I have been nicotine free now for almost two years. In this time I have helped hundreds of people achieve their own success stories by sharing my thoughts and giving advice on side effects. I have only been forced to not allow one post in this two years, mostly due to the negative tone and the insistence that Chantix had changed them.

Two years later we see a little news that Chantix carries a suicide risk and may cause mental illness. I am not your doctor so you can never take my facts and use them as medical advice. The only thing one can say about Chantix is that it has helped you quit smoking and people who quit smoking go through a lot of problems as they adjust to addiction.

Using Chantix could cause the very same side effects if you used a negative reinforcement method to stop. I have blogged before about the more than 4,000 chemicals that are in smoke. Some refuse to take this one pill due to the media and continue to ingest those chemicals. If you can make it rational that the 4,000 chemicals  in smoke are ok, there is no therapy that I know of which would help you stop.

I would take Chantix again if my blog doesn’t help me to stay smoke free. In these two years there has only been an urge four times to smoke, but it was easily dismissed as not a real need. Will I make it to four years? If this blog is still here it serves as a reminder of all the pain we go through to quit and is a paper weight that helps to stop the years of nicotine abuse from flying into my face.

May you all still read and post your stories, as I had no idea it would serve everyone else the way it has.

1 Response to “A non smoker with Chantix two years later”

  1. 1brandi97 on Nov 13, 2008 at 2:26 pm:

    I am so proud of you! That blog is what helped me. It was the first place I found where others were scared, hopeful, cynical, and TRUTHFUL that Chantix is not all fun and is NOT an EASY way out- and it was just a place to express where you were human and hurting. It was the most important tool besides the actual pill for me. I have not even so much as reached for a cigarette, and it’s been over a year (I still have the last empty bottle!). It’s almost like I got reprogrammed to what I was before. Congrats to you, though. Like I have said in the other blog: when I quit cocaine (in my early 20s, 10 years ago- and this was a $5K/week habit - ouch) it was NOTHING in comparison to how hard quitting smoking is. Take a look back at some of your first posts about it. Isn’t it great to see how much you have grown?? Kudos, mate. ~brandi Dallas, TX

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