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Quitting Around The Holidays

New Year’s Resolution To Quit? Why Wait?

Declaration of Independence From Nicotine

Fall Is Upon Us. Here Come The Seasonal Triggers

It’s Almost Turkey Time… Cold Turkey!

Welcome to the first day of the rest of your life!!!

When you’ve made the decision to quit dipping you need support. You’ll get it right here at KillTheCan! This site is dedicated to helping people QUIT dip, smokeless & chewing tobacco! It will be a long & difficult road, but we are confident that you too can be successful and quit dip!

All articles on KillTheCan.org are written by members of our forums. These are people who understand what it means to quit. They write these articles from the perspective of a quitter. Don’t believe the “experts” that you find out there on the web – believe someone that has successfully QUIT DIP.

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Tom S
Tom S
8 years ago

I also started using nicotine when i was 13 and i am now 39. This is the longest i have ever gone without nicotine since i was 13. In all fairness my last week before i quit last oct i quit chewing and started vaping. It somehow hit me for real i didnt want to be controlled by nicotine the rest of my life. It has nothing to do with cancer or heart attacks for me i just dont want to be controlled or addicted. I wanted to see how it would feel weeks and months without using. I realize now how much it really was effecting my life, i feel like a totally different person?i have so much more energy, im not constantly burned out, my attitude has improved alot. I wouldnt say using nicotine gum instead of chew is a mistake. Everyone has to find their own method. Perhaps people find it easier to quit the gum than actual chew but the important thing is you really have to want to quit. Using nicotine gum is just going to prolong the agony. If you quit cold turkey 3 days and your body is clean of all nicotine. If you can make it that long the hardest part is over. Using nicotine created connections in the brain associating using with pleasure. Every time you fight off an urge you weaken and break those connections. thats why there is no easy way to quit you have to fight it. It does get easier as you go. Just make it the 1st 3 days. You can do 3 days standing on your head. Anyway best of luck bro.

Chuck Moser
Chuck Moser
8 years ago

I, too started at 12 and am now 42. I tried gums. I tried weaning myself. Dozens of times. You have to cold turkey it, man. And, know that it’s a royal bitch, especially that first week. I can remember going nearly nuts, and stopping myself after driving halfway to the store, having a hard time remembering why I wanted to put myself through this quitting misery to start with.
Invest in anything you can to calm the oral fixation. I used toothpicks… hundreds of them. The fake chew helped a little, for me. Other guys swear by it.
You can do it. I’m nearly three years in, and rarely have a desire to chew at all.

Billy
Billy
8 years ago

I have smoked or chewed since I’ve been 12 years old I am 42 now do you think I should quit cold turkey or with the assistance of nicotine gum help me

Billy
Billy
8 years ago

Well I made through the night but I have been using nicotine gum. Hoping that’s not a mistake

Robby
Robby
8 years ago

Day 4 for me. You said exactly what I was thinking.

Daniel
Daniel
8 years ago

Day 132. My quit is going well. I still have GERD and occasional bouts with anxiety but both are receding. At this point I am just trying to forget all about tobacco like it was a bad dream. Works most days.

Tom S
Tom S
8 years ago

Billy sht sorry didnt see your post until this morning. I hope you made it through the night without using. One thing i used my first week as dumb as it sounds is lemon drop candy or cleaning my teeth with a toothpick from my swiss army knife. Theres no real easy answer what to do to fight off the cravings. Obviously you got to try to do something to take your mind off it. If you have support from family use it. Talk to someone. Watch a movie you havnt seen or havnt seen in awhile. Try to fight them off until its time to go to sleep and the trouble of driving all the way to the store that late isn’t worth it. Try to keep in mind all the benefits of quitting. You dont want to be controlled by drug addiction for the rest of your life. Plan on how you will reward yourself with the money you save. Alot of people use a 12 step program like AA, ask a higher power if it works for you. I spent alot of time looking at benifit timeline online. it was almost like a rush quitting. Your blood will flow easier with more oxygen without the nicotine constricting blood vessels. I also spent more time walking my dog. Keep in mind also that the nicotine fits may seem like they last forever but in reality they only last minutes. If you can just fight them off/think of something else until they pass they get easier and easier to fit off especially when youmstart feeling the benifits of quitting. I hope you made it. If theres anything else i can do i will try to help if i can.

Billy
Billy
8 years ago

Tom , first day with out a chew. Now it’s night after dinner and I want one bad. Any suggestions

BOB
BOB
8 years ago

BIG PHARMACIDE HOPES TO KILL NATURAL CURES THAT USURP THERE MONEY MONGERING GAME !!!

