Skip to main content

I am an Ex-Smoker!

 

Hi, my name is Bill, and I'm a regular guy. I'm also an ex-smoker.



   I have something that I think you might want to hear. About 15 years ago, I decided to

quit smoking. At the time, I decided to take some logical steps and jotted everything down, which is the critical thing here. I documented when I prepared to quit when I stopped

smoking, what I did and how I felt. It's been almost 15 years, and I never looked back. 


   When I quit, I commented to people around me that if I had known it would be this

easy to stop smoking, I would not have smoked as long as I did, which was literally

decades. Now, as I'm getting near retirement, I thought it would be a good idea for me

to put all this information together in a program. It would make it easier for other people

to quit too. 


   Considering the cost that I see today to smoke, which is just shocking for the price

with the tax of a carton of cigarettes, the cost to purchase my program would be less than

that carton of cigarettes in many places,  depending on the tax where you buy them.


   My program is very reasonably priced.


   I'm here to tell you that if you look around and you're tired of standing out in the

rain or snow, you can't smoke in your office or shop, or in the building where you work,

or your house. If you're tired of sitting and wishing you had a cigarette at the airport

or on the train. Are you tired of holding your family up while you puff away at the end

of the restaurant meal while they're waiting to go to the movies? 


   If you've had enough, and if you want to get control of your health, save all that money,

and be in plan your day instead of the nicotine, then I'm telling you that I have what I

consider to be an easy-to-follow, pretty good program that worked for me. 


   I believe it will work for you because I know it worked for me. After all, I bet my life on it!


    So if you're interested in this and you want to find out more, Please click the link

to visit www.ToStopSmoking.org 


    I hope I can help you to become an ex-smoker too!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How to Handle the Little Voice in You that Tries to Persuade You Not to Quit Smoking

  Quitting smoking is no easy task, and while it may seem like a challenge at first, it is entirely possible to break the habit and enjoy a healthier lifestyle. One hurdle to getting started is dealing with the little voice in your head that tries to convince you not to change your lifestyle. That voice pleads with you every time you think of making a change, telling you to just have one more cigarette or to try and quit tomorrow. But no matter how strong that voice is, it’s more possible than ever to ignore it and take the plunge . The first step in handling the little voice in your head is to recognize it and acknowledge it. Despite that voice trying to talk you out of it, you have to know that quitting smoking is in your best interest. Keep reminding yourself that you are doing this for your own well-being and that there are real benefits to quitting. The next step is to be proactive in making progress. This could mean anything from replacing the smoking habit with a healthier a...

Learn To Stop Smoking - To Go To Movies

  Learn To Stop Smoking - To Go To Movies If you want to learn to stop smoking to go to movies, I think I can help. My name is Bill and I’m an ex-smoker. I quit smoking about 15 years ago, but I remember going to movies when I was a smoker, and I remember all the challenges that it posed. To set this up for younger people, when I was a young cigarette smoker, most movie theaters allowed smoking. It was kind of a common practice that movie theaters back then were larger, and they weren't the multiplexes that we have these days. Very typically, there'd be a balcony section, and a lower section and the balcony section would be the section for smokers. Some theaters were only one level, so generally the back so the back 20 rows or so would be reserved for smokers. The rest of the theater was for non-smokers.  Now I'm sure that if you were anywhere near that line, and you were a non-smoker, the smokers certainly won out in that battle of the smoke! Considering the amount of smok...