From: Dcuster <dcuster@nando.net>
-----------------------------------------------------------------

The "Kicking Butts" article from "Changing Times" has information
that has helped many a person win the smoke-free quality of life.
I hope it helps you. I wish you only the best in your journey.
Good luck, (It's only me) Father Don from the Store Front Church


KICKING BUTTS. (NICOTINE ADDICTION) (INCLUDES RELATED ARTICLES)

It may not be a "sin" anymore, but few would dispute that smoking
is the devil to give up. Of the 46 million Americans who smoke--26
percent of the adult population--an  estimated 80 percent would
like to stop and one-third try each year. Two to 3 percent of them
succeed. "There's an extraordinarily high rate of relapse among
people who want to quit," says Michael Fiore, M.D., M.P.H.,
director of the Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention at the
University of Wisconsin.

THE TENACITY OF ITS GRIP CAN BE MATCHED BY FEW OTHER behaviors,
most of which, like snorting cocaine and shooting up heroin, are
illegal. Since 1988, nicotine dependence and withdrawal have been
recognized as disorders by the American Psychiatric Association,
legitimizing the experience of the millions who have tried,
successfully and otherwise, to put smoking behind them while
kibitzers told them to use more willpower.

It's not just a habit, the medical and scientific communities now
fully agree, but an addiction, comparable in strength to hard drugs
and alcohol.

In fact, the odds of "graduating" from experimentation to true
dependence are far worse for cigarettes than for illicit drugs,
which testifies to tobacco's one-two punch of addictiveness and
availability: Crack and heroin aren't sold in vending machines and
hawked from billboards. Alcohol is as legal and available as
cigarettes are, and as big a business, but apparently easier to
take or leave alone. The majority of people who drink are not
dependent on alcohol, while as many as 90 percent of smokers are
addicted.

If nothing else, the persistence of smoking in the face of a
devastating rogue's gallery of bodily damage, little of which has
been kept secret, attests to the fact that this is no rational
life-style decision. "Take all the deaths in America caused by
alcohol, illicit drugs, fires, car accidents, homicide, and
suicide. Throw in AIDS. It's still only half the deaths every year
from cigarettes," says Fiore.

The news, however, isn't all bad. For the last 20 years, the
proportion of Americans who smoke has dropped continuously, for the
first time in our history. In America today, there are nearly 45
million ex-smokers, about as many as are still puffing away.

These quitters, perhaps surprisingly, are for the most part the
same folk who tried and failed before. The average person who
successfully gives up smoking does so after five or six futile
attempts, says Fiore. "It appears that many smokers need to go
through a process of quitting and relapsing a number of times
before he or she can learn enough skills or maintain enough control
to overcome this addiction."

Never underestimate the power of your enemy. Although nicotine may
not give the taste of Nirvana that more notorious drugs do, its
effects on the nervous system are profound and hard to resist. It
increases levels of acetylcholine and norepinephrine, brain
chemicals that regulate mood, attention, and memory. It also
appears to stimulate the release of dopamine in the reward center
of the brain, as opiates, cocaine, and alcohol do.

Addiction research has clearly established that drugs with a rapid
onset--that hit the brain quickly--have the most potent
psychological impact and are the most addictive. "With cigarettes,
the smoker gets virtually immediate onset," says Jack Henningfield,
Ph.D., chief of clinical pharmacology research for the National
Institute on Drug Abuse. "The cigarette is the crackcocaine of
nicotine delivery."

Physiologically, smoking a drug, be it cocaine or nicotine, is the
next best thing to injecting it. In fact, it's pretty much the same
thing, says Henningfield. "Whether you inhale a drug in 15 seconds,
which is pretty slow for an average smoker, or inject it in 15
seconds, the effects are identical in key respects," he says. The
blood extracts nicotine from inhaled air just as efficiently as
oxygen, and delivers it, within seconds, to the brain.