BOB
BOB
8 years ago
Chuck Moser
Chuck Moser
8 years ago

Kinda, sorta. Windex does, too. They’re making some jumps Evel Knievel would have a hard time making.

http://www.snopes.com/2015/08/24/cannabis-kills-cancer-study/

BOB
BOB
8 years ago

CANNABIS KILLS CANCER !!!

Tom S
Tom S
8 years ago

90 days, 3 months no nicotine today. $270 saved. my old record was 12 days without chew. Im not sure how i made it this time. I dont think all the times i tried quitting before i ever actually believed i would quit for good.. Until now. Walking by a store yesterday seeing people hanging out smoking and the sidwalk covered in dirty cigarrette butts and it felt so good to think i am finished with nicotine. I dont need nicotine to get by. I felt bad for those people puffing on their smokes not being able to stop. I will never let nicotine control me again. Ive had some bad days but i Was able to get through them. it does get easier.

Justin
Justin
8 years ago

Day 12 of my quit, longest I have gone since 2007…… dipped 2 cans/day for about 18 years. I actually feel better than I expected, definitely a couple times throughout the day I would love one but it feels like a switch just flipped……. just over it. the mess, the sneaking around, the cost and most importantly, the fact that it slowly rips your face apart. I’ve tried so many times in the past but this is my first attempt after discovering this site. just always felt I was flying solo but seeing and reading the stories on here are so helpful. good luck too all, I have never been prouder to be a quitter in my entire life. Thanks!

dundippin
8 years ago

Craigselk66,
I am on day 120 and my last 3 days have felt like my first 3 days. I can not explain it but I know I just have to muscle through it. I do not want to start the hell of quitting over again. That is not an option. I just found out my daughter is on day 4 of her cigarette quit. Her boyfriend has recently given up snuff.

So, yes, the funk of quitting hits you at different times and in different ways. I have seen people who have been quit over 3 years say they still get a nagging. You have to be ready for it and hang in there.

Continue your quit and do not get weak.

Remember you are setting an example for others.

I quit with you today.

Tom S
Tom S
8 years ago

+craigselk66 89 days for me today also, nice! Idk if i have a leg to stand on giving advice when we are on the same days but When i was using chew it numbed my senses so when i got sick i felt like shit anyway so didnt notice but now when i get sick im alot more sensitive. Maybe your fog is a little cold? When i first quit i would get dizzy but that i think was not only my brain healing but nicotine consticts blood vessels so i was getting more oxygen. Just dotn screw up. As bad as you feel chew will not help. Tomarrow will be 3 months, dont throw it away now, we are finished with that crap.

grantl92
grantl92
8 years ago

Willy you havent even hit puberty and your dipping?

T.C.
T.C.
8 years ago

Day 14 for me. I dipped for 30 years on and off. I tried to quit more times than I remember. This time I am doing it, thanks to this site and all of you here. I feel that i am not alone.

Dundippin
8 years ago

Brad,
Yes, you can ask a question. That is what this site is for. Post away.

Willy
Willy
8 years ago

Dude I’m 13 and chew cope black and a way to quit is slow add coffee to your can as u go add more and more it helps SOmuch!!!!

Brad
Brad
8 years ago

Hey can I ask a quick question

Dundippin
8 years ago

JerW,
Effects of quitting – my white receding gums are now pink. I for the first time in my life can smile where before I could never. I do still have a case of dry mouth, irritated top of my mouth, etc. No cancer and have been using tobacco for 48 years. I am lucky and healthy. I have been working out all my life and have good genes.

You will read other stories in here where folks dipped for 1 or 2 years and got cancer. It depends on a variety of factors.

However, one thing you can not dispute, the sooner you quit the sooner you reduce your chance of getting the big C.

So come in, join, post your introduction and have us assign you to a quit group. Just stop and stop today.

Dundippin
8 years ago

Redsoxfan4444,
I am surprised you have not quit sooner at $30 a can. I was complaining when it was costing me $4 at Royal Farms in MD. Be glad it costs too much as incentive to quit. Here is the link for smokeless alternatives: https://www.killthecan.org/your-quit/smokeless-alternatives/.

There is not substitute for straight out quitting. But you need 3 days where you can cacoon and rest in bed. That is how I quit. The other thing to focus on is anything but the dip. If you focus on what you are quiting then it will be impossible to quit. Instead think of anything else to keep your mind distracted.

I am on day 117, been using tobacco since 6th grade, and just quit at the ripe age of 59. You can do this. You know you can.

I quit with you today.

Red Soxfan4444
Red Soxfan4444
8 years ago

Hey folks, I’m from canada where a tin is pushing into the 30$ range. I’ve been chewing for 14 years since age 12. I was just wondering what you guys thought was the best substitute? I’ve tried just stopping before and I relapse quick.

lynndeelou
lynndeelou
8 years ago

Day 5. I would rather go back to the fog, at least there it not my mind playing tricks on me. It’s starting again, the I can have just one. Not this time!

