Quit Smoking Cigarettes Naturally
After completing your order you will be brought back so you can begin the method immediately.
If you're one of the 70% of smokers who have tried to quit but just haven't been able to, my Quit Smoking Cigarettes Naturally system WILL work for you like it did for me. I have made my system so affordable that you can't use cost as an excuse. You're already spending way more money on the cigarettes you're smoking after all. You'll save the cost of my program from the very first week you quit smoking. So ultimately it costs you nothing. Besides, if something works, it would be a bargain at any price.
I'm Randy Wayne Fricke. I'm a widowed father of 3, grandfather of 2 awesome grandsons, and a life-long professional musician and singer who up until Y2K had a very nasty smoking habit that was running my life, and ruining my health. The sad part was that I didn't even start smoking until I was 19. I used to smoke Marlboros. 2 to 3 packs a day for 23 years. What was I thinking?
If quitting smoking and saving your own life isn't worth the price of my method then I can't help you. You're the one who has to live with the risks. It's sure less expensive than a doctor's visit or the thousands you can look forward to spending on cancer treatments.
So you have a choice to make: Either spend your money on your next umteen cartons of cigarettes, or, buy my system and never spend another penny on cigarettes. Ever!
As I mentioned above, I have been a guitar player and singer pretty much all my life. When I smoked I was always singing through colds and hoarseness. It was a constant battle just getting ready for the next gig. Singers who smoke really need to think seriously about quitting cigarettes. It's great to hear that Adele finally quit. Some singers, and some of the old crooners like Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin didn't seem to be too affected by smoking. But in the long run that's what did them in. Frank Sinatra died of dementia. Recent research has shown that smoking is a significant risk factor for vascular dementia and Alzheimer's disease, with smokers twice as likely to develop the disease as non-smokers. Dean Martin died of tobacco related lung cancer.
I also mentioned above that I am a widower. When we first met, my late wife Sherry smoked. But she was able to quit cigarettes when she became pregnant with our first daughter. I smoked outside from then on. Sherry died on April 23, 1990 from chemotherapy poisoning for breast cancer treatment. Although it was breast cancer, my point is that dying from cancer of any kind has got to be just about the most horrible way to die ever. I recommend avoiding it if it is at all possible...
And speaking of smoking outside, with all of the positive no smoking laws now in effect, smokers must now go outside to smoke. This was great from my perspective because as an ex-smoker musician, I didn't have to breathe all that second hand smoke. Now that smokers must go outside, I kind of feel sorry for the ones who live in cold weather climates. They all huddle together puffing away when it's -20° F outside. Smokers love smoking. I sure did. I used to stay up late at night just so I could smoke!
But all that aside, being a 19 year old musician back in the '70s cancer was the furthest thing from my mind and like a lot of other people, I started smoking because I thought it would make me look cool. In fact, to show you just how naive I was when I first started, I didn't even know you were supposed to inhale. That is until I ran into a buddy one night who asked: "Why do you even bother smoking if you're not going to inhale?" I asked: "What do you mean inhale? Do you mean take the smoke into your lungs? Are you nuts?"
Well, he showed me how to inhale. Naturally I coughed my head off and my eyes watered like I’d just taken a blast of pepper spray in the face, but you know what? That didn't stop me. After my lungs stopped burning and my eyes stopped watering I took that second drag. I took it in good and deep too! It felt s-o-o-o-o good. From that moment on I was a cool cigarette smoker.
I smoked quite heavily from the time I started and I finally got tired of the colds I'd catch that lasted seeming for months on end. Allergies too have always been an issue for me. As a singer I spent most of my time just learning how to sing through a cold. In 1998 I decided that it was probably a good idea to quit smoking cigarettes. Piece of cake. Or so I thought.
My first attempt was pure cold turkey. "I can do this" I kept thinking to myself and I'd go two, three, maybe four days all proud of myself and then BLAMMO! The withdrawals would start kicking in and with that, overwhelming craving. All I wanted to do was smoke a cigarette and make it all go away. So I did. So much for that attempt.
