As any smoker can verify, giving up - and staying |
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smoke-free - is one of the most difficult things to do. |
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But if you are successful in giving up smoking, it is |
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not only one of the healthiest steps you can take, it |
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also decreases your chances of dying from smoking or any |
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related diseases. Just twenty minutes or so after |
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smoking their last cigarette, a person's blood pressure |
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will return to normal and after just two days of being |
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smoke-free, the chances of having a heart attack will be |
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reduced. The heart and lungs will begin to repair the |
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damage caused to them by smoking. And after two days, a |
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person who has just stopped smoking may also notice that |
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their sense of smell and taste is more heightened - and |
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may want to eat more, as food tastes better. Immediately |
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after quitting, a smoker may also experience some |
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unpleasant symptoms which are perfectly normal - sore |
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gums, coughing, irregularity and a temporary weight |
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gain, which is caused by the body retaining fluids. Many |
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ex-smokers also feel irritable or tired or find it |
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difficult to sleep. It might make you feel better to |
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know that these are all signs of nicotine being removed |
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from your body - most of it will have gone completely |
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within several days. |
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You will also have nicotine withdrawal symptoms and it's |
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during the first few days and weeks after quitting that |
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you will have to fight the urge not to smoke. Symptoms |
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of nicotine withdrawal often resemble a mild dose of the |
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flu and can include any or all of the following - |
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irritability, insomnia or fatigue, headache, sore |
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throat, tightness in the chest, dry mouth and lack of |
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concentration. These symptoms can be unpleasant - but |
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they will pass. After a few weeks, the worst symptoms of |
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nicotine withdrawal will start to diminish and the whole |
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process should become easier. You will find that |
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circulation improves and you may also find that walking |
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and exercising are easier as your body readjusts to its |
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new and healthier state. You will still probably have |
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the occasional craving for a cigarette, but after a few |
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weeks, it is a little bit easier not to give in. |
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Of course, the longer you are smoke-free, the easier it |
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is to stay that way. After a few months or so, the |
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physical longings for a cigarette will have diminished |
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to a large extent, although you need to be careful not |
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to lapse and have just one cigarette, which may then |
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lead to another. And the long term effects of giving up |
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smoking are something that shouldn't be taken for |
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granted - a far lower chance of getting cancer or heart |
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disease and perhaps just as importantly, a feeling of |
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accomplishment and pride. |
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