Michael W
Michael W
8 years ago

Those of you in your first week, I am with you (day 5). I understand why those who are addicted to “worse” drugs have to go away for rehab. This is hell on earth, but I get these glimpses of well being that I have not had much of in a long time. Every day there seems to be a little more, like seeing the sun light slowly cutting through the fog.

Jer W
Jer W
8 years ago

I just have a question. Been dipping for 4 years. Im 22 and really ready to quit. But my concern is not with future damage to my mouth i will do…because well…i dont plan on doing any more…but what did you fellow dippers experience as far as oral changes from chew? And how many of you long time dippers have cancer? Im just very concerned for myself.

Tom S
Tom S
8 years ago

Grats to all those who have decided to quit. Its tough no doubt but if i can do it anyone can. Theres alot of good info on the internet to help get you though those rough first days. Keep in mind why you want to quit. You dont want to be controlled by chemical addiction the rest of your life. Your cravings early on in your quit dont last long, they can feel like it though. Wait them out, try to think of something else. Set some goals, maybe a reward for yourself using all the money you have saved. Years of nicotine abuse has created connections in your brain linking tobacco use with feeling good/better so it is rough those first few weeks but everytime you are fighting off an urge to use you are weakening and breaking those connections. Not only will this cause it to get easier and easier to say no your brain is also healing and rebuilding those connections with pleasure to normal things in life. You will enjoy things you had lost interest in. Your energy will increase and your thinking will become clearer. Nicotine constricts the blood vessels and is hard on the heart. Alot will come naturally so i would suggest dont push yourself. I have 85 days today. Physically i feel so much better. My energy has increased and i have started lifting weights and jogging. My gums are completely healed and are now finally not bleeding.I dont feel so down and depressed all the time. I enjoy things now. When i chewed i was just miserable. when i woke up every morning the taste in my mouth was so nasty. By the end of the day the taste of a chew was so revolting and sometimes so painful i couldnt leave it in long. Then if i wasnt chewing say somewhere i couldnt then eventually all i was doing was craving and wanted to get home to have one. I was to the point where i wasnt happy whether i was using or not And it was causing serious depression and sapping me of enjoying anything. Anyway best of luck to you with your quit. Dont give up, you can do it. I passed my hardest test this week, the one that has had me worried since oct. i have seizures and after my mind is scrambled with serious anxiety, confusion, nervousness and it lasts for days to over a week. I am still feeling somewhat odd but i am proud to say i stayed strong and didnt give in. Chew would not have helped and would probably made the seizures and recovery worse especially when i havnt had any nicotine months.

Sam-7
Sam-7
8 years ago

You can do it my friend. I’m on day 7 and holding strong. If I can do it YOU can stop dipping too! I discovered Smokey Mountain tabaco free snuff. It has helped me the most! Good luck to you and everyone else here!

Russell
Russell
8 years ago

I use jakes mint. Day 133 and it helped me. Check out their web page. I dipped kodiak so i got a roll of wintergreen and a varierty pack.

jeremy coontz
jeremy coontz
8 years ago

i started when i was 12 or 13, i’m 37 now so you do the math, i’m on day three now of being chew free. so far it has sucked to be honest,now i feel like i could puke at any second. but i am not going to cave

DL34
DL34
8 years ago

Day 2 dip free. Been dipping since I’ve been 17 and am about to turn 31 in a couple of months. I’ve “quit” 3 times but never longer than a 7-10 days. I weaned myself off until I had nothing left which was almost entire month of December. I’ve read what others have tried and agree sunflower seeds, beef jerky and another thing I’ve been popping in are sugar free ice breakers mints.

Jason
Jason
8 years ago

Hello all, I’m 39 years old, I have been dipping for almost 25 years and have to quit! I’m getting really scared of the potential consequences. I use to dip the wintergreens many moons ago and then good ole skoal came out with the flavor tobaccos and I got hooked even more, especially the berry skoal now (pause, spit!). I need to know a good alternative to a flavored dip of a fake chew or something. I’ve tried to quit a few times but….well you know the story. In 2015, I had a goal to lose a ton of weight and did it (yep, food was another addiction) now after 85 lbs of fat gone I’m ready to tackle this feat. Any suggestions?

78craft
78craft
8 years ago

http://forum.killthecan.org/topic/11465559/129/

Bow….post roll here in the morning

JW 521
JW 521
8 years ago

I quit before Christmas and broke down this week before s stressful meeting. My wife found my tin and lost it. She really wants me to quit for my health and says she does not like how chew makes me act. So now I’m on the wagon again, threw out my tin and hoping the wife will forgive me and help. Any help comments are welcome it is hard.