But I was determined to quit. I really was. So I tried again in 1999. I had gotten the flu and the cigarettes were tasting like crap so I thought that would be a good time to try once more. But again, the cravings were just too powerful and even though that was probably the sickest I'd ever been with a cold, I just couldn't leave the cigarettes alone. I lit up and took that first drag and coughed so hard I thought I was going to pass out. Not good.
Over the course of the next year, still very determined to quit I thought may I need a bit more help since the two cold turkey attempts didn't pan out. I bought some of that nicotine gum which tasted as bad as the cigarettes. Funny thing about the gum for me was that it actually made me smoke more. So did the nicotine patches I tried after the gum didn't work out. Going to a doctor was out of the question financially even though I was already spending the money on cigarettes which were half the cost they are today as we well know.
Going into 2000 and running out of viable options I was at my wit's end. My #1 New Year's Resolution of course was to quit smoking. But the more I thought about quitting, the more I smoked. It was a vicious cycle of utter ridiculousness!
Then, just before my birthday in January of 2000 something inside me "clicked" and in a moment of what I now believe was nothing short of a miraculous flash of insight, I was able to see my addiction from a fresh perspective that I'd never seen before.
The method offered here for quitting cigarettes came to me almost in an instant. It was now clear what I had to do to quit smoking cigarettes once and for all.
But like everything else in life, the proof is in the pudding. My method worked for me. And if it could work for me, it will work for you. If you're ready.
I've been a non-smoker since Y2K. My method is so straight up simple, easy, and stress free that you cannot possibly fail. You can't mess it up!
My method will help you succeed where other methods you've tried have failed you. It will do it for far less than the cost of a doctor's office visit, prescription pills, nicotine gum, inhalers, lozenges, nasal sprays, and patches.
My method will work for you every bit as well as it did for me.
There's no way to sugarcoat this. Out of all the smokers who will try to quit smoking cigarettes using traditional smoking cessation methods in 2017, only 6% will succeed at quitting completely. When it comes to smoking you have two choices: 1. You can buy yet another carton of cigarettes at an average cost of $60.61 per carton and look forward to spending anywhere from $50,000+ on an otherwise completely preventable smoking related cancer treatment while gasping for every breath, wheezing, and coughing up strange looking goo while waiting around to die in searing agony, or, 2. Quit smoking.
The total economic cost of cigarette smoking is well over $300 billion a year which includes almost $170 billion in direct medical care for adults. More than $156 billion is lost in productivity as a result of premature death and exposure to second hand smoke.
Lung cancer treatment typically involves one or more of the following options, alone or in combination: Surgery, which can cost $15,000 or more. Chemotherapy, which can cost $10,000 - $200,000 or more. Radiation therapy, which can cost $10,000 - $50,000 or more. And/or drug therapy, which can cost as much as $4,000 or more a month depending on the drug used.
For instance, ranibizumab (Lucentis) costs about $1,600 a dose. Erlotinib (Tarceva) costs $3,500 per dose.
So far we've just been focusing on American smokers, but according to a study from The Lancet Medical Journal, the smoking population of China is in for a rude awakening too. The study warns that if current smoking rates in China prevail, two million Chinese will die by 2030 from smoking related illness. The industrial pollution is bad enough there as it is. Being a smoker is a double-whammy for the Chinese smoker.
The tobacco industry spends billions of dollars each year on cigarette advertising and promotions. Smoking leads to disease and disability and harms nearly every organ of the body because where the blood flows, so do the harmful constituents of the cigarette.
In the upcoming fiscal year the states will collect nearly $26 billion from tobacco taxes and industry related legal settlements. 85 to 90 percent of Americans who die from lung cancer are smokers which in a nutshell means that smoking is the #1 leading cause of preventable death.
According to the American Cancer Society $133,000,000,000 was spent on tobacco related healthcare costs from 2000 to 2012. Total related health care costs and loss of productivity was $289,000,000,000. Smoking causes damage throughout the entire body.
One of the many benefits of quitting smoking of course is that you won't become another smoking related death statistic. Research suggests only about 6% of quit attempts succeed long-term.
We all know the dangers of smoking. There are at least 7000 chemicals infused into cigarette tobacco many of which are known cancer causing carcinogens. Smokers know they need to quit and the sooner, the better.
