Jump to content

johnny5

Members
  • Posts

    7960
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    119

Everything posted by johnny5

  1. Congratulations on 8 months of freedom, Solo! Keep up the great work.
  2. Congratulations on 9 years of freedom, Avian! Do something to celebrate today.
  3. Welcome to QuitTrain, SOS. I'm sorry to hear about your relapse. 2 weeks is a great start back, though. Smoking really brings nothing positive at all to your life, just negative. You will be so much better off putting that behind you for good. Stick close to this site. Read as much as you can and reach out whenever you need help. Education and support is what helped me quit for good and you can get both here.
  4. NOPE!
  5. Congratulations Garry! 3 years smoke free is excellent. Thanks for sticking around to help support others
  6. NOPE! Happy Friday the 13th, everybody!
  7. Congratulations on 6 months smoke free, QueenB! You are doing great!
  8. Yep, Johnny's still here. Welcome to QuitTrain, @Travis Trapani
  9. NOPE!
  10. Congratulations on three years smoke free, Diane! I hope you celebrate this huge accomplishment. Please feel free to check in and let us know how you are doing.
  11. Glad to hear your quit is strong, Diane, and that you were safe during the hurricane. I feel for all impacted by the storm and I pray for your friends and family impacted by this. I look forward to hearing more from you when things get settled. Great job on keeping the quit.
  12. Hey Pots, I'm glad your kid is ok. Every time I hear a post from someone who relapses and says that they "had to smoke because..." I can't help but think of Cristobal's post that Sazerac shared, Your Quit and Your Life - The Proper Sequence A successful quitter realizes that they cannot smoke ever, no matter what life throws at them. Relapsing and smoking a cigarette is a conscious decision. No life event made the person light up. The person decided to light up and relapse on their own. A successful quitter must never allow a person or event influence them into lighting up again. In order to successfully quit, you must never take another puff. Yes, take it one day and one moment at a time but the ups and downs of life (which will always be there) cannot influence your quit. You must be serious about this and realize the only thing that can make you smoke is yourself. I agree with the other posters too. Why wait? There is no better time than now. You keep torturing yourself with all of these relapses. Start back now. Commit to never taking another puff and reach out to this board anytime you feel tempted. We all want to see you succeed but you are the one who has to make the commitment.
  13. Those are great pictures. Thanks for sharing!
  14. I am sure your doctor will be happy that you have quit and it will feel great to tell him the awesome news. I hope all goes well with your doctor's appointment and keep up the great work!
  15. Congratulations Leanna! That is an awesome quit!
  16. NOPE - smoking sucks!
  17. johnny5

    chicks or sticks

    1 @Sazerac I haven't seen Wallace and Gromit in a long time but it is really funny. Check it out if you get the chance.
  18. NOPE - I don't smoke anymore.
  19. Juan, I'm happy you keep trying to quit. It is clear that you know life is better as a non-smoker. Still, those first few hours and days are really tough. Once you make it through them, things slowly get better. With time, a lot better. Do yourself a favor. Commit to never taking another puff (NOPE) and, if you are struggling and tempted to light up, reach out here first and post an SOS. You can do this. It is tough early on but quitting is very doable. The long term rewards to a smoke free life are worth the early struggles. You just have to commit to NOPE.
  20. NOPE - I don't smoke anymore.

About us

QuitTrain®, a quit smoking support community, was created by former smokers who have a deep desire to help people quit smoking and to help keep those quits intact.  This place should be a safe haven to escape the daily grind and focus on protecting our quits.  We don't believe that there is a "one size fits all" approach when it comes to quitting smoking.  Each of us has our own unique set of circumstances which contributes to how we go about quitting and more importantly, how we keep our quits.

 

Our Message Board Guidelines

Get in touch

Follow us

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Guidelines

Please Sign In or Sign Up