Traceymac23
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 603
- Location
- London,England
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
- Dislikes
- Moaner
Teetotal and quit smoking twenty years ago. Smoking is 90% habit, in my opinion. The nicotine dependency is gone within a fortnight...twiddling your thumbs with nothing to suck on is the hard part.
Teetotal and quit smoking twenty years ago. Smoking is 90% habit, in my opinion. The nicotine dependency is gone within a fortnight...twiddling your thumbs with nothing to suck on is the hard part.
I have always smoked and drank way too much alcohol way too much........before diagnosis I smoked 20-25 ciggies a day and if I had a drink that could e-a-s-i-l-y go up to 80 if I was on a real heavy session:***:
Since diagnosis I greatly reduced the alcohol intake to 1-2 nights a week(from 5)and got the fags down to 10 a day maximum
Since(and indeed during) my recent hospitalisation for sepsis I obviously have had no alcohol pass my lips(although seriously for the first few days I was greedily eyeing up the alcohol hand gel!!).......and I won't do at least until my antibiotics finish.
Having broken the back of the alcohol addiction(let's be honest.....that's what it was....or perhaps is?) I've not really missed it........feel fitter,have more energy and am spending more quality time with the OH instead of getting drunk. However kicking the nicotine habit is proving much harder.......the hospital gave me patches to take away and I have now ordered a vaping kit from Amazon which should help and I have got the daily intake down to 5 a day but struggling to maintain that.
Anyone got any ideas/experience?
How did that go down with the office mates?Many years ago in my working days I stopped smoking, I bought a baby's dummy, and sucked that all day at the office. It worked for a few months.
Traceymac, bearing in mind you have had a very significant issue with your foot, you need to be protecting your CV system and micro blood vessels carefully. Not smoking is the biggest thing you can do in that regard.
I know it's easy for me, a life-long non-smoker, who has always disliked smoking intensely, to say, but it's true.
My mother was non-diabetic, but was a lifelong smoker and almost lost a leg due to her blood vessels becoming caludicated - probably by a clot. I say probably by a clot because she got astonishingly lucky to find that probably days from amputation the vessel clearer and the blood supply was refreshed. It was a dreadful, dreadful time for her. In hospital she stopped smoking in a nano-second.
When we went for a follow-up session with the vascular bods, the consultant was at pains to say that she must, must remain smoke free, as every cigarette increased the chances of a recurrence and he had rarely known anyone as lucky as she, in terms of the spontanbeous resolution.
She was mentally and physically scarred by it. We toher family members were only mentally scarred.
Have you looked at the NHS cessations resources?
How did that go down with the office mates?
I have been referred to the cessation clinic.......the patches and one of those white puffers are 'stage 1'.
I have been told all of the downside of smoking......even told that giving up is AT LEAST as important as medication but it's just really hard........I actually found myself having a ciggie THREE HOURS after the big toe was amputated........hated myself for it but still not enough to persuade me off of the weed altogether.........the addiction is so bad I can't sleep at night unless I know I've got a cigarette to wake up to!!
My partner is helping by NOT smoking or drinking in the house OR around me but I feel guilty for depriving her of something she enjoys
I do now keep a diary of when I have a fag and that helps me cut down.as it's like writing down a crime I've committed.
Perhaps listing the cigarettes smoked daily in with the daily 'BG and what you ate yesterday' thread will also bring it home to me just how much I need to jack it in!!
My ex wife smoked seriously for many years. A regular 20 a day gal. I tried so hard to get her to give up. She tried patches but always gravitated back to square one. In order to keep the costs of smoking down I bought her duty free cigs for many years but this of course encouraged her more. Since divorce I heard she had stopped smoking. She always said that she could not stop as the addiction was so strong. I think DCUKMod’s analogy with heroin is not far out in that sense.I have always smoked and drank way too much alcohol way too much........before diagnosis I smoked 20-25 ciggies a day and if I had a drink that could e-a-s-i-l-y go up to 80 if I was on a real heavy session:***:
Since diagnosis I greatly reduced the alcohol intake to 1-2 nights a week(from 5)and got the fags down to 10 a day maximum
Since(and indeed during) my recent hospitalisation for sepsis I obviously have had no alcohol pass my lips(although seriously for the first few days I was greedily eyeing up the alcohol hand gel!!).......and I won't do at least until my antibiotics finish.
Having broken the back of the alcohol addiction(let's be honest.....that's what it was....or perhaps is?) I've not really missed it........feel fitter,have more energy and am spending more quality time with the OH instead of getting drunk. However kicking the nicotine habit is proving much harder.......the hospital gave me patches to take away and I have now ordered a vaping kit from Amazon which should help and I have got the daily intake down to 5 a day but struggling to maintain that.
Anyone got any ideas/experience?
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