain does that so you can keep eating and survive (If it didn’t release dopamine when you ate, you would forget to eat and die)

Unfortunately, nicotine affects your brain the same way. It hijacks the dopamine receptors in your brain, which makes it think that you need nicotine to survive.

So your brain reminds you to smoke, through your craving mind, because it thinks you need nicotine to survive.

But of course, you don’t need nicotine to survive. Your brain simply has outdated information.

In other words, the biological part of your brain has been totally hijacked. So you need to use the intellectual part of your brain to rewire the biological part.

How to Handle Craving Thoughts

A craving is a thought and there are many ways to handle your thoughts.

1) Reply back to the craving mind. When the craving mind tells you “I need a cigarette right now”, you can disagree or disregard it. You can say, “No, I don’t. You’re wrong,” or you can say, “okay, I heard you now I’m gonna move on.”

2) Let the craving thought pass. There was a recent study that found we have 6200 thoughts every day! So just let the craving thoughts pass from your mind as if they were any of the thousands of thoughts that you have every day. Don’t interact with them, don’t try to think about them, don’t try to entertain them… just let them pass mindfully.

3) Replace the craving thoughts. You can’t have two thoughts at the same time. So you can always replace a thought you don’t like with a new thought. Just imagine you’re watching TV and you’re changing the channel. Or that you’re changing the station on the radio. You can do the same thing with your brain. When you have a thought you don’t like you can replace it, you can tell yourself “next thought please” and there will always be a new thought available. Watch how to do that in my TED talk.

Will You Always Have Mental Cravings?

Your brain is a learning machine. The same way you programmed your brain to think about smoking, you can reprogram it to stop thinking about it as something desirable.

How?

The more you put yourself in situations where you used to smoke, and you don’t… and you feel good in those situations, your brain gets new information and sees that “hey we didn’t smoke and nothing bad happened to us.” And this new information allows you to rewire your brain because it gets proof that you don’t need nicotine to survive. So with time, it’s going to stop reminding you to get it!

A Craving is a State of Wanting

A mental craving is a state of wanting but what are you wanting?

Has this ever happened to you? You stop smoking, and this feeling of wanting stays with you for a while. So you think that smoking left a void, and you try to fill that void with other vices like food and alcohol.

But here’s the thing. Everyone has this feeling of wanting – smokers, non-smokers, never smokers. But as smokers, we have learned to respond to that feeling by smoking. In reality, we don’t want the cigarette nobody wants rolled grass with poisonous chemicals. What you want is to change how you feel.

So when you have a mental craving, this is a sign you’re low on some of your emotional needs. We all need to feel certainty, love, security, comfort, and relief. But when you have a craving, what you’re really craving is to meet an emotional need. You crave to feel in a certain way.

What to do?

When you have mental craving, ask yourself, “What do I really need right now?” or “What am I missing from my life right now?”

Find what you need, meet that need in a helpful way, and the craving will go away.

For example, let’s say you’re home alone and you feel that something is missing. Ask yourself “What do I really need right now?” Maybe you’ll realize that you feel lonely and need some connection.

Then ask yourself “How can I meet this need in a helpful way?” Perhaps making a phone call to a loved one is going to give you some of this connection. And, if this is what you were looking for.. you’ll see that the craving will go away.

Or if you feel anxious after an argument, instead of reaching for a cigarette, ask yourself “What do I really need right now?” Maybe it’s to feel relaxed and secure.

Then ask yourself “How else can I meet that need?” Maybe do deep breathing, journaling, take a walk, practice gratitude, there are many ways to feel relaxed and secure.

Or let’s say you’re in a social situation and everyone smokes and you crave a cigarette. Ask yourself “What do I really need right now?” Maybe it’s to connect and feel belonging or not to feel awkward with your hand.

Then ask yourself “How else can I do that?” maybe change the conversation or hold a glass of water with the hand you used to smoke. There is a solution to everything.

To sum up

  • Mental cravings are positive thoughts about smoking that create positive feelings about smoking.
  • The craving mind reminds you to smoke – through your craving thoughts – because it thinks you need nicotine to survive.
  • You can overcome your craving thoughts – replace them, let them pass, reply back to them. Don’t act upon them.
  • A craving is a state of wanting but what you’re wanting is to meet a need (not inhale chemicals). Meet that need in a helpful way, and the craving will go away.

Overcoming the mental addiction and specifically overcoming the mental cravings is part of the third quit smoking stage of the CBQ method which is Change your smoking pattern. The CBQ method has four stages in total and they’re all important to take you from a smoker to a happy non-smoker.

If you want to overcome the mental addiction and change how you see smoking make sure you get the foundational video of the CBQ Method.

The CBQ Method is a 4-stage method that’s specifically designed to help you overcome the mental addiction, change how you think about smoking, and break the habit. The mental addiction is the biggest part of the smoking addiction so overcoming it makes quitting easy.

Click here to get the Foundational Video of the CBQ Method

If you want to learn more about the CBQ Method and get support on your quit smoking journey you can join our Facebook support group. The CBQ Facebook community has thousands of amazing members who are in the process of quitting smoking or have already quit. And we post tips every day to help you quit smoking and remain smoke-free.

Join the support group here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/cbqmethod/

Filed Under: Nicotine Withdrawal, Uncategorized

Why Nicotine Withdrawal Is Good for You

by Nasia Davos

Every smoker is afraid of the nicotine withdrawal symptoms, but do you have to really worry?

The truth is, being terrified of the withdrawal prevents you from quitting. And when you experience the withdrawal and you see it as a bad thing this can make you relapse.

But when you understand why the withdrawal is good for you, you can go through it easily.