THE CIGARETTE ALSO GIVES THE smoker "something remarkable: the
ability to get precise, fingertip dose control," says Henningfield.
Achieving just the right blood level is a key to virtually all
drug-induced gratification, and the seasoned smoker does this
adeptly, by adjusting how rapidly and deeply he or she puffs. "If
you get the dose just right after going without cigarettes for an
hour or two, there's nothing like it," he says.

The impetus to smoke is indeed, as the tobacco companies put it,
for pleasure. "But there's no evidence that smoke in the mouth
provides much pleasure," says Henningfield. "We do know that
nicotine in the brain does."

For many, nicotine not only gives pleasure, it eases pain. Evidence
has mounted that a substantial number of smokers use cigarettes to
regulate emotional states, particularly to reduce negative affect
like anxiety, sadness, or boredom.

"People expect that having a cigarette will reduce bad feelings,"
says Thomas Brandon, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychology at
the State University of New York at Binghamton. His research found
this, in fact, to be one of the principal motivations for daily
smokers.

Negative affect runs the gamut from the transitory down times we
all have several times a day, to clinical depression. Smokers are
about twice as likely to be depressed as nonsmokers, and people
with a history of major depression are nearly 50 percent more
likely than others to also have a history of smoking, according to
Brandon.

Sadly, but not surprisingly, depression appears to cut your chance
of quitting by as much as one-half, and the same apparently
applies, to a lesser extent, to people who just have symptoms of
depression.

According to Alexander Glassman, M.D., professor of psychiatry at
the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, the act
of quitting can trigger severe depression in some people. In one
study, nine smokers in a group of 300 in a cessation program became
so depressed--two were frankly suicidal--that the researchers
advised them to give up the effort and try again later. All but one
had a history of major depression.

"These weren't average smokers," Glassman points out. All were
heavily dependent on nicotine, they smoked at least a pack and a
half daily, had their first cigarette within a half hour of
awakening, and had tried to quit, on average, five times before. It
is possible, he suggests, that nicotine has an antidepressant
effect on some.

More generally, suggests Brandon, the very effectiveness of
cigarettes in improving affect is one thing that makes it so hard
to quit. Not only does a dose of nicotine quell the symptoms of
withdrawal (much more on this later), the neurotransmitters it
releases in the brain are exactly those most likely to elevate
mood.

For a person who often feels sad, anxious, or bored, smoking can
easily become a dependable coping mechanism to be given up only
with great difficulty. "Once people learn to use nicotine to
regulate moods," says Brandon, "if you take it away without
providing alternatives, they'll be much more vulnerable to negative
affect states. To alleviate them, they'll be tempted to go back to
what worked in the past."

In fact, negative affect is what precipitates relapse among
would-be quitters 70 percent of the time, according to Saul
Shiffman, Ph.D., professor of psychology at the University of
Pittsburgh. "We invited people to call a relapse-prevention hot
line, to find out what moments of crises were like; what was
striking was how often they were in the grip of negative emotions
just before relapses, strong temptations, and close calls." A more
precise study using palm-top computers to track the state of mind
of participants is getting similar results, Shiffman says.

Most relapses occur soon after quiting, some 50 percent within the
first two weeks, and the vast majority by six months. But everyone
knows of people who had a slip a year, two, or five after quitting,
and were soon back to full-time puffing. And for each of them,
there are countless others who have had to fight the occasional
urge, desire, or outright craving months, even years after the
habit has been, for all intents and purposes, left behind.

Acute withdrawal is over within four to six weeks for virtually all
smokers. But the addiction is by no means all over. Like those who
have been addicted to other drugs, ex-smokers apparently remain
susceptible to "cues," suggests Brandon: Just as seeing a pile of
sugar can arouse craving in the former cocaine user, being at a
party or a club, particularly around smokers, can rekindle the lure
of nicotine intensely.

The same process may include "internal cues," says Brandon. "If you
smoked in the past when under stress or depressed, the act of being
depressed can serve as a cue to trigger the urge to smoke."

Like users of other drugs, Henningfield points out, addicted
smokers don't just consume the offending substance to feel good (or
not bad), but to feel "right." "The cigarette smoker's daily
function becomes dependent on continued nicotine dosing: Not just
mood, but the ability to maintain attention and concentration
deteriorates very quickly in nicotine withdrawal."