But what about the new trend of vaping that smokers are turning to to help them stop smoking cigarettes? Are there dangers involved with vaping too? Bad news. It looks as though there is.
As if the reports coming in about exploding e-cigarettes weren't horrific enough, the reports also suggest that the chemicals ingested in vaping e-cigarettes is causing an incurable disease known as "popcorn lung" as well as other debilitating respiratory diseases.
Popcorn lung started showing up a few years ago when people who were working in the microwave popcorn production industry began developing a debilitating respiratory condition that was ultimately linked to the inhaling of excessive amounts of the artificial butter flavoring used in microwave popcorn. A Harvard study shows that 39 out of the 51 flavors used in e-cigarettes that people are now vaping contains that very chemical known as diacetyl.
As it turns out, it's looking more and more like vaping e-cigarettes is as bad for you as smoking traditional cigarettes. Not only is the diacetyl in the e-cigarettes bad enough on its own, but with the 7000 odd chemicals in cigarettes, wouldn't quitting altogether be the best option?
And to make matters even worse, today's cigarettes have a fire retardant chemical laced into the paper that extinguishes unattended cigarettes that are left in ash trays or that get tossed out of car windows. It was promoted by the cigarette manufacturers under the guise of preventing house fires caused by people who fall asleep while smoking cigarettes. I once dated a woman that that happened to. There was nothing left but the screws and nails. Fire prevention of course is always a positive thing so far as cigarettes are concerned, but it's not the full story.
Tobacco manufacturers #1 motivation is shareholder dividends. They have to keep people addicted and it doesn't matter whether it's regular cigarettes, vaping e-cigarettes, or chewing tobacco. I firmly believe that the fire retardant chemical was really added in order to make people smoke more cigarettes by not letting them go out sitting in an ashtray. Now you get to smoke the WHOLE cigarette. Thus making smoking even more addicting than it already is. An ingenious lot those cigarette manufacturers are wouldn't you say?
Despite the many ways to kick the habit that people have tried, and the fact that people are quitting smoking in greater and greater numbers over the past few years, the manufacturers are more intent that ever on keeping smokers hooked. They had to devise a way for those still smoking to smoke the entire cigarette rather than leave it in an ash tray to burn up. The fire retardant extinguishes the unattended cigarette and since people are intent on getting the most "bang" for their buck, the smoker is being forced to keep relighting the extinguished cigarette. As a smoker you know that the first light up provides the best flavor, and that the more times you have to relight that stale cigarette, the nastier it tastes. But still; waste not, want not eh?
So the cigarette manufacturers figured out a way to keep that unattended cigarette from burning down to the butt. Even the name of the holder strikes me funny now that I look at it. Butt! You put the "butt" of the cigarette in your mouth to smoke it. Maybe it's just me...
At any rate, this fire retardant is actually making you smoke more and as a result is making you more, and more addicted to cigarettes which the manufacturers love because in light of all those people who have quit smoking cigarettes the cigarette makers and their shareholders are still making out like bandits. Because that's exactly what they are.
But what about the new trend of vaping that smokers are turning to to help them stop smoking cigarettes? Are there dangers involved with vaping too? Bad news. It looks as though there is.
As if the reports coming in about exploding e-cigarettes weren't horrific enough, the reports also suggest that the chemicals ingested in vaping e-cigarettes is causing an incurable disease known as "popcorn lung" as well as other debilitating respiratory diseases.
Popcorn lung started showing up a few years ago when people who were working in the microwave popcorn production industry began developing a debilitating respiratory condition that was ultimately linked to the inhaling of excessive amounts of the artificial butter flavoring used in microwave popcorn. A Harvard study shows that 39 out of the 51 flavors used in e-cigarettes that people are now vaping contains that very chemical known as diacetyl.
As it turns out, it's looking more and more like vaping e-cigarettes is as bad for you as smoking traditional cigarettes. Not only is the diacetyl in the e-cigarettes bad enough on its own, but with the 7000 odd chemicals in cigarettes, wouldn't quitting altogether be the best option?