What is nicotine withdrawal?

Nicotine withdrawal happens when nicotine and toxins leave your body. Withdrawal starts around 30 to 45 minutes after you smoke a cigarette so when you’re a smoker you have withdrawal all day long.

But when you stop smoking, when you stop supplying your body with nicotine you have more intense withdrawal that eventually ends.

Some examples of nicotine withdrawal symptoms are:

  • Cough
  • Brain fog
  • Agitation
  • Smoking dreams
  • Tingling in your hands and feet
  • Physical and mental cravings

Of course, you’re not going to experience everything. You can learn more about the nicotine withdrawal symptoms and how to face them here.

6 Reasons to Embrace the Nicotine Withdrawal

1. Withdrawal is Detox

When you have the flu you have symptoms – like fever, you feel shaky or you feel tired, right? You have those symptoms because your body is trying to fight off the toxins and the infection.

The same thing with the nicotine withdrawal; you have symptoms because your body is fighting off the drug and the toxins. Withdrawal is detox.

2. It is Temporary

It’s not gonna last forever! The nicotine withdrawal will end as long as you stay nicotine free.

The withdrawal symptoms that you may experience can last from a couple of days to a couple of weeks.

But if you’re using nicotine substitutes or vape this is going to prolong and extend the nicotine withdrawal because you keep supplying your body with nicotine.

You don’t need to use those products. The withdrawal is not any worse than a common cold!

3. Nicotine Withdrawal Is Not Harmful. It’s Helpful

The withdrawal is not harmful to your health, it’s actually helpful!

For example, if you experience cough and chest pain this may seem bad but what really happens is that the muscles in your chest contract so they can expel all the mucus that has been accumulating in your lungs all those years. So it looks bad but it’s a good thing.

Or if you experience tingling in your hands and your feet this happens because oxygen is finally flowing properly to these areas of your body.

When you have physical cravings, it’s because you have less and less nicotine in your body.

Or if you’re feeling down or anxious after quitting smoking, it’s because your brain starts regulating dopamine – the feel good chemical in your brain – naturally so that you can feel good without needing nicotine… and your emotions will not be controlled by nicotine anymore.

Because quitting smoking, and this has been proven by research, decreases depression and anxiety even if you have chronic depression and anxiety. And it increases happiness. But for you to get those benefits, you need to go through this adjustment period that we call withdrawal.

4. Nicotine Withdrawal Is Easy to Overcome if You Change Your Mindset

In 1971, during the Vietnam War 20% of the US soldiers were addicted to heroin. And because the government was worried, they created the Special Action Office of Drug Abuse Prevention to track those soldiers and help them.

Here’s where it gets interesting! After leaving the war only 5% of the soldiers that were addicted to heroin relapsed within a year and 12% relapsed within three years.

90% of heroin addicts quit basically overnight – no withdrawals, no pains, nothing. And the researchers concluded that this happened because they changed their environment.

They went from war to home so their triggers were gone, the reasons for using were gone, and they changed how they saw their addiction.

And that’s what I want you to take from this. You need to change your context your frame of mind and your routine. Because quitting smoking is a mind game it is as big of a deal and as difficult as you make it to be. It’s all about context.

And if they can overcome heroin withdrawal you can definitely overcome nicotine withdrawal.

5) Nicotine Withdrawal Is a Sign of Health & Healing

The nicotine withdrawal is a sign of health, healing, and progress. It is a sign that your body adjusts back to normal health and a sign that you’re doing things right.

If you don’t experience any withdrawal symptoms then how do you know you’re overcoming the addiction?

Withdrawal is a sign your body is changing, it is a feedback loop, a conversation between you and your body. It’s your body telling you “Hey you did the best you could you quit smoking be patient with me I’m changing just stay away from nicotine and smoking.”

6) Nicotine Withdrawal Serves as A Reminder of Your Effort

The withdrawal is a reminder of your effort and a reminder of how many changes your body had to go through trying to heal. And if nothing else, this can make it harder for you to go back.

It’s like touching a hot stove. It’s gonna hurt a little bit but next time you’re around a hot stove you’re gonna remember your past experience and hopefully step back.

Same here, if you remember all the changes you had to make this is going to stop you from picking up a cigarette after you quit.

Now I’m not telling you you have to suffer but just remember how it felt like to be addicted.

Take Aways

You should embrace the nicotine withdrawal because:

  • It’s detox and not worse than a common cold. It’s your mental state that makes all the difference.
  • The withdrawal is temporary.
  • It’s not harmful to your health it’s helpful.
  • And it’s easy to overcome it if you change your frame of mind. If you see it as a trauma it’s gonna be painful but if you’re a happy about quitting you’re gonna see it as freedom signs. And I invite you to change its name call it “freedom signs” because the words we use change our experience. So if the name “nicotine withdrawal” has a negative connotation for you or if it makes you feel bad just change how you call it. You can call it freedom signs or something else that makes you feel empowered.
  • Nicotine withdrawal is a sign of health, healing, and progress and a reminder that you don’t want to go back to smoking.

If you want to overcome the mental addiction and change how you see smoking, you can start by getting the foundational video and PDF starter guide of the CBQ Method.

The CBQ method is a 4-stage method that helps you overcome the mental addiction, change how you think about smoking, and break the habit.

Click here to get the Foundational Video if the CBQ Method

And if you want help and support, you can join our CBQ method Facebook support group. We have thousands of amazing members who are on the same journey as you, and we post tips every day to help you quit smoking and remain smoke-free.

Join the support community here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/cbqmethod/

Filed Under: Nicotine Withdrawal, Uncategorized

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