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                How to Stay Quit once you have Quit Smoking |  
              | by: 
                Llewellin Jegels |  
              | 
 We have all met different people who claim that  'quitting smoking is easy.'  They generally say this  as they are puffing on a cigarette.  Sure -- it's  easy to quit for an hour or a day, but it is the  steadfastly remaining quit part which is  demanding.
 
 Perhaps the most beneficial incentive for avoiding cigarettes  is knowing how it rewards you.  According to the  US Surgeon General's report the advantages of  giving up smoking begin almost straightaway and  increase the longer you keep away from smoking.  After just  20 minutes of nonsmoking your blood pressure  comes back to normal.  Eight hours later, your system  has flushed the carbon dioxide.  During the three  months after quitting, your lung capacity  increases by 30%.  One year after quitting your  risk of heart attack has become half that of a  steady smoker.  After five years your risk of  sudden stroke has normalized and after 10 years  your expected risk of lung cancer is half that of  a steady smoker.
 
 These increased physical health benefits are one  and the same regardless when you quit.  Of course,  if you quit when you are young you have a much  better probability of regaining normal health within a  shorter time.  But even if you quit when you are  60 your life expectancy and primary standard of  living will significantly intensify.
 
 Unfortunately, what is going to happen 10 years  down the road is often of little direct importance  during a spell of nicotine craving.  The longer  you quit smoking, however, the less often these  cravings will readily occur.  But smoking is more  than just a physical addiction, it is also a  behavioral habit, and long after the physical need  for nicotine has been finally overcome you may  still feel the need to smoke in special  circumstances.
 
 Identifying the current circumstances which cause you  to reach for a cigarette can be of great help in  overcoming the inclination to smoke. If you  usually recognize, for instance, that you feel  like smoking at parties, you may especially need to  avoid them for a particular interval of time until  you break the habit.  Also, if current conditions  of stress make you want to smoke, finding  alternative ways to deal with stress will help you  stay smoke-free.
 
 Despite all your best efforts, you may find that  you have had a relapse and have taken up smoking  again.  If this results, don't let this discourage  you -- many people have to try four or five times  before they successfully quit.  The most important  is immediately to stop smoking.  Even if you are  in the middle of a cigarette, put it out and  discard the balance of the package.  Don't get  down on yourself or think that you have failed --  each time you reaffirm your commitment to quit it  becomes stronger.
 
 Look for moral support from family and  confidantes.  If you deeply feel like smoking,  talk to somebody about it and let them know what  you are going through.  Some communities have  solid encouragement groups for people who are  trying to quit.  With regular scheduled meetings  and contact with other group members you can  support one another and offer encouragement and  expert guidance.
 
 Some companies besides offer programs for  employees who wish to quit.  Take advantage of all  of these services -- your long-term commitment to  quit smoking is helpful not only to you but also  to your family, friends, and associates.
 
 
 
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