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"It's possible to love smoking and still give
it up"
There once was a man who was trying to quit smoking.
After a couple of months had gone by, however, his non-smoking wife
found out that he had smoked on a few occasions.
“Why,” she said, “would you do that?”
“Well,” he replied, “I had gone several weeks without smoking.”
“Yes,” said his wife.
“And I was very proud of myself.”
“Of course. I understand.”
“So I rewarded myself with a cigarette.”
His wife didn't understand.
If you understand, then you are ready for this book.
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Preach-free Guide to Smoking and Quitting
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Dear
Friend,
It
is possible to love smoking and still give it up. I know because I
always loved smoking. I can remember sitting by myself in my favorite
chair with a book by my favorite author, smoking cigarette after
cigarette as I turned the pages into the late evening.
When
I was
young, there were long drives with my friends, smoking and talking till
the air in the car was dense with cigarette smoke. I recollect rolling
my own smokes when money got low and, on one or two occasions,
searching through the ashtrays after a party looking for the longest
butt.
Many evenings I
could be found doing a quick calculation of how many
cigarettes I could smoke before bed and still leave myself enough to
get out of the house in the morning. Breakfast was two or three
cigarettes, two or three cups of coffee, and the morning paper. If I
didn't have those two or three cigarettes in the house, I'd have to
leave early to get to the store.
Whether I was alone or with other people, I always had a cigarette.
They were with me more than anyone or anything else. I was a raging
addict, true, but I like to think I was more than just an addict: I was
a genuine lover of cigarettes.
Smoking was a major part of my life, as it may be of yours now.
Smoking is a very complex behaviour. It is drug-taking to be sure. But,
oh, the versatility of the drug nicotine and the act of smoking:
People smoke to wake themselves up in the morning, and they smoke to
wind down at night.
We smoke when we are bored and depressed, we smoke when we are afraid
and nervous, and we smoke when we are excited and happy.
People smoke to relieve loneliness, and they smoke to enjoy friendship.
Smoking appears to soothe, compliment, enhance, as necessary. It
seems to provide immediate bodily and emotional rewards in a whole
spectrum of situations.
Little wonder that most youth who have more than one or two cigarettes
become regular daily smokers.

You know the old
saying, inside every fat person is a thin person trying to get out?
Well, there are those
who would have you believe that
inside every smoker is a non-smoker trying to get out.
Ha! You and I know that inside most smokers is a smoker
trying to stay right there and have one more smoke in peace.
- Preach-Free Guide
to Smoking and Quitting
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Tobacco
is formidable, but do not make the mistake of holding tobacco
in too much respect. If you are genuinely determined to quit, you can
and will quit. The questions are when and how.
The addiction to smoking is 90% psychological and only 10% physical.
I've put together the Preach-free
Guide to Smoking and Quitting to show
you pschological tricks that our old friend Nicotine plays on us - and
how
to beat him at his own game.
Feeling
guilty doesn't help us quit. If anything, it keeps us smoking. That's
why you'll find this guide to quitting preach-free.
You'll find
some laughter you'll find some understanding of why it is
that you smoke, along with clear instructions about how you can go
about quitting - when you are ready to quit.
With the Preach-Free
Guide you will quit when you are ready, on your
own schedule, not anyone else's.
I've done it. Thousands of others have done it. Why don't you join us?
Preach-Free Guide to Smoking and
Quitting

82 pages
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Preach-Free Guide to
Smoking and
Quitting
Preface
Introduction
1. Smoker's Tale
2. Nicotine Doohickies
3. Smokers and Smoking
4. Working up to Quitting
5. Help!
6. The Final Days
7. The Aftermath
Conclusion
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This
is a fun book to read. If you're a smoker you'll find yourself nodding
in agreement and having a laugh at all the cartoons.
If
your not a smoker but know one, this is the best 'nag-free' present you
could give him of her to help them break free.
How much does this book cost?
$7.
Yes, for less the price of a pack of smokes you will have all of the
information you need to break free.
Why $7?
I'm only charging $7 for this e-book, and not giving this report away,
for 2 reasons.
1. $7 puts the report within reach of the vast majority of
people. If you can afford to smoke you can afford to quit using this
guide.
2. Anyone who's not serious enough to invest $7 into this
report isn't going to take the time to read and use it to become a
non-smoker anyway.
So if you're serious about giving up the smokes, click the "Buy Now"
button below. If you need to justify the expense just buy another pack
of cigarettes for tomorrow and it's paid for.
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Get Your Copy Now For Only
$7

Secure Payments
Made Through PayPal
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P.S. Seriously, for
just $7, less than the cost of your next pack of smokes, This
guide will
show you how to use the sneaky psychological tricks that will enable
you to break free from
tobacco for good. How can you pass on that?
Questions?
Comments? Need support? simon@onelastpuff.com
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