I find the cravings do diminish over time. For me, the worst trigger is watching someone make love to their cigarette in a movie -- just makes it look so damned good.
I broke a 5-10 cup-a-day of espresso addiction two weeks ago and it's much worse than quitting my 10 year cigarette addiction a couple of years ago. The psychological and physical torture is unreal (probably like crack addicts suffer.) Worse, I get insane panic attacks with even the slightest caffeine now, so I had to go cold turkey, or risk going to the psych ward.
Guess what I'm saying is: There are harder habits to break than the smokes. Pick up some nicorette or thrive mints if you get the extreme urge. I found popping a mint every once in while when I thought I couldn't resist a smoke helped re-strengthen my resolve, since you do get the relaxing effect of the nicotine. Also, stomach breathing helps -- inhale deep with your stomach, hold for 10 - 15 seconds, then exhale really slowly and deliberately (kinda relates to the rythmic breathing matt3 is talking about.)
I broke a 5-10 cup-a-day of espresso addiction two weeks ago and it's much worse than quitting my 10 year cigarette addiction a couple of years ago. The psychological and physical torture is unreal (probably like crack addicts suffer.) Worse, I get insane panic attacks with even the slightest caffeine now, so I had to go cold turkey, or risk going to the psych ward.
Guess what I'm saying is: There are harder habits to break than the smokes. Pick up some nicorette or thrive mints if you get the extreme urge. I found popping a mint every once in while when I thought I couldn't resist a smoke helped re-strengthen my resolve, since you do get the relaxing effect of the nicotine. Also, stomach breathing helps -- inhale deep with your stomach, hold for 10 - 15 seconds, then exhale really slowly and deliberately (kinda relates to the rythmic breathing matt3 is talking about.)