Waylan_Carl
Waylan_Carl
8 years ago

So, I stumbled onto this community about 2 weeks ago and have been lurking around reading all the stories. As of 10 minutes ago, I just finished my last can and have decided thay today is the day I quit. I’ve been dipping since I was 16, it pretty much has/had complete control of my life. The only times I wasn’t dipping was either when I was asleep or eating, other than that it was nonstop. I’m looking forward to this but I also know just how tough this is going to be, in the end it will all be worth it though.

Samantha
Samantha
8 years ago

Can you recommend any that are like grizzly wintergreen pouches? Tobacco and nicotine free but still has the burn?
Sorry I’m so difficult. :/

bowhunter1053
bowhunter1053
8 years ago

Day 5

Tom S
Tom S
8 years ago

Well i passed my test. Like i said i suffer from seizures. After i have one it leaves my brain scrambled and can sometimes take over a week to recover. Its what screwed up my last attempt when i had 11 days. Well as bad as ive felt for the last 4 days i managed to not use any chew. I still feel somewhat odd today but am feeling better. Atleast i didnt throw away my quit and have 83 days now.

Bowhunter1053
Bowhunter1053
8 years ago

Day 4

Forgot to mention in my post yesterday that I’ve been dipping for 11 years.

Samantha
Samantha
8 years ago

I quit on 1/2/2016. I am going to be 24 on March 30th. I started dipping when I was 17 years old. I tried to quit once before and I was having such a bad day, I caved after two months. I feel as if this time is a lot harder. My headaches are making me sick, I can’t stay awake, and I’ve been so angry or annoyed with everything. I am taking everything out on my fiancé. We are quitting together. I’m a dipper and he’s a smoker. Its just so hard feeling like complete shit when I know that if I just go buy some and put a lip in everything with be alright.
Do they have like, fake dip?

ChadRebel
ChadRebel
8 years ago

Turning 21 in a month I’ve been dipping since I was 15 in Highschool. I have a baby on the way now and figured I needed a change. Wish me luck because after this can I’m done!

Justin
Justin
8 years ago

Hey everyone! Just been dipping for only 5 years… I have wanted to quit for a long time. I just turned 21 and decided enough is enough. I have been tobacco free for 2 days because I just got all my wisdom teeth taken out. I am happy to report that it is almost out of my system and I did use a lot less before I quit. I have tried to use grinds, I like the great smokey mountain a lot better because it’s long cut! So hopefully this 2016 year will become the best of them all for all the quitters! Tobaccofree2016

JH
JH
8 years ago

Magnesium Bis-glycinate is a highly absorbable form of magnesium. Magnesium helps relieve muscle cramps and aids in relaxation. Might be the trick for those experiencing those problems. 200 to 400 MG a day would be a good dose to help fight muscle cramps.

ncham186
ncham186
8 years ago

Please find your appropriate Quit Group in the Quit Forum on killthecan.org, ALL OF YOU!!!! We hold each other accountable every single day. It’s a journey for all of us. And we will all be QUIT together!!!!

Matt K
Matt K
8 years ago

Day 4 going strong. Had heavy urges today and a rough night sleep last night. Went to dollar general today and picked up some seeds and beef jerky. I recommend giving jerky a shot! Chew up a piece and leave it in your lip just like a dip… Tastes great and might be a good substitute for fake dip. Not sure yet….

Sean
Sean
8 years ago

Hey fellas. After my morning chew I decided the hell with it. It’s 2:30 now and blows ass. Gum and seeds go a long way for me. I quit a couple of years ago for 6 months. I need to get life insurance and don’t want to have to pay $$ cause I’m an idiot chewer. I know I can never socially chew so I just need to stay away from this sh!%. It was getting to the point of having a dip in every waking moment. Dumb..

bowhunter1053
bowhunter1053
8 years ago

I quit for 53 days in the spring last year until I broke down.

This will be day 3 quit so far.

Ex-Chewer-Snuser
Ex-Chewer-Snuser
8 years ago

68 hours nicotine free. It pains me to say this, but I’ve “quit” twice in the past 6 months only to cave at day 16 and day 19. What’s frustrating to me in the first 3 days are the toughest, but I cave later on thinking I’ll just have a chew and be done. Obviously it doesn’t work that way. Right now the agitation is so strong I’m miserable to be around, but the last 6 hours I’m starting to see a little light.
No nicotine in 2016. I’m going to choose everyday to quit. I’ve got a good support system including a close friend who quit nearly a year ago and having people around to keep me accountable helps. Hang tough!

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