Nicotine
Withdrawal Symptoms
This
is the stumbling block over which many a would-be quitter trips.
The problem with many smokers is that they fail to recognize these
symptoms as symptoms. A nicotine withdrawal symptom is
something that a person experiences once he or she stops using
a substance that gives them a kick. Oops, is that too hard to
digest? Well, let’s try to make it simpler.
There are many things that are identified with substance abuse.
Alcohol is one of them, narcotic drugs are another and tobacco
is in no way to be left behind. The problem, or let us say that
the similarity among all these substances, is that once one gets
used to them, breaking away is not easy.
Contrary
to popular belief, it is not the fear of deprivation of the pleasantly
high feeling that drives the person to use the substance again
and again so that it is used, misused and eventually abused. The
person returns for his or her daily shot because of certain altered
conditions in the body. These substances are indeed very potent
and they affect certain specific spots or centers of the brain.
The brain quickly gets used to these alterations and then before
we know it, these centers of the brain cannot do without the daily
dose of the substance. The brain did not ask for the substance
in the first place but we gave them to it. When we experience
that pleasantly high feeling we do not bother about the changes
that are taking place within.
It is common knowledge that the entire processes carried about
in the brain are maintained by a delicate balance of the various
chemical salts there. Once we start using substances like the
above-mentioned tobacco, narcotics and alcohol, the balance of
these chemical salts gets altered. The body as I mentioned earlier
is a self-adjusting machine and so this new chemical balance is
established and it takes no time for the brain cells to get adjusted
to the new balance.
Then when the brain cells do not get what is required to maintain
the new balance (read that as the daily puffs) things go hay wire.
The old balance was disturbed and altered and a new balance was
set up. But this new balance is not the real natural thing. It
is something that has to be artificially supported and when that
daily, or timely dose of nicotine does not get to the brain, the
new balance gets upset.
That is when a person gets those peculiar feelings, which can
be broadly called "nicotine withdrawal symptoms". You
know what I am talking about don’t you? Haven’t you
felt uneasy and jittery when you were unable to get that puff?
It’s a strange kind of feeling isn’t it?
It’s a feeling that can only be soothed when you take that
long refreshing pull of highly toxic smoke. Some people break
into a sweat, some get the tremors, some feel queasy, and some
get constipated…
All
these are nicotine
withdrawal symptoms, so unless you prepare yourself to face
the pressure of withdrawal, you’re going to face a losing
battle.
Psst… let’s not leave out an important detail...
The
new balance in the brain that was established with the help of
the used substance can indeed be broken. I’m not saying
that it is easy but once you start conditioning your brain, that
it just not going to get what it wants, that is the external substance,
the brain will be left with no alternative than to go back and
restore the old balance.
Of course the brain is not going to give up without a fight and
that is what we are going to experience as the withdrawal symptom.
Initially the brain had been doing all too well without the help
of any external substance; and then we made the brain become dependent
on something. So when we stop using that something, it is only
a matter of time before the brain goes back to its original state
of functioning. All we have to do is to muster up the will power
to over come the withdrawal symptoms that might set in.
But again I do admit that it is easier said than done. In the
end, however, knowing that withdrawals will come (and recognizing
them as such), is a vital part of the quitting process.
About
the Author
Learn
how to quit smoking once and for all. Free-Stop-Smoking-guide.com
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