The Hemp Connection [Search results for nicotine

  • Stopping smoking, part I

    Stopping smoking, part I

    I was just asked about tips for stopping smoking. This is a tough one, since nicotine is the second most addictive substance known to man (surpassed only by heroin). Yes, it's that powerful.

    I was once certified as a Smoke Stoppers teacher and I thought I'd create a couple of blog posts around this one. Hope you find them helpful.

    It's most important, first of all, to understand how nicotine works. It doesn't actually hit your bloodstream until about 20 minutes after it's been inhaled.

    So the relief you feel when you light up, is likely due to the deep breath you took, not the chemicals in the cigarette.

    The anxiety that you feel when you crave…THAT's the nicotine. It's very tricky timing that works on behalf of Big Nicotine. You associate the wrong thing with relief from the symptoms. You've been associating the wrong stimulus and response all this time!

    Practice this technique: Lie down on your bed or sofa, and place a pillow or book on your stomach. Practice breathing in a way that makes that pillow or book move up and down. Notice how quickly you feel less anxious? Now practice that using a hand on your stomach. If you can do that, you can use this technique wherever you may be…at work, in the car, at a party…get used to how it feels to breathe deeply. Associate breathing deeply with feeling better, to help disconnect the association between the cigarette and breathing more deeply.

    If you can make it for 20 minutes the urge to smoke often passes. So don't start catastrophizing about how miserable it feels to not be able to smoke now and forever, just focus on the next 20 minutes, breathe deeply, and trust.

    If you make it, put the amount of money you saved by NOT smoking that cigarette, in a jar in a highly visible place. Once you start to see that money rack up (it's about $1.50 a smoke), you'll start to question whether or not this is something you really want to spend money on. Especially if you're struggling in other financial areas of your life.

    Give it a try, let me know what happens!

    And congratulations for making the effort!

  • Note from Amber's copilot — Installment #4

    Note from Amber's copilot — Installment #4

    Amber asked me awhile ago about some healthy substitutes for condiments, as she's noticed now that she's reading labels more closely, many are high in sodium.

    Before I get to my suggestions, I want to congratulate Amber for her victorious week fighting the nicotine demon! It can be so hard to kick that habit, and it takes a lot of willpower. But if she can kick the butts…the rest is a whole lot easier.

    Also, she's going to notice as she clears the tar and nicotine residues out of her body, her senses of smell and taste may be a whole lot more sensitive than when the cigarettes dulled everything. She may find that she doesn't even need salty condiments in order to taste her food. It's one of the rewards of quitting.: )

    Tartar sauce
    1/2 cup canola oil mayonnaise
    2 tablespoons sweet pickle relish
    1 large green onion, chopped
    1 1/2 teaspoons red wine vinegar

    Barbecue sauce and Steak Sauce
    I'm leaving this up to Eating Well, as they have a whole collection of barbecue sauces, marinades, and rubs. And the vinegar in many of these is excellent for keeping your post-meal blood glucose level low!

    Ketchup
    For the Jamie Oliver fans in our group, here is his recipe. I recently wrote an article about fennel, and it's included in his version. It takes a little bit of time, but for things like this I like to find pretty bottles at Goodwill and get crafty with it. Your kids might enjoy this as a Saturday afternoon project.

    Mayonnaise
    Canola oil mayonnaise is my favorite. I also, for those wanting to reduce fat, recommend stirring a spoonful of mayonnaise into a cup of Greek yogurt. Hummous makes a nice sandwich spread alternative to mayonnaise as well.

    OK! Sounds like Amber had a great week, and tackled a lot of tough challenges. I look forward to seeing what the next week brings!

  • Stopping smoking, part II

    Stopping smoking, part II

    Yesterday I talked about the biochemistry of a nicotine addiction. Today I wanted to share a psychological technique that can help you tackle cigarettes in manageable bites, so that the prospect of giving it up for good, all at once, isn't so overwhelming that you give up trying before you give yourself the opportunity to succeed!

