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So it's nothing new. I was hoping for something new.
I could just quit cold turkey. I have that type of mental fortitude. But smoking is literally one of the... I think three joys that I have in my life. So I'm a bit apprehensive about giving up one of the few things that makes me less miserable.
And before you ask, all of my "joys of life" can be classified as addictions.
Maybe that's the problem... I literally have nothing that makes me happy and is healhy. I'll look into that. Thanks for making me think about it.
That's a very good and honest answer and that can also be worked with, you have an outline for effective change right there:
Work on better mental health, starting with non-smoking activities, ideally getting out of the house and trying new things, preferably at first in spaces where you can't even smoke if you wanted to. Consider talking to a therapist. Change your environment, don't stop at your computer, clean your whole living space and change things around. Change your career (I know, I know, I gotta throw it out there.) If you are in a rut, change what you can and change how you feel about the things you can't change. Find something of value you can start tackling in your life like raising a pet, a plant, a new routine like forcing walks.
Understand that the addiction is also diminishing your happiness. I like to use porn addiction as the best example of this part, because people often misinterpret why pleasurable addictions are harmful even if they had no health effects - which is, as you engage with activities that boost your pleasure responsonses, your brain will reinforce those pleasure paths and all the other pathways in your brain diminish and wither so that it's harder to feel happiness from other things. Think of the things you do and think about like roads and highways, the more you pave them and use them, the easier it is for your thought-stream to get on an onramp to flavortown and indulge in the vice, whereas the offramps to other things that used to make you happy start to erode and fade.
So whichever you tackle first, understand that this takes time.
(I never was a smoker, but I did beat a level of alcoholism that took the lives of most of my family, it took a long time and many attempts.)