And to make matters even worse, today's cigarettes have a fire retardant chemical laced into the paper that extinguishes unattended cigarettes that are left in ash trays or that get tossed out of car windows. It was promoted by the cigarette manufacturers under the guise of preventing house fires caused by people who fall asleep while smoking cigarettes. I once dated a woman that that happened to. There was nothing left but the screws and nails. Fire prevention of course is always a positive thing so far as cigarettes are concerned, but it's not the full story.
Tobacco manufacturers #1 motivation is shareholder dividends. They have to keep people addicted and it doesn't matter whether it's regular cigarettes, vaping e-cigarettes, or chewing tobacco. I firmly believe that the fire retardant chemical was really added in order to make people smoke more cigarettes by not letting them go out sitting in an ashtray. Now you get to smoke the WHOLE cigarette. Thus making smoking even more addicting than it already is. An ingenious lot those cigarette manufacturers are wouldn't you say?
Despite the many ways to kick the habit that people have tried, and the fact that people are quitting smoking in greater and greater numbers over the past few years, the manufacturers are more intent that ever on keeping smokers hooked. They had to devise a way for those still smoking to smoke the entire cigarette rather than leave it in an ash tray to burn up. The fire retardant extinguishes the unattended cigarette and since people are intent on getting the most "bang" for their buck, the smoker is being forced to keep relighting the extinguished cigarette. As a smoker you know that the first light up provides the best flavor, and that the more times you have to relight that stale cigarette, the nastier it tastes. But still; waste not, want not eh?
So the cigarette manufacturers figured out a way to keep that unattended cigarette from burning down to the butt. Even the name of the holder strikes me funny now that I look at it. Butt! You put the "butt" of the cigarette in your mouth to smoke it. Maybe it's just me...
At any rate, this fire retardant is actually making you smoke more and as a result is making you more, and more addicted to cigarettes which the manufacturers love because in light of all those people who have quit smoking cigarettes the cigarette makers and their shareholders are still making out like bandits. Because that's exactly what they are.
I used to work with recovering heroin addicts. Many of them told me that kicking heroin was a breeze compared to cigarettes. So if you've been trying to quit and haven't succeeded (yet) it's not your fault. Quitting smoking is so hard not only because of all the chemicals the tobacco is spiked with, but you also have the repetitive motion component that reinforces the habit.
I had an uncle who when he found out he had cancer quit immediately albeit too late because he did wind up dying from lung cancer, but for the few years he lived after he quit he was constantly bringing his right hand to his left-side shirt pocket because that's where he's always carried his smokes. You'd be standing there talking to him and it's like he was on autopilot. He didn't even know he was doing it was so embedded in his subconscious mind.
Quitting smoking is also hard because many smoking cessation programs seem to put the smoker in the role of the victim. That's totally unfair. The cards are stacked against you from the get-go when it comes to quitting. The addictive factor coupled with the "victim mentality" only sets the smoker who's trying to quit up for failure. It's not your fault. You just haven't found a method that will work for you. Until now...
Another thing that sets you up to fail is premature celebration. You make it your first 3 or 4 days without a cigarette and you start bragging to your friends and coworkers: "Hey! I finally quit smoking!" Then, on Day 5, or a week later those cravings kick in or something happens that stresses you out and you're right back to smoking. And probably even more than you were before. This feeds the victimhood notion perfectly and you start kicking yourself for falling off the wagon. I offer you a better way.
Of course as I said earlier, nothing will work unless you have the proper mindset. Nicotine is arguably the most formidable addiction after all.
In a nutshell, my system takes the subconscious, habitual action of smoking and turns it into a conscious decision. Once your decision to light up becomes a conscious one, you can then control it. Rather than it controlling you.
I had an uncle who when he found out he had cancer quit immediately albeit too late because he did wind up dying from lung cancer, but for the few years he lived after he quit he was constantly bringing his right hand to his left-side shirt pocket because that's where he's always carried his smokes. You'd be standing there talking to him and it's like he was on autopilot. He didn't even know he was doing it was so embedded in his subconscious mind.
Quitting smoking is also hard because many smoking cessation programs seem to put the smoker in the role of the victim. That's totally unfair. The cards are stacked against you from the get-go when it comes to quitting. The addictive factor coupled with the "victim mentality" only sets the smoker who's trying to quit up for failure. It's not your fault. You just haven't found a method that will work for you. Until now...
