It is said that cigarettes help to reduce stress and help people
relax, a fact smokers regularly produce when asked why they can't quit
smoking. "I can't quit I'm too stressed out." Is a common sentence
uttered by many a smoker every day. And when in a tough, problematic,
critical and anxious situation a smoker will more than likely 'need' a
cigarette to calm his nerves.
And smokers also get several other
benefits from smoking including increased concentration, an added energy
'boost' mental 'strength' to deal with tough situations, curing boredom
and relaxation.
These aspects can be condensed into two main
beneficial areas of smoking. Firstly that, smoking is calming and
relaxing, and secondly, it helps smokers concentrate and think clearly.
So
on the Calming and Relaxing side - cigarettes take the stress out of
life (relaxation) and help relive tension and stress. The benefits of
smoking are to help smokers calm down and reduce anxiety and stress.
When you visualise or think of relaxing what comes to your mind? It's
usually a slumping of the shoulders effect, that aaaaaahhhhhhhhh... slip
into your arm chair and letting go feeling - you are relaxing.
On
the Strength and Boost side - smoking is uplifting, helps with
concentration, keeps smokers on their toes and gives them mental
strength. The other benefit of smoking is that it lifts smokers up a
level - their senses are awakened. When you visualise or think of
yourself concentrating and being uplifted what comes to mind? Generally
it's a head up, on our feet, eyes open, chest out, shoulders back and
an alert state of mind and effect - it gives you that I'm ready, let's
do it and let's go feeling.
So cigarettes can have two effects -
at times cigarettes can make you feel more relaxed and calmer - a
general feeling of tranquillity or peacefulness. AND cigarettes can
make you feel more confident, more capable, better equipped to deal with
tough situations and they can give you increased concentration - a
general energetic and empowered feeling.
But how is it that this same product or substance can do both of these things? Two different things that are complete opposites?
Smokers
have been told, and believe that cigarettes not only help to lower
stress levels but they also help to keep you on your toes - two
completely different effects. Relaxation is a suppressing feeling while
concentration is an uplifting feeling.
How can the same substance
or product make the body feel up and raring to go and also make it
relaxed and increase inner tranquillity?
The truth is that cigarettes can't make or help smokers do both, or either - it's impossible. You've also been told that cigarettes can cure boredom, help you enjoy your coffee and tea and meals and also sex more.
But
again, how can cigarettes do all of these things? Yes nicotine does
have a stimulating effect, (as it releases dopamine, the body's natural
pleasure drug, into the brain) but how the hell does it make you feel
up, down and everything in between?
Basically we have been told that cigarettes can pretty much do whatever you want them to,
depending on the circumstances surrounding you while you smoke. So if
you need some mental energy or strength - have a cigarette and if you
want to relax and forget about your problems then you should have a
cigarette too! How can the same cigarette make you feel how you want to
feel, depending on your choosing?
The truth is that despite
nicotine releasing dopamine into the brain, all the other substances in a
cigarette actually put a huge strain on your brain and body - they make
you feel more tense, more anxious, more stressed and more on edge. No
matter how much you argue against this it's the cold hard truth!
Look at the undeniable stressful effects of smoking on you and your body below.
1. When carbon monoxide and nicotine enter your body they reduce the amount and supply of oxygen to your brain. Without this oxygen (the fuel of the brain), your brain struggles to function properly, think clearly and concentrate.
It
is a fact that nicotine and carbon monoxide reduce oxygen levels in a
smoker's body and it is also a fact that the body needs oxygen to
concentrate, not even the doctors and scientists can deny that!
Essentially
oxygen is the basis of all activity in the body - any effort the body
makes (from thinking to running), is harder with less oxygen. The
carbon monoxide and nicotine in cigarettes prevent oxygen from reaching
the brain and the other organs in the body - this simply cannot help you
relax or concentrate. It's impossible!
The nicotine may give you
a little pick me up, but it and cigarettes simply cannot do all of the
things that millions of smokers, just like you have been led to believe
and continue telling yourself.
2. Nicotine is a vaso-constrictor -
it shrinks your veins and arteries in size, meaning that your heart is
forced to work harder to pump the same amount of blood around your body,
but through a smaller space. Add to that, the fact that tar and the
other chemicals in cigarettes are being deposited in your veins reducing
blood flow even more.
The result is that your beats 35,000 times more per day than a non-smoker and your blood pressure is also ten to twenty points higher than it should be, under this added workload.
3. The effect that nicotine has on the insulin in your blood puts your body under constant stress.
Every forty five minutes or so, when you smoke, the nicotine in your
body blocks the release of insulin (this is the appetite suppressant
effect).
Once this nicotine has worn off your insulin is
re-released, and forty five minutes to an hour or two later you have
another cigarette.
This stop start process puts a huge strain on your body
- a non-smoker's body will only reduce the flow of insulin when he
really needs it - when he hasn't eaten in a while. But smokers make
their body's stop-start this process twenty times more, or more a day
than a non-smoker. This is an added stressful workload on your body.
4. The several thousand chemicals, poisons, toxins and carcinogens in a cigarette force the body into a state of shock.
When
you inhale the smoke from a cigarette your body has to adapt to the
presence of harmful chemicals. Each of which are deposited in your
veins, lungs, heart, arteries and other organs in your body, then when
you stop smoking for a few hours (e.g. at night) your body does it's
best to clear out the foreign substances.
You will also experience
this process through a 'smoker's cough' in the day and also in the
morning, when yours body has had eight hours or so to start the
cleansing process, and you cough up a lot of mucus.