    In my Smoke Stoppers training we learned about a 2 pack a day smoker who was able to eliminate all but his first cigarette of the day. No matter what he tried, the urge overpowered him and he succumbed. So his Smoke Stoppers coach asked him to journal everything he could about that cigarette, to see what the trigger was. Turns out, it was the stop sign at the first corner out of his garage. He'd pull out of the driveway, up to the corner, stop the car…and while he was stopped…he'd take the time to light up the cigarette. Everything leading up to the cigarette, from starting the car, to stopping, to the visual cues at that particular intersection, were part of the ritual.

    So what did the man do to kick that last cigarette? Instead of pulling out of his driveway and turning right, he went the opposite direction, where the corner was a little bit further away. Did the trick.

    My suggestion to you is to first tackle the first cigarette of the day. The one you light up with your morning coffee, while reading the paper, while driving to work…because it lays the groundwork for all of the nicotine highs and lows that trigger the rest of the cigarettes throughout the day. It's the most behavioral of all of your cigarettes, because you made it through the night without smoking. Mix up your routine. Go for a walk instead of reading your email. Eat a different breakfast. Sit in a different chair at the table. Anything, anything at all, to mix up the spatial, visual, and emotional cues.

    See what happens. See what you learn about your habits. And how intertwined they are with food.

    Speaking of food, as important as it is to me that you eat well to manage your PCOS, if you're making a choice between quitting smoking and changing your eating, the former is the most important one to prioritize. Don't worry about weight gain, we can take care of that later. Smoking is your bigger health risk. And if you can kick the habit, the one that has you chained to the second most addictive substance in the world…well, changing eating is going to be a much easier thing to tackle than you're envisioning.

    One thing at a time!

    Let us know how you're doing with this, by the way. Share the cues you figured out, help your fellow cysters!

  • Note from Amber's copilot — Installment #5

    Note from Amber's copilot — Installment #5

    I'm grateful to see Amber's post this week. It's very real. And it confirms, for all of you, that changing behaviors isn't a perfect journey. In fact, there will be great days, and there will be far-from-awesome ones. If you're living with the fantasy that life is going to be just peachy when you lose weight/have a baby/get a boyfriend/pay off your debts, get over it. Real people have real problems. It is not whether or not you have problems that is important, it is how you handle those problems when they arise that is key.

    What Amber didn't mention in this post, is that she is almost 2 weeks into being nicotine-free! So what's especially hard for her right now is that when things get stressful, not only does she not have food to turn to, she doesn't have cigarettes. Kudos to her for riding through it and being able to be introspective and insightful in the middle of a hormone/withdrawal storm. She's not giving herself enough credit for just what she's managed!

    I introduced Amber to our resident yoga teacher, Sarah Jones, who is going to give Amber some pointers that can help both with the nicotine withdrawal and the stress management. Yoga is a very powerful tool for both. I look forward to hearing how the collaboration turns out.

    Keep up the great work, Amber! Glad you liked the fries!

    xoxo

    Monika

  • Got PCOS? Smoking? Not a good idea

    Got PCOS? Smoking? Not a good idea

    Here's a pretty large study (650 women with PCOS) that illustrates why taking care of your PCOS is not just about diet and exercise.

    Smoking cigarettes may be very important in hormone function and PCOS. They found that women with PCOS who smoked, compared to women with PCOS who did not, had higher fasting blood lipids (cholesterol, triglycerides, and low-density lipoprotein) and lower prolactin levels. They also had higher adrenal responsiveness (meaning more cortisol secretion).

    One of the reasons often given by women for not quitting smoking is that it helps keep weight down. But if you're doing unhealthy things to keep that weight down (restrictive dieting, smoking, diet pills, etc.), you may be making the problem you are trying to control, even worse.

    Sometimes the initial weight gain that comes with quitting smoking keeps people from quitting. But if you hang in there, and keep up the other healthy behaviors you have been working on, that weight will eventually come off. It's a type of weight gain, in my opinion, that is well worth it, for the long-term gains you earn.

    It's a tough one, I know…nicotine is the second most addictive substance (behind heroin) known to man…but if you can conquer the butts…you can do just about anything that comes along afterward that you decide to put your mind to.

    Glintborg D, Mumm H, Hougaard DM, Ravn P, Andersen M. Smoking is associated with increased adrenal responsiveness, decreased prolactin levels and a more adverse lipid profile in 650 white patients with polycystic ovary syndrome. Gynecol Endocrinol. 2011 Jul 20. [Epub ahead of print]