Henningfield's studies have shown that in an addicted smoker,
attention, memory, and reasoning ability start to decline
measurably just four hours after the last cigarette. This reflects
a real physiological impairment: a change in the electrical
activity of the brain. Nine days after quitting, when some
withdrawal symptoms, at least, have begun to ease, there has been
no recovery in brain function.

How long does the impairment persist? No long-term studies have
been done, but cravings and difficulties in cognitive function have
been documented for as long as nine years in some exsmokers. "There
are clinical reports of people who have said that they still aren't
functioning right, and eventually make the 'rational decision' to
go back to smoking," Henningfield says.

The conclusion is inescapable that smoking causes changes in the
nervous system that endure long after the physical addiction is
history, and in some smokers, may never normalize.

THE WEALTH OF recent knowledge about smoking clarifies why it's
hard to quit. But can it make it easier? If nothing else, it should
help people take it seriously enough to gear up for the effort.
"People think of quitting as something short term, but they should
expect to struggle for a couple of months," says Shiffman.

What works? About 90 percent of people who give up smoking do so on
their own, says Fiore. But the odds for success can be improved:
Programs that involve counseling typically get better rates, and
nicotine replacement can be a potent ally in whatever method you
use.

In a metaanalysis of 17 placebo-controlled trials involving more
than 5,000 people, Fiore found that the patch consistently doubled
the success of quit attempts, whether or not antismoking counseling
was used. After six months, 22 percent of the people who used the
patch remained off cigarettes, compared to 9 percent who had a
placebo. Of those who had the patch and a relatively intense
counseling or support program, 27 percent were smoke-free.

More than 4 million Americans have tried the patch, which replaces
the nicotine on which the smoker has become dependent, to ease such
withdrawal symptoms as irritability, insomnia, inability to
concentrate, and physical cravings that drive many back to tobacco.

You're likely to profit from the patch if you have a real physical
dependence on nicotine: that is, if you have your first cigarette
within 30 minutes of waking up; smoke 20 or more a day; or
experienced severe withdrawal symptoms during previous quit
attempts.

Standard directions call for using the patches in decreasing doses
for two to three months. Some researchers, however, suggest that
for certain smokers, the patch may be necessary for years, or
indefinitely.

"It's already happening," says Henningfield. "Some doctors have
come to the conclusion that some patients are best able to get on
with their life with nicotine maintenance." One such physician is
David Peter Sachs, M.D., director of the Palo Alto Center for
Pulmonary Disease Prevention. "I realized that with some of my
patients, no matter how slowly I tried to taper them off nicotine
replacement, they couldn't do it," says Sachs. "They were literally
using it for years. Before you start tapering the dose, you should
be cigarette-free for at least 30 days."

His clinical experience leads him to believe that 10 to 20 percent
of smokers are so dependent that they may always need to get
nicotine from somewhere. One study of people using the gum found
that two years later, 20 percent of those who had successfully
remained cigarette-free were still chewing. The idea of indefinite,
even lifetime, nicotine maintenance sounds offensive to some.
"Clearly, the goal to aim for is to be nicotine-free," says Sachs.
"But if that can't be reached, being tobacco-free still represents
a substantial gain for the patient, and for society." And getting
nicotine via a patch or gum source means a far lower dose than
you'd get from a cigarette. Plus, you're getting just nicotine, and
not the 42 carcinogens in tobacco smoke.

Although the once-a-day patch has largely supplanted the gum first
used in nicotine replacement, Sachs thinks that for some, the most
effective treatment could involve one or both. The patch may be
easier to use, but the gum is the only product that allows you
control over blood nicotine level. Some people know they'll do
better if they stay in control. And would-be quitters who do fine
on the patch until they run into a stressful business meeting may
stifle that urge to bum a cigarette if they boost their nicotine
level in advance with a piece of gum, Sachs says.

