All that ever worked for me was getting preggers...each time I quit for 3 years, then one day realized that I was smoking again without even being able to pin point exactly when I started buying them again. My youngest is almost two...which means we're getting close to that 3 year mark, so I'm trying to stay hyper-aware...there's no way I'm having more kids, so if I start again I'm done for - wish ME luck!![]()
Seriously, there's 9 years between my last two, so I was a serious 2 pack a day smoker with this last time quitting - and pg or not, it was HARD! You sound kinda like I'd felt - I'm smart, always led a bit of an extra-healthy lifestyle on all other fronts, absolutely hated the idea of my kids smoking, and my cute new husband is terribly asthmatic and HATES smoking, none of my friends smoke or can even stand smoking...but, even with all these good reasons, I just couldn't get myself to really care - I really enjoyed my cigarettes. Even now the smell of a cig makes me want to puke...and there's still part of me that considers asking the smoker if I can just have one little drag.
I'm not a 'baby-steps' kinda person - for me it really helped to change EVERYTHING at once - the same has also been true for anytime I've dieted, but I think it was more important with smoking...be as active as possible, don't do the things you strongly associate with smoking for 2wks or a month (for me it was going out for coffee, going to the bar, long car rides alone or anything that sets off my social anxiety - that's still my hardest time, lotsa people really makes me wish for an excuse to just 'step outside' for a bit), and especially don't let yourself get bored! What also helped me was to make a poster of people who looked like the kind of person I liked to see myself as one of...athletes, granola girls, healthy moms, etc - I would look at it and remember that I couldn't picture any of them smoking, and for some reason that helped too.
Good luck - it's hard and it definitely gets worse before it gets better. If you want to feel you're not alone, find a copy of Garrison Keillor's 'End of the Trail' about the last smokers in America, hiding in a box canyon... definitely a great read (or a better listen if you can find an audio version of it)!![]()