On a warm October day,
I hurried to class, manoeuvring around groups of slower-moving students. I
checked my phone – fifteen minutes before class started, enough time to buy
myself a cup of tea. Approaching the entrance, I smelled the faint scent of
fresh cigarette smoke from a passerby. Then my eyes caught the posters
featuring cigarette brands on the tea stall. All of the sudden, pleasurable
memories wafted over me. I could feel the cigarette between my fingers and
taste the hot smoke. I was experiencing a smoking crave.
What is a Smoking Crave?
The dictionary definition says a craving is a
powerful desire. For me, craving an addictive substance. is a little different.
I have a powerful desire, for example, to be able to support my family with the
music I write and perform. But that desire is deep and unchanging. It is a life
goal and a fundamental part of my personality and identity. The tobacco craving,
on the other hand, is temporary, impulsive and extemporaneous from the rest of
my existence.
We know that smoking is highly addictive. Mainstream science holds that
cravings are a physiological phenomenon related to dopamine, the reward circuit
of the brain and hormones. These powerful urges are also linked to memory and
hunger. In fact, recent research suggests the same parts of the brain are
active in food cravings and drug
cravings.
Fighting the Craves for Smoking
in Addiction Recovery
Fortunately, acute cravings do not last long –
usually a matter of minutes. Distraction is a crucial tool when fighting the
urge to give in. I experience alcohol and nicotine cravings, although the
nicotine cravings are stronger. This does not mean it was harder for me to quit
smoking (it was not). But for some reason, the short-lived, visceral desire to
smoke strikes me more often than the desire to drink. Although I can’t explain
the brain mechanisms behind this, to me, smoking felt more like an activity,
whereas drinking was a way of life (and nearly death).
In addition, drinking
for me was more about escaping and checking out than it was a source of
pleasure. Smoking, on the other hand, had pleasurable effects. Perhaps that’s
why those pleasant memory-laced thoughts of cigarettes return, even though I
know smoking is deadly.
How I Cope With Smoking
Craves
When a craving hits
me, I like to address it. I take spiritual
approach to recovery, but there is a secular
corollary to the way I deal with cravings. When I start to think that a
cigarette or a beer sound good, I pray to have the craving removed and for that
thought to be replaced with a positive thought. In early recovery, when my
cravings were more severe, I practiced a lot of distraction too. In effect, I
employ a combination of prayer, cognitive
behavioral therapy (CBT) and distraction.
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complete and holistic treatment for Smoking Craves. We
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