What To Expect – 100 Days and Beyond
Years ago, we put together a timeline of the first 100 days of your quit – What To Expect When You Quit Dipping. It was created based on the input of thousands of quitters and has proven to be incredibly accurate. And while this timeline shows a quitter with incredible accuracy what to expect in the first three months of their quit, it doesn’t clue them into what to expect further down the road. That’s where this page comes in. We’re going to try and lay out the time after you hit the 100 day Hall of Fame. We’re looking for feedback and input so please comment below and we’ll incorporate themes moving forward.
Days 120 – 150
You’re feeling pretty good about yourself. You’ve successfully quit dipping but it bothers you that you still think about it from time to time. You question your quit and how solid it actually is. You’re scared that in a moment of weakness you’ll go back to the can and throw away everything you’ve worked so hard to achieve. You get especially scared because you’re dealing with some massive craves now and then that you haven’t felt since the funk back in the 80-90 day range. Stay strong. This will pass.
Day 365
Congratulations! You have successfully navigated a full year being quit! Now staying quit is “simply” a matter of repeating what you already did last year. There is not a single day on the calendar that you have not already conquered.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
Forum member BrianG had this to say:
Seems like everyone has just fallen into posting roll here. Maybe you are all on gropeme, who knows. I went back quite a few pages and all you see is roll post or someone trying to find someone to post. I always said the second 100 days were the toughest. Anybody else here finding this to be true? Anyone having a rough time? Any way, not trying to stir anything up, just making sure nobody is getting left behind. Stay focused and stay quit…
****************
Day 200
Today marks my second Hall of Fame day. It has been a while since I have updated my progress
so I thought I would write about the last 100 days, day 101 to 200. The one thing I have noticed
here on KTCk, is that not much is written about the days after your HOF. I understand that the
first 100 days are very important and that is where the focus is. After completing the second
100 days, I think some attention needs to be paid to this time frame. I believe the second 100 days
are tougher than the first, bar maybe week 1. Let me explain.
During the first 100 days, your group is getting a lot of attention. You have a goal in sight and
you are excited about reaching the HOF. If you have any competitive spirit to you at all, 100 days
is not that difficult. You make your promise everyday and keep your eye on the prize. If you get
through the first couple weeks, it is very doable. After the HOF, the attention to your group tends
to fade. People in your group tend to drift off. We have lost well over a third of the guys who
made it to HOF in the second 100 days. A few to caves and some who felt they were cured. This is the
time where you really have to dig deep and remember what you quit for in the first place.
I quit because it was time. 35 years was enough. I took tobacco off the table on day 1 and refused
to ever let it be an option no matter how bad it got. That is the mentality that got me through those
first days and the mentality that got me to the HOF. Shortly after day 100, I started to have craves
comparative to the first week. I found myself thinking about dipping quite often. I was in a funk
that was hard to get out of. During the next 100 days, that voice in my head has gotten louder. Many
times I have found my inner voice trying to convince me that I have quit long enough. That one dip
would not affect me like the others. I could do 1 dip and be quit. I have asked myself more than a
few times if I really want to be quit. These thoughts have come many times over these last 100 days.
Every time, I have been able to convince myself that I am quit for good reason. I try and remember day
1 again. I go to the new groups and read how those poor bastards are doing. I say to myself, never
doing day 1 again. I have to stay quit. I relied on my group to get me through. A few phone calls
and lots of texts to different people.
I cant imagine going through these last 100 days without my group, without KTC as a whole. I am positive
that I would have caved somewhere along the way if I wasnt continuing to post roll everyday. I see
people leave and wonder how they can do it. How do they have the confidence to stay quit? I hope there
comes a day when I can have the confidence to leave KTC and know that I am quit forever. I know that
thought is not popular on this site, but like it or not, that is my goal.
My hope is that the next 100 days are easier than the last 100 days. People keep saying that it gets better.
I believe they are right, but I am getting tired of reading about it and not realizing it. With all this
being said, I would not change a thing. I have been quit for 200 days. I am proud of that. I will keep
battling the inner voice with the help of all of you.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
More coming soon… please comment below with your experiences after the 100 day mark.
I’m about 10 months quit now, after 25 years. I have been getting some really strong cravings lately, similar to the ones I had when I first stopped. Has anyone else experienced this phenomena?
