Dr. Anjalika Atrey

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How to Stop Smoking – Dealing With Cravings

How to Stop Smoking – Dealing With Cravings
Psychiatrist in Andheri

Author
Dr. Anjalika Atrey

Introduction

Smoking is not simply a habit. It is a form of nicotine dependence that affects brain chemistry, emotional regulation, and behaviour. Many people want to quit but struggle repeatedly because cravings feel overwhelming and emotionally distressing.

Understanding how to stop smoking by dealing with cravings requires moving beyond willpower and addressing the neurobiology and psychology of addiction.

Understanding Nicotine Addiction

Nicotine increases dopamine release in the brain’s reward system. Over time:

  • The brain adapts to nicotine presence
  • Dopamine production without nicotine drops
  • Stress and irritability increase during withdrawal

This leads to:

  • Strong cravings
  • Anxiety and restlessness
  • Irritability and low mood
  • Difficulty concentrating

These are predictable withdrawal responses not weakness.

Why Cravings Feel So Powerful

Cravings are short lived neurological events, usually lasting 5–15 minutes. However, the brain interprets them as urgent threats.

Key principle:

Cravings do not need to disappear they need to be tolerated safely until they pass.

Why the Mind Defends Smoking

Nicotine temporarily relieves withdrawal discomfort. The brain misinterprets this as stress relief.

Over time:

  • The substance becomes emotionally “protective”
  • Any attempt to quit feels threatening
  • Thoughts arise to justify continued use

This is neurobiology, not lack of motivation.

Common Triggers for Cravings

Emotional

  • Stress
  • Anxiety
  • Low mood
  • Boredom

Behavioural

  • Morning routines
  • Tea or coffee
  • After meals
  • Social situations

Identifying triggers is essential.

Psychiatrist-Recommended Strategies

1. Delay and Distract

Delay smoking by 10 minutes and shift attention. Most cravings peak and fade.

2. Urge Surfing

Observe the craving without acting. Let it rise and fall like a wave.

3. Change Routines

Replace automatic smoking moments with new behaviours.

Breathing to Reduce Cravings

Slow breathing calms the nervous system:

  • Inhale 4 seconds

  • Hold 2 seconds

  • Exhale 6 seconds

Repeat for 2–3 minutes.

Cognitive Techniques

Replace unhelpful thoughts:

  • “I can’t cope” → “This will pass”

  • “One cigarette won’t matter” → “One restarts the cycle”

CBT is highly effective for this.

Role of Medication

Nicotine Replacement Therapy

  • Patches

  • Gum or lozenges

  • Sprays or inhalers

Reduces withdrawal intensity.

Prescription Medications

  • Bupropion: reduces cravings and low mood

  • Varenicline: blocks nicotine reward

Medication choice is individualised.

Smoking, Stress, and Mental Health

Smoking increases baseline anxiety over time. Quitting is associated with:

  • Improved mood

  • Reduced anxiety

  • Better sleep

  • Emotional stability

Preventing Relapse

Relapse is not failure it is feedback.
Key steps:

  • Avoid self-criticism

  • Identify triggers

  • Resume treatment

  • Strengthen support

When to Seek Psychiatric Help

Consult a psychiatrist if:

  • Cravings feel uncontrollable

  • Smoking is linked to anxiety or depression

  • Multiple quit attempts have failed

  • Mood worsens during quitting

Final Thoughts from Dr. Anjalika Atrey

Learning how to stop smoking by dealing with cravings means understanding how addiction affects the brain. With the right strategies and psychiatric support, cravings become manageable and recovery becomes sustainable.

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