Now I don't. And that was because I won this fight many years ago.
After my moment of truth - when I was forced to accept that I was an addict, not a free man - I knew that this fight was the most important fight of my life. It took me eighteen months to kill the desire to smoke. And that is the key. Smoking is, above all, an emotional problem, a habit, not so much an addiction.The method I used to become a free man again was almost identical to this. I say almost because what took me a year and a half could have taken much less. Weeks or even days.
There is no drama or special supplements in this method. No 'will of iron' is necessary. And above all there is
no fear. (One of the biggest problems for most of us is our fear of change.)
It is a guide to your enemy. I suggest that you look into this.
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Stroke
Do you want a stroke? Me, neither. Let’s hear what it’s like –
"On a stormy afternoon, I collapsed heavily to the floor of my in-laws’ home. I lost complete muscle control of the left side of my body from cheek to ankle and lay there, helplessly watching my young daughter screaming from across the room. I had just turned 43 years old."
Later, he says, "My condition was too acute for surgery and the body was going to have to plug the leak on its own, and quickly. My survival was given as 50/50 over 24 hours, depending on how quickly the bleeding stopped."…. "I was, in effect, a paraplegic."
[Many months later] "Now I have recovered 99% of motor function in all left-side limbs." [He was left-handed] "I learn to write with my left hand a little more each day."
By the way, this man has stopped smoking. Let’s wish him well.