HOWEVER, NICOTINE REPLACEMENT "is not a magic bullet," says Fiore.
"It will take the edge off the tobacco-withdrawal syndrome, but it
won't automatically transform any smoker into a nonsmoker." Other
requisite needs vary from person to person. A standard approach
teaches behavioral "coping skills," simple things like eating,
chewing gum, or knitting to keep mouth or hands occupied, or
leaving tempting situations. Ways people cope cognitively are as
important as what they do, says Shiffman.

He advises would-be quitters at times of temptation to remind
themselves just why they're quitting: "My children will be so proud
of me," or "I want to live to see my grandchildren," for example.
Think of a relaxing scene. Imagine how you'll feel tomorrow if you
pass this crisis without smoking. Or simply tell yourself, "NO" or
"Smoking is not an option."

Coping skills, however, are conspicuously unsuccessful for people
who are high in negative affect. Supportive counseling works
better. Depression or anxiety may interfere with the ability to use
cognitive skills.

One exercise that Brandon teaches patients asks them to
inventory--and treat themselves to--things that make them feel
good, a substitute for the mood-elevating effect of a cigarette.
These might include exercising, being with friends, going to
concerts, reading, or taking a nap. "Positive life-style changes
that improve mood level" are particularly useful if you use
cigarettes to deal with negative emotional states, he says.

Depression treatment is particularly important for those trying to
quit smoking. One study found that cognitive therapy significantly
improved quit rates for people with a history of depression.
Various antidepressants have been effective in small studies, and
a large double-blind trial using the drug Zoloft is underway.

Fiore has found that having just one cigarette in the first two
weeks of a cessation program predicted about 80 percent of relapses
at six months. Even when the withdrawal symptoms are gone, a single
lapse can rekindle the urge as much as ever.

In the critical first weeks without cigarettes, a key to relapse
prevention is avoiding, or severely limiting, alcohol, which not
only blunts inhibitions, but is often powerfully bound to smoking
as a habit. Up to one-half of people who try to quit have their
first lapse with alcohol on board.

Watch your coffee intake, too. It can trigger the urge to smoke.
And nicotine stimulates a liver enzyme that breaks down caffeine,
so when you quit, you'll get more bang for each cup, leading to
irritability, anxiety, and insomnia--the withdrawal symptoms that
undermine quit efforts.

Try to change your routine to break patterns that strengthen
addiction: drive to work a different way; don't linger at the table
after a meal. And don't try to quit when you're under stress:
vacation time might be a good occasion.

And if you do have a lapse? Don't trivialize it, because then
you're more likely to have another, says Shiffman. But, "if you
make it a catastrophe, you'll reconfirm fears that you'll never be
able to quit," a low self-esteem position that could become a
self-fulfilling prophecy. "Think of it as a warning, a mistake
you'll have to overcome."

Try to learn from the lapse: examine the situation that led up to
it, and plan to deal with it better in the future. "And take it as
a sign you need to double your efforts," Shiffman says. "Looking
back at a lapse, many people find they'd already begun to slack
off; early on, they were avoiding situations where they were
tempted to smoke, but later got careless."

Don't be discouraged by ups and downs. "It's normal to have it easy
for a while, then all of a sudden you're under stress and for 10
minutes you have an intense craving," says Shiffman. "Consider the
gain in frequency and duration: the urge to smoke is now coming
back for 10 minutes, every two weeks, rather than all the time."

If lapse turns into relapse and you end up smoking regularly, the
best antidote to despair is getting ready to try again. "Smoking is
a chronic disease, and quitting is a process. Relapse and remission
are part of the process," says Fiore. "As long as you're continuing
to make progress toward the ultimate goal of being smoke-free, you
should feel good about your achievement."

TIPS FOR QUITTERS

*   Nicotine addiction is powerful. Expect to struggle for a couple
    of months. It's an up-and-down course.

*   Don't despair. It may take six tries to learn enough skills to
    beat this addicition.

*   Aim for absolute abstinence--even a single puff leads to
    relapse.

*   Inventory those things that make you feel good and treat
    yourself to them--exercising, kissing, reading, taking a
    nap--instead of a smoke.

