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Lung Health : The Uses of Smoking
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 Message 1 of 2 in Discussion 
From: Rene  (Original Message)Sent: 2/25/2006 8:01 PM
 


 The Uses of Smoking - An Integrated Awareness Perspective

by Mark Fourman, Integrated Awareness Teacher


Why does nicotine replacement therapy (nicotine patch and gum) only have a 7% success rate for quitting smoking? Why do people on nicotine replacement therapy still crave cigarettes? Clearly, there are reasons for smoking that go far beyond simple chemical addiction. This article, based on The Body's Map of Consciousness, explores the uses of smoking. It gives you some pointers for how you can go about quitting successfully.

People use smoking to avoid feeling unpleasant emotions such as sadness, grief and anxiety. This is accomplished partly through the chemical effects of nicotine on the brain. (Many other articles discuss this, so I won't go into it here.) More important for this article is the interaction of smoking with the Body's Map of Consciousness.

The Body's Map of Consciousness was developed by Lansing Barrett Gresham through thirty years of empirical research working with thousands of clients. It is the foundation of the healing discipline known as Integrated Awareness, and provides a map for how physical sites in the body relate to other levels of consciousness, such as emotions.

Smoking acts most directly on our lungs. From an Integrated Awareness perspective, we use our lungs as a place to hide emotions that we don't want to deal with: grief, loss, and sadness.

Smoking deadens feeling in the lungs. It anesthetizes them and physically clogs them with mucus. If your objective is to hide your emotions from yourself and not feel them, smoking certainly helps. If you're a smoker ask yourself "What situations make me smoke the most? What emotions am I trying to avoid or deny?"

Research has shown that smokers who are depressed generally find it harder to quit than those who aren't depressed. There is a good reason for this: quitting smoking means that the depressed feelings are more likely to surface, and so the person starts smoking again to help hide those feelings again. The problem is that if you never deal with your feelings they will never have the opportunity to heal, so this becomes a life-long addiction as you deny more and more feelings and you need to smoke more and more to help hide them.

So, one of the most effective ways to help quit smoking is to learn how to deal with the 'unwanted' emotions and to start to heal them. Here is one of my clients' experiences of using Integrated Awareness as a tool to help her quit smoking:

"I had recently quit smoking and was having a very hard time with it. I had a couple of emotional crises in the first two weeks that caused me to fall off the wagon. Frustrated with what I perceived as weakness, I went to Mark Fourman for help.

He explained some of the causes for smoking addiction to me and I immediately related to the "stuffing" of emotion. Every time I have begun smoking again it had to do with some emotional crisis that I did not want to deal with.

I lay fully-clothed on a massage table and Mark used gentle touch to draw my attention to the back of my ribs and my lungs. I was suddenly overwhelmed with an intense emotion�?and I laughed. I was very aware that I laughed instead of cried. Very interesting! Mark suggested that it might be more productive for me if I tried to go with what I was feeling instead of fighting it. From there he continued to guide my attention using touch to my liver and right hip, where I discovered I held some deep and serious trust issues with males. It was emotionally very intense but I tried to keep with it and work through the emotions I was experiencing.

By the end of the session, I felt very calm and peaceful. What I noticed at once was that the knot at the back of my neck, which had been growing tighter and tighter over the last year (and which no amount of massage seemed to be able to penetrate), was completely gone. My shoulders were completely loose and free. Since this session, my cravings for cigarettes have dramatically reduced.

I recently had a phone call from my mom (one of the prime triggers for past smoking misteps). There was yet another crisis in her life that I could do nothing about. It was a difficult conversation. Usually I would have reached for a cigarette right after talking to her! The remarkable thing is that I did not even realize until the next day that I didn't even think about having a cigarette. That is truly amazing.

Since the session, I have continued to feel much more relaxed and the tension in my neck and shoulders has not returned. Mark explained that I have the tools now to confront and work through future emotional crises without resorting to smoking. I'm more aware now where the cigarette cravings originate from and finally feel like I have the capability to be free of them."

In addition to 'stuffing' emotions, there are other reasons people smoke: for example, as a way to reduce anxiety and to reduce some of the feelings associated with chronic hyperventilation syndrome. Plus, of course, because of plain chemical addiction.

If you want to quit smoking, the most effective way is to address it in an integrated way - that is by including the physical, emotional, mental and spiritual bases for the addiction in your path to healing.