Hi Andrew – congrats on 10 months of freedom! Believe it or not, it’s pretty common. Do NOT underestimate the occurance of ‘seasonal triggers’ – that may very well be what you’re dealing with https://www.killthecan.org/fall-is-upon-us-here-come-the-seasonal-triggers/
You will continue to get these cravings. On and off for a long time. It’s difficult because you may go months without thinking about it and then one day, out of nowhere, it hits you like a truck. I’m sorry you are going through it, but we all did and are. You get used to dealing with it after a while. And I believe it does fade eventually.
I quit dipping a few years back and after being quit for around 2 months I started having crazy heart palpitations and It totally freaked me out. I used that as an excuse to start dipping again. I have recently quit again and I am on day 6. I am only sleeping a couple hours a night and twitching quite a bit while laying in bed. I am nervous that I will experience the heart palpitations again. I am determined to overcome anything in my way.
Congrats on a good start to your quit Mike – sadly, this is pretty typical so keep pushing through. Nothing wrong with getting to a doctor to have a convo and some peace of mind too.
Head on over to our Discord for support, accountability, etc. http://www.killthecan.org/discord/
I need help. I been quit for 6 months now. I’ve used this sight a little. I’m 40 I’ve been smoking since I was a child more or less. In my 20s i started dipping. So I basically dipped and vaped for the last 20 years. I had a health scare and that what pushed me to quit so I’m thankful for it and for you guys. I have used hhco and smoke hemp flower every now and then to help with cravings. But the hhco which is a cannabis product has helped. What you guys think
As long as it doesn’t contain nicotine, it’s not keeping your addiction going.
Hey thank you for the reply. As I’ve heard others say it’s true for me, the second 100 days has been kicking my tail lately. Coffee pisses me off lol when I drink it I get mad. It’s like I’m trying to scrach a nic itch with coffee and it letting me down…God bless you all
Hi curtis what was your health scare? also i am 250 post quit and still have brain fog, dizziness and anxiety from time to time. I am still fighting.
Hello peoples
I have been diping sents I was 17 I am 46 . Some times I would dip for months then just stop . One time I dip for 3 strate years then stop for a year and a half . I have no qlue why I can get tired of something and say I am done for a bit. But I do as I will . I control it . It does not control me .
You’re definitely not a ‘typical’ addict.
After 29 years I quite I got 6 months but I am still having sore throat and sore in my cheeks any body have any symptoms
6 months is great. Don’t give up now or that would be a waste of time. Keep going, it will pass. I have been quit for 3 years now and I still get cravings when stressed or really bored. Learn to hate the stuff and the companies. They are literally selling us poison that will eventually kill us.
This is PERFECT Steve. Nailed it!
Yep – sores in my cheeks and gums actually peaked at about the 6 month mark and I had a sore throat for quite some time as well. I can’t speak for sure as to why, but I think quitting actually made my allergies worse.
I am also 6 months in to my quit. Sore throat on an off and neck pains. I never would have thought symptoms would last this long. Don’t give up we’re in this together
You just have to want to quit . There’s no reason or excuse to put that cancer in your mouth. That’s what I tell myself 102 days never again
Keep it up. 3 years and 4 months quit here. First year is a bitch. Second year is a little bit less and so far the third year seems pretty easy but I still do get cravings.
the important thing is to learn to hate the product. Feel pity for people that still use it. Don’t use fake replacement stuff. It doesn’t fix the problem. It’s just putting a Band-Aid over it.
Be mentally strong. Don’t let your brain fool you.
“the important thing is to learn to hate the product. Feel pity for people that still use it.”
I LOVE this. Well said!
Your body deserves better! I just made myself really mad at myself for dipping – it may seem weird but Im PISSED~~~ Its been a good 4 months now from 20 years, time to let it go! It has not been easy, defintely try to find something to keep you occupied as being bored is a TRIGGER nobody talks about~~ People with ADHD or association – tobacco does seem to help but it just makes things worse in the end. HOPE everybody is keeping their heads up and pushing on ~ DONT get STUCK~
Keep on rocking that quit! GREAT words of wisdom here – TOBACCO JUST MAKES THINGS WORSE IN THE END!
P.A.W.S. Post acute withdrawal syndrome is an beast. I think from personal experience that “we” think we’re good after 100 days. I’ve had five years without an chew, then went back to the can.Today I’m just north of 240 days however however a few years back I made it to almost nine months then caved in. Actually if I’m being honest I caved at eight months just didn’t fully relapse for a few more weeks. My point in all if this is I stop counting days and started to enjoy the days. Still get an craving not often but I know it’s part of the lifestyle. You can’t do something for 30 years and think it’s going to disappear. Never forget why you put that can down and keep your head up!
This is outstanding insight Vincent – thanks for sharing!