God.
This is horrible. The legs have gone rogue and are in perennial state of
complaining and revolting. I woke up a couple of hours ago and not a single
minute has been worth waking up. I used to do 20 a day at the peak of my
addiction and these days I’ve been doing 8-10 before I suddenly stopped smoking
altogether 5 days ago. It was probably an extreme decision to give it up all at
once, but I tried a lot of times unsuccessfully to phase the habit out and now
it had reached a stage only drastic decisions can help and what a drastic one
it is turning out to be.
I’ve
walked around the house, stood up in a place for a few minutes, slept on the
floor stretching my legs and rolling them into a ball around my chest and none
of that works. I feel constantly miserable and reading the Alan Carr book to
see if he actually says something about how to do it, instead he goes on and on
about how stupid people are and how they are tricked into it. I’m about 40%
into the book and all I see is repetitions and sermons, frequently written in
block letters as if the readers are idiots and miss them when he has been
repeating them like a lecturer who feels he can make up for years of his own
incompetence with talking down upon imbecile students.
Anyway,
the book was least of my problems. Before I even started it I knew it was not
going to be helpful. I just read it because I feel it may put forth a way to
reduce the addiction and 100 pages into it, the man hasn’t gotten around to it
yet. I have a feeling that the remaining 200 pages will be more of the same and
that he really hasn’t got any method to the smoking problem and may be he just
feels that ranting out the evils of smoking a million times will make at least
one of it stick in the minds of his readers. That might even be a way, who
knows.
Today
is a full day without office or anything else to do. Might be the sternest
test. I got a few calls that I haven’t answered but I’m not in a mood to call
anyone back. The 10 minutes I spent writing this are the only ones where I was
able to do something, and ignore the pangs in my legs, not that they are not
there, but I was just about able to manage myself to ignore it. I can’t keep
writing forever in the hope that at some stage I don’t have to do it.
Does
everyone who quit face all these or a lot of these issues are just in my head. They
can’t be for I know how my legs feel. I haven’t ever consciously felt their
presence so strikingly as I’m finding these five days. All other parts of my
body are all right, may be the legs are taking up for every one of them. The
pangs are acute, thought not painful; they make me feel restless, angry,
irritable and desperate to do something. That something would involve smoking a
cigarette definitely and that is also the reason why the entire exercise is so
ridiculous. I know the solution to the problem, yet the solution is the problem.
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