Both of these attempts at cleaning out the toxins puts your body through a strenuous cleansing regime
process
every time you stop smoking, every day of your smoking life. A
non-smoker will only experience this cleansing process, as extensively
as a smoker when he has a virus or infection or if they smoke a
cigarette.
The truth is that smoking is only an 'effective' stress
relief tool because you believe cigarettes and nicotine can help you.
And that is the key - you believe.
It all comes back to what you think.
Because you tell yourself that cigarettes calm you, you think they do.
Because you tell yourself that they help you concentrate, you think
they do (despite the fact that you are putting a huge strain on your
system - your heart beats an extra 35,000 times per day due to the
reduction in vein size making your blood pressure higher).
So even
though cigarettes and nicotine are having a harmful and weakening
effect on your body, which you have always known, you believe that they
make you stronger and more capable of dealing with life. It is a clever
trick that the tobacco companies have played on you!
They have
shown you on films, on TV and in commercials that cigarettes help you
concentrate, relive stress, beat problems, enjoy sex more and that they
make men more manly and women more sexy.
You have to give them
credit because it has worked and it is still working! But once you take
a step back and look at the overall picture, you can see that
advertising and your beliefs have led you to believe that you need
cigarettes and nicotine, and that they bring you many benefits. When in
fact that is all in your head!
But it can't just be the placebo
effect (believing that something will happen, makes it happen) that
makes you concentrate and relax can it? The truth is no, but only to an
extent.
So yes when you smoke you may feel slightly relaxed - this
is down to the way you breathe when you smoke. Have you noticed any
difference in the way you breathe when you smoke? Take a minute and put
your fingers to your lips and pretend you are smoking, or better yet -
light up a cigarette!
Have you noticed anything different in
comparison to your normal breathing patterns? You should have noticed
the two following patterns.
Firstly, your in-breath was much
stronger when smoking. Try it again, inhale as if you were smoking a
cigarette. This deeper in-breath sucks in a lot more air than normal
breathing because you are sucking air in from the bottom of your stomach
(your diaphragm). With this extra air also comes more oxygen - your
brain and body's fuel, up to 20% more oxygen in fact than when you breathe normally.
The
second thing you should have noticed is the way you exhale. Your
out-breath was also much stronger and deeper, when smoking. Try it
again, breathe out deeply without cigarette smoke, do it several times.
How do you feel? You feel relaxed and calm don't you! Exhaling feels good, especially when it is done strongly.
Have you noticed that when you laugh and when you sigh you exhale and
breathe out strongly? Breathing out has a calming and positive effect
on the body. So even though the smoke puts a strain on your system,
when you breathe out strongly you feel good.
So basically when you
smoke you are just practicing deep breathing exercises. The deep
breaths provide your body and organs with more oxygen, which helps you
to relax and release stress to a degree. I say to a degree because
that extra oxygen is not enough to compensate for the strain that the
chemicals in a cigarette put on your body.
So smoking itself doesn't actually reduce stress, or help you concentrate in any way - it's the way you breathe that does that for you.
Have you ever wondered why people tell you to take deep breaths when
you feel a craving or withdrawal symptoms? It's because the deep
breathing mimics the way you breathe when you smoke.
Every time
you have a cigarette you put your body under stress. Then your body
tries to clean out the chemicals, which again makes you feel
uncomfortable, and puts you under stress. And you do this every day
going round and round in circles, no wonder you a re so stressed!
Then
when your body realises it has extremely low blood sugar (no nicotine
to block insulin which releases your sugar stores) you get pangs and
cravings because your body needs sugar - it becomes stressed. You then
have a cigarette to relieve that stress. Then after forty five minutes
or so the process starts all over again! You are just going around in
one huge destructive and pointless circle.
People say smoking
reduces stress, when in fact - the stress is caused by the last
cigarette - when nicotine and the chemicals enter your body you put it
under a huge strain. Then when the nicotine leaves your body it becomes
stressed - because there is no nicotine to release sugar into the
blood.
Tobacco increases stress and then relieves it (artificially
by playing with your blood sugar levels) when you smoke. So smoking is
basically like hitting yourself over the head with a hammer because it
feels really good when you stop!
A major reason why people say
they can't or won't stop smoking is - they feel they would be giving up a
very effective stress management technique. But once you stop smoking
for a short period of time, you will become calmer, even under stress,
than when you were a smoker.
Another smoking myths is that it
'cures boredom.' This argument is so pointless that it hardly merits
much attention. Yes some people believe that it cures boredom, but so
does banging your head against a wall and stabbing yourself with a fork.
That doesn't mean it's either good for you, effective, productive or
an adequate way to deal with the situation.
Again if you rely on
cigarettes to cure boredom, all you are doing is telling yourself - 'I
am not good enough to deal with this situation on my own. My cigarettes
will take care of it.'
If you smoke due to boredom, you need to
pay particular attention to changing your habits so that you have
adequate new methods to keep yourself entertained.
Smoking as a
stress relief mechanism is just and excuse. Many smokers know this but
continue to lie to themselves because it prevents them from admitting
that they cannot stop smoking.
Finding new ways to deal with stress is essential if you are going to make your stop smoking attempt a success.
My
Complete Step By Step Guide To Quitting Smoking explains how to beat
the stresses of everyday life when you quit smoking and it shows you how
to break any and all your associations to smoking, so you can become
completely smoke free in 3-4 weeks.
Daniel Fargher
Quit Smoking Specialist
Stop Smoking For Good
Click Here To Learn How To Quit Smoking In 28 days Or Less With Hypnosis
Quit Smoking Specialist
Stop Smoking For Good
Click Here To Learn How To Quit Smoking In 28 days Or Less With Hypnosis
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