Thursday, August 10, 2006

Quit-Smoking : The Best Way To Quit Smoking, Don’t Burn Your Future

The Best Way To Quit Smoking, Don't Burn Your Future


A number of years ago smoking a cigarette in public was kind of the "chic" and fashionable thing to do in many social environments. For many years there has been kind of a social conditioning for smoking. It’s presented as equivalent to wearing a nice suit or a fashionable hat. Something everyone should "use" if they ever want to be included in the "winners" side at the end of the game. Regretfully, the game is over already for many smokers that had to suffer the most common consequence of smoking, which is an early death.

The most active ingredient in a cigarette and the one that is involved in causing the heavy addictive characteristics of tobacco is the naturally occurring liquid alkaloid better known as Nicotine.

While there are thousands of chemicals in a single cigarette, including the naturally occurring ones and also those added by cigarette manufacturers, it is Nicotine that produces all the good feelings that draw people back for another cigarette again and again.

During the manufacturing of a cigarette, producers use tobacco having a Nicotine content of normally around 5 percent of the plant by weight. Packed cigarettes, contain 8 to 20 milligrams (mg) of nicotine (depending on the brand you prefer to smoke), but only approximately 1 mg is actually absorbed by your body when you smoke a cigarette.

But you do not need industrial amounts of Nicotine in your body in order to become addicted to cigarette . This minimal quantity of Nicotine that you absorb with each cigarette you smoke is more than enough to make you beg for more, and more cigarettes.

Nicotine readily diffuses into your body through the following channels: Skin, Lungs and the Mucous membranes such as the lining of your nose or your gums. That’s why you will get equally addicted to nicotine even if you just chew and spit tobacco.

Even considering that Nicotine takes a lot of different actions throughout the smokers body (many of them very bad), what it does once it has arrived to the brain is responsible for both the good feelings you get from smoking, as well as the irritability you feel if you try to quit; i.e., the brain becomes addicted. Within 10 to 15 seconds of inhaling the smoke of your cigarette, you will probably be feeling nicotine's effects. Nicotine initially causes a rapid release of Adrenaline, the "fight-or-flight" hormone. The effects of this hormone are the familiar: Rapid heartbeat, increased blood pressure, and rapid, shallow breathing. All this state of high alertness caused by adrenaline also tells your body to dump some of its glucose stores into your blood.

And if we consider that Nicotine itself may also block the release of the hormone insulin. This all means that nicotine puts people in a hyperglycemic state, having more sugar than usual in their blood torrent. So you become kind of a part-time diabetic with each cigarette you smoke and with the long term consequences this condition brings.

The health problems associated with using nicotine-containing products are far worse than any benefits you may feel at the beginning. The average person will be in high risk of; Lung Cancer, Heart Disease, Stroke and Emphysema.

It should be mentioned that many of these illnesses are actually caused by other chemicals in cigarette smoke or in smokeless tobacco products, different to Nicotine. The biggest problem with nicotine is how easily it makes you become dependent on smoking or chewing tobacco, with all the chemicals it brings into your body. Which lead us to the conclusion that Nicotine-free cigarettes are not much healthier, maybe less addictive but equally dangerous.

When trying to quit smoking you will surely have this symptoms, arising due to the lack of nicotine in your blood stream. Irritability , Anxiety, Depression, Craving for nicotine. And yes, no one denies it; quitting cigarette smoking can be a real nightmare for many people.

For many smokers, even a day without Nicotine is excruciating. Statistics indicate that every year, millions of people try to break the nicotine habit but only 10 percent of them succeed. Will you succeed?

If you’re still struggling with your smoking addiction and need help, visit:

=> http://www.askingplanet.com/QuitS

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home