sweet angel
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 9, 2004
- Messages
- 7,592
Really? I thought the nicotine was out in 48 to 72 hours? So it would be a bad idea to stop the wellbutrin then, huh?
That sounds about right. It took me about 2-3 weeks until I hit the wall. You have to prepare yourself mentally for that so you don't give in.Pamlur said:Don't get over-confident. I remember going in to my dr's office after about 10 days or so and saying "This has been surprisingly easy". It takes about three weeks for the withdrawal to hit you hard. I don't want you to be surprised like I was.
I quit cold turkey, so I'm not sure how the wellbutrin works.sweet angel said:2-3 weeks, huh? Okay, I guess I'll stay on the meds then. When I've quit in the past, I haven't had a problem after like day 2 (once when prego, and once after bronchitis). I'll trust you guys though.
sweet angel said:Well, it's been 8 days now. Don't know if it's the wellbutrin or not, but this has pretty much been a piece of cake. I'm counting myself as really lucky!
Thanks for the support!
sweet angel said:Well, it's been 8 days now. Don't know if it's the wellbutrin or not, but this has pretty much been a piece of cake. I'm counting myself as really lucky!
Thanks for the support!


You have a great attitude, keep it up! 
Good point. I'll keep that in mind for my cruise in November. Thanks for the tip.snoopy said:Warning, though, I started craving cigarettes about 4 months later while I was on vacation. For me, vacation was always associated with relaxation, and in those first 4 months of quitting I did very little relaxing.
If your hands are busy embroidering, knitting, crocheting, or scrapbooking, it's hard to smoke at the same time. 