*   Watch your coffee intake. Not only is it a trigger to smoke,
    your sensitivity to caffeine increases, mimicking
    nicotine-withdrawal symptoms.

*   Change routines associated with smoking. Take a walk before
    your morning coffee. Drive to work a different way.

*   Although most quitters succeed (eventyally) on their own,
    programs that involve counseling improve the odds, especially
    for the depressed or anxous.

*   Don't dismiss nicotine replacement with patch or gum. Gum
    allows you control over your blood nicotine level.

*   Keep your guard up. Most lapses occurthree or four weeks out,
    when you're feeling better.

*   In the first weeks, avoid, or severly limit alcohol.

BORN TO SMOKE

Although the difference between smokers and nonsmokers appears to
reflect complex environmental and social factors, genetics
apparently plays a role comparable to that observed in alcoholism,
responsible for about 30 percent of the propensity.

In particular, shared genetics appears to account for the link
between smoking and depression, according to data collected on
nearly 1,500 pairs of female twins. "The twin data show that
whatever gene puts you at risk for depression, the same gene puts
you at risk for smoking," says Alexander Glassman.

Further evidence for this conclusion comes from a prospective
epidemiological study, in which 1,200 people in their twenties were
surveyed twice, 18 months to two years apart. Nonsmokers who were
depressed at the first interview were more likely to be smoking at
the time of the second, while nondepressed smokers were more likely
to have become depressed by then.

Genetics may even play a role in how you smoke. Shiffman studied a
group of people who had smoked regularly but lightly, five
cigarettes or less, four days or more a week, for several years at
least. Says Saul Shiffman: "They had ample opportunity to become
addicted--on average, they'd smoked 46,000 cigarettes, but we found
not the slightest evidence of dependence: they showed no signs of
withdrawal when abstinent. They really could casually take smoking
or leave it."

Such nonaddicted users--"chippers," in drug culture parlance--are
also seen among consumers of hard drugs. "We didn't delve deeply
into what made these smokers different," says Shiffman. "But we did
find evidence that they also had relatives who smoked with little
dependence, who followed the same pattern. This makes it plausible,
although it doesn't prove that these folks are biologically
different." With rare exceptions, chippers have always smoked that
way, he points out. For a once-addicted smoker to try to become a
chipper is "a risky business" that's probably doomed to failure.

NICOTINE IN THE NINETIES

Smoking just doesn't have the cachet it once did. Instead of a mark
of worldliness and joie de vivre, it's become something of a social
disease, banned from airplanes, restaurants, and, in some
localities, public parks. Except on billboards and in magazine ads,
the smoker him- or herself is less likely to be the object of
admiration than of pity and contempt.

The change in smoking's status is no doubt in part responsible for
the 40 percent decline in its prevalence since 1964. And it would
seem logical that those people who are still smoking in the face of
such adversity are an increasingly hard-core, heavily addicted
bunch, unable to quit.

Alexander Glassman conjectures that as the social environment grows
more hostile to smoking, the genetic component of the behavior will
become more evident. And as the number of smokers drops, an
increasing percentage will have psychiatric problems, particularly
depression.

But the change hasn't yet been documented. "Actually, I don't think
the data support the idea that today's smokers are very different
from years back," says Fiore. "The average number of cigarettes
they smoke today isn't dramatically different from 20 years
ago--about 22 per day."

One thing that has happened is a change in the sociodemographics of
smoking. "More and more, it's a behavior predominantly exercised by
disadvantaged members of society: 40 percent of high-school
dropouts smoke, compared to 14 percent of college grads. Poor
people are more likely to smoke than wealthy. It's getting
marginalized," he says.

If nothing else, today's antismoking climate has eliminated much
denial about the true nature of the cigarette habit. "Smokers are
much more aware of being hooked," says Saul Shiffman. "You can't
tell how dependent you are if access is easy. If you can smoke at
your desk and at a restaurant, you can delude yourself, as people
have for decades: 'I like to smoke but I can take it or leave it'.
It's hard to say that when the only place you can smoke is outside
when it's hailing and 20 degrees."



