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On Being of More than Tender Years


13 years ago 0 653 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Wise words!
 
Tiana, Health Educator
  • Quit Meter

    $79,500.75

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    Days: 5542 Hours: 7

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13 years ago 0 206 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Well said, O Ancient and Wise One!
As soon as I can find an orderly to drag my walker out to the porch, I'll join you there!
You raise so many excellent points to agree with!!  Perhaps one of the biggest for me is that we share so much with the great ones whose quit days number in the hundeds and thousands -- another sage pointed out very recently that we are only as successful as the latest craving we successfully resisted.
 
Thanks for being here with us --- I'm so glad that your success has added to many days to your life; you are a blessing to us all.
 
peteg
13 years ago 0 880 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hello My Fellow Travelers:
 
It has recently come to my attention that I am getting older. Yes, alas it is true.  My body is feeling the wear and tear of many trips around the sun.  For some reason tomorrow is becoming today at an ever increasing rate of speed and yesterday seems much farther away than it used to be. 
 
In short,  time is ticking on and in many ways my internal time piece is becoming more attuned to the passage of days.  But I think this may all be a good thing.  There are many out there who are, shall we say, less of tender years and more of hard bitten experience.  And I think, when it comes to finally releasing one's self from the grip of our shared addiction age is an advantage.
 
When we are young, focus can be a difficult thing to achieve.  And why should it not be so.  The future is wide, the possibilities are endless, and we believe that it shall always be that way.  So we try this and we try that and each this and that becomes a building block that brings us to now.  It is difficult through out this process to center ourselves.  But once we come to that place where we know with absolute certainty that time (our time) is really finite, focus becomes less difficult.  At least that is the way that I am experiencing the aging process. 
 
So come gather round all of you folks of more than tender years.  For years you have wished to end this addiction.  I know,  the thought has come and gone.  Perhaps you have tried in the past and found yourself to be less than satisfied with the out come.  Perhaps you have thrown up your hands in despair and put cessation on hold.  Maybe you believe that it is impossible.  I understand that, it is not an easy addiction with which to come to terms.  However, do not think that past failures are any indication of things to come.  No, each of these attempts has taught us something, even if the lesson seems hard to remember.
 
The length of time that we have smoked should not be a barrier against success.  In truth the realization of our mortality can be a time that allows us to focus more clearly on the things that are important.  It does for me anyway.  We need to guard our health, we need to gather our courage around the idea that we can still make things better for ourselves.  And what better way to test that hypothesis than to put the cigarettes down for good?
 
Yes, I know that growing older can be a bit awkward, that it often brings on anxiety tinged with regret.  But I also know that it allows us to focus on the years that remain.  And it is that focus that keeps us from just blowing away...
 
 
stay well
 
 
nonic            
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