Mark Fourman is an Integrated Awareness Teacher in in Cambridge, MA. The book "The Body's Map of Consciousness Volume I: Movement" charts much more of the territory touched upon in this article, and includes many personal explorations that you can do at home for self healing. You can order the book at www.mfourman.com or by calling NoneTooSoon Publishing at 801-226-3031. The Body's Map of Consciousness is the foundation of the healing discipline known as Integrated Awareness. Apprentices of Integrated Awareness complete at least three years of professional training before being eligible to stand for certification as a teacher. They support their clients in healing for their body, mind and soul. For information about Lansing Barrett Gresham and other teachers around the USA visit www.inawareness.com. Integrated Awareness and The Body's Map of Consciousness are registered trade marks of Touchstone.

 

http://www.byregion.net/articles-healers/Uses_of_Smoking.html

 

 



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 Message 2 of 2 in Discussion 
From: ReneSent: 3/23/2006 7:17 PM
 


  Butting Out

- By Debbie Adams

Facts and Stats


More than 45,000 Canadians will die this year due to smoking related diseases.


Tobacco smoke contains over 4,000 chemicals, including at least 50 that cause, initiate or promote cancer. These include tar, ammonia, carbon monoxide, oxides of nitrogen, and benzopyrene.


Although the amount of chemicals in each cigarette is small, it is cumulative - the amount stored in the body actually increases with each puff of a cigarette.


There is a little bit of chemical in each cigarette puff, and there are over 10 puffs per cigarette. Over a year, at one pack of cigarettes a day, a smoker will inhale 73,000 puffs of dangerous chemicals.


Research has found that children of smokers were almost twice as likely to smoke as children with parents who never smoked.

These reasons alone should be enough to make you never touch a cigarette again. Did you know that the day after you stop smoking your body begins to rid itself of tobacco toxins?

Unfortunately, smoking is extremely addictive; some people try again and again to quit, but end up back smoking after a few days or months. However, by choosing the right method, having a lot of determination and support you will be able to stop smoking for good. There are many options to choose from when you decide to quit smoking and it may take a few tries. The important thing to remember is: don’t give up!

Taking the First Step

Talk to your physician or Live Well Pharmacist about your decision to quit smoking. Together you can determine which smoking cessation method is right for you.

Patch It

A nicotine patch continuously delivers a small amount of nicotine through your skin to help take the edge off the effects of quitting. However, because you don't get large amounts of nicotine and it is delivered continuously (instead of the peaks and valleys in nicotine levels that occur with smoking), you may still have cravings to smoke or experience some withdrawal. People typically start with a patch strength that delivers close to the same amount of nicotine as they usually get smoking. After 4-6 weeks, step down to a lower strength to slowly wean off.

Nicotine Gum

The gum works by replacing nicotine when you get a craving you can't ignore. Rather than lighting up, you chew a piece of gum. It has little pockets of nicotine so with each chew you get the nicotine that you would get with one puff. One piece of gum is about equal to one cigarette in nicotine and duration. The act of chewing gum can be a soothing distraction. Don’t chew it like bubble gum, though; proper technique requires a couple bites, parking it between your cheeks and gums for 30 seconds, and repeating the cycle until the craving passes. Each piece only has enough nicotine to last 30 minutes.

Inhaler

Oral inhalers are a newer form of nicotine replacement therapy. The inhaler delivers nicotine into the mouth and produces a sensation in the back of the throat similar to that produced by tobacco smoke. This form of cessation sends nicotine to the bloodstream in a matter of minutes, and dosage can be adjusted to individual withdrawal symptom levels. Using the inhaler also helps with the “hand to mouth�?habit many smokers rely on. It is important not to smoke cigarettes or use other forms of tobacco if you decide to use an oral nicotine inhaler.

Medication May Help

Zyban�?(Buproprion), is a medication originally developed to treat depression but has been found to help people with cravings. The drug must be started prior to your quit date, usually 7-10 days, as it takes time to build up in your bloodstream. A medical prescription is required for Zyban�?and it can be used with other smoking cessation methods such as the nicotine patch.

Support Group

Look for a smoking cessation support group in your community. Often, having others with the same goal to lend support and share their experiences can be helpful in maintaining commitment to personal goals.

For information on the above methods and other ways you can quit smoking, talk to your doctor or Live Well pharmacist.

Sources:


http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hecs-sesc/tobacco/index.html
www.quitsmokingsupport.com
http://www.smoking-cessation.org
  
Jan 25/05 article appeared:  
http://www.pharmasave.com/library/foundarticle.asp?artID=1226