First of all, good for you.
You are Winning the game.
Secondly, shame on you.
Had you both read and comprehended Allen Carr’s The Easy Way to stop Smoking you have realized that it’s all about the power of suggestion.
You have, in this thread, suggested that the system does not work thereby making it harder for others who believe in it (or would wish to) to be successful.
Until you have personally interviewed every single smoker that both succeeded and fail based on his, or any other system, you would be better off to add an IMO when calling Bullshit on something that does indeed work for others.
i haven't said his method doesn't work. i have actually read his book twice, and do appreciate what is said. it makes a lot of sense and nobody can really argue that. in fact i have rather openly suggested that the only way to quit smoking IS cold turkey. nicotine is the problem not the cigarette. stop the chain stop the problem.
what i do take issue with is the notion of "easy". if it were, nobody alive today would remain a smoker. nobody. if it were so easy why wait 30 years? ironically he did die of lung cancer in 2006 albeit 20+ years after quitting.
nicotine receptors do and will become altered with cessation. this will trigger physical withdrawal. for me it was rather intense.
what i am trying to do is share my experience. if i have to say anything is that for the first 4-5 days of non-smoking was akin to being in the middle of the Sahara desert and being thirsty. you want to quench your thirst so badly but water is nowhere to be found. from days 6-12 the balance of power was 50/50, and for this week will power for me peeked. what kept me strong was believing that the worst was over and that if i fail the clock starts at zero. by day 12 onwards to even now, the balance has totally swayed. now it's more like smoking is akin to wanting icecream for dessert after a really big meal. you want one and would probably enjoy it. but if you don't have icecream your day isn't ruined. you can think about it, look at others enjoying their icecream, but i no longer feel i need dessert to feel completely satisfied. this stage is where i feel Allen Carr's book really pays off. now is the time to believe in being a happy non-smoker. now is the time i can look back and see smoking for what it really is. now is the time i can look at other smokers and pity them not envy them. i no longer need will power to remain a non-smoker. and that is powerful.