Another thing that sets you up to fail is premature celebration. You make it your first 3 or 4 days without a cigarette and you start bragging to your friends and coworkers: "Hey! I finally quit smoking!" Then, on Day 5, or a week later those cravings kick in or something happens that stresses you out and you're right back to smoking. And probably even more than you were before. This feeds the victimhood notion perfectly and you start kicking yourself for falling off the wagon. I offer you a better way.
Of course as I said earlier, nothing will work unless you have the proper mindset. Nicotine is arguably the most formidable addiction after all.
In a nutshell, my system takes the subconscious, habitual action of smoking and turns it into a conscious decision. Once your decision to light up becomes a conscious one, you can then control it. Rather than it controlling you.
Any worthwhile endeavor must begin with a positive mental attitude. Many people are familiar with the use of "positive affirmations" however, one factor is the affirmations most stop smoking formulas employ. Traditional affirmations don't work for the majority of people because there is a part of the subconscious mind that "filters" affirmations and actually rejects them if they're too complicated or structured in the negative which is especially so for affirmations that the subconscious mind KNOWS are not truthful.
The more these ineffective affirmations are repeated the less effective they are to the point where the affirmation actually becomes counter-productive and despite our best efforts, starts working against us. At that point frustration sets in and we simply give up.
My system uses an affirmation technology that totally bypasses that "bullshit" filter which makes the affirmations much more effective. I believe that is (at least in part) why for so many people quitting never sticks. The incessant inner dialog of self-talk not performed in the right way sabotages our best efforts.
The smoker quits, makes it a month, maybe 2 months, then something a little stressful happens and because they haven't properly conditioned the subconscious mind to defend against residual urges and impulses, coupled with the all too easily defaulted to victimhood and justifications for failure, the next thing you know, they're lighting up a cigarette. Then it's off to the store to buy another carton.
Then the guilt kicks in and the justifications and you're back to smoking more than you did when you first tried to quit. Gack!!!
Some of the best things you'll experience from quitting cigarettes is that almost immediately food starts tasting better. You'll sleep better and more soundly too waking more refreshed. Your thinking will become clearer. For men and women both, blood flow to "vital" areas will increase as well if you catch my drift. In short; you'll smell better, look better and feel better.
All of these wonderful things and many more await you in your new life as a non-smoker.
Over half of all cigarette smokers will make an attempt to quit smoking. If you are among that group, wouldn't having a system that guarantees success be a welcomed ally?
How do I know my system will work for you? It's simple; I have been tobacco-free since Y2K.
The more these ineffective affirmations are repeated the less effective they are to the point where the affirmation actually becomes counter-productive and despite our best efforts, starts working against us. At that point frustration sets in and we simply give up.
My system uses an affirmation technology that totally bypasses that "bullshit" filter which makes the affirmations much more effective. I believe that is (at least in part) why for so many people quitting never sticks. The incessant inner dialog of self-talk not performed in the right way sabotages our best efforts.
The smoker quits, makes it a month, maybe 2 months, then something a little stressful happens and because they haven't properly conditioned the subconscious mind to defend against residual urges and impulses, coupled with the all too easily defaulted to victimhood and justifications for failure, the next thing you know, they're lighting up a cigarette. Then it's off to the store to buy another carton.
Then the guilt kicks in and the justifications and you're back to smoking more than you did when you first tried to quit. Gack!!!
Some of the best things you'll experience from quitting cigarettes is that almost immediately food starts tasting better. You'll sleep better and more soundly too waking more refreshed. Your thinking will become clearer. For men and women both, blood flow to "vital" areas will increase as well if you catch my drift. In short; you'll smell better, look better and feel better.
All of these wonderful things and many more await you in your new life as a non-smoker.
Over half of all cigarette smokers will make an attempt to quit smoking. If you are among that group, wouldn't having a system that guarantees success be a welcomed ally?
How do I know my system will work for you? It's simple; I have been tobacco-free since Y2K.
After completing your order you will be brought back so you can begin the method immediately.