Our tips to help a smoker quit smoking
Supporting a loved one, a colleague or a friend in their smoking cessation is a noble approach, but often a complex one. While the intention is commendable, the method used to help a smoker quit smoking often determines the success or failure of the initiative. Between the fear of doing too much and the feeling of helplessness in the face of a powerful addiction, how can you position yourself effectively?
Smoking is a pathology of the will, coupled with a physical and biochemical dependence. To become a real source of support, you must trade your hat as a “lecturer” for that of a “success partner”. Reset Laser shares here its expert tips to transform your benevolence into a lever for lasting change.
1. Understanding the smoker's complex psychology with the Prochaska model
Before taking any action, it is crucial to understand that smoking is not just a “bad habit” or a lack of character. It is an addiction that rests on three pillars: physical dependence (nicotine), psychological dependence (managing emotions) and behavioural dependence (rituals).
Definition of the Prochaska model
To help a loved one quit smoking effectively, it is essential to understand that change never happens abruptly. The Prochaska model, also known as the transtheoretical model of change, precisely describes the different phases a person goes through before lastingly modifying a behaviour.
This model rests on a key idea: you cannot support a person who does not wish to change their behaviour in the same way as someone who is already engaged in action. Identifying which phase your loved one is in and adapting your support according to this phase is therefore decisive.
The 5 stages of the Prochaska model
- Pre-intention (pre-contemplation): the smoker does not yet perceive the problem or refuses to change. At this stage, any pressure is counterproductive. The objective is simply to inform, without judging.
- Intention (contemplation): they begin to consider quitting smoking, but remain torn between the desire to change and the fear of withdrawal. This is a phase of reflection, where dialogue and listening are essential.
- Preparation: the decision is taken. They look for concrete solutions, set a date or seek information about methods. This is the ideal moment to propose active support.
- Action: cessation is underway. The smoker must face withdrawal symptoms and ingrained habits. Support then becomes daily, both practical and emotional.
- Maintenance: the goal is to consolidate the gains over time and avoid relapses, which are often part of the process.
Understanding this model helps to avoid a common mistake: wanting to go too fast. Forcing someone to take action when they are not ready creates almost systematically resistance. Conversely, support tailored to each stage considerably increases the chances of success and helps to better manage the urge to start smoking again.
2. Benevolent communication: the art of active listening
The way you communicate is also a determining factor of effectiveness. Non-violent communication (NVC) is a powerful tool to help a smoker quit smoking without creating conflict.
Ask questions rather than give orders
When it comes to quitting smoking, judgement is enemy number 1! Avoid the accusatory “you”. Instead of saying “You should quit, you’ll end up with cancer” or “You’re ruining your health”, which triggers an immediate defence mechanism, prefer open questions that prompt reflection:
- “What do you still enjoy about cigarettes today?”
- “What scares you the most about the idea of quitting?”
- “How can I help you concretely when you have a strong urge to smoke (a craving)?”
Validate efforts, however small
Supporting someone means being able to see the path travelled rather than the distance still to go. If your loved one reduces their cigarette consumption, congratulate them sincerely. If they hold out for a whole day, mark the moment. Remind them that every small victory counts and that the most difficult day of cessation often takes place 72 hours after stopping smoking. Once this peak has passed, your loved one is already well on the way to freeing themselves lastingly from tobacco and thus improving their general health.
3. Creating a “smoke-free” environment conducive to success
The physical and social environment is strewn with triggers for a person suffering from a tobacco addiction. To help them quit smoking, you can act directly on the living environment to limit automatic temptations.
Cleaning the living space
As soon as the decision is taken, help them reduce the risk of relapse by doing some cleaning:
- Remove objects related to tobacco: get rid of ashtrays, lighters and emergency packs “just in case”.
- Deodorise: the smell of stale tobacco on curtains or clothes can trigger a reflex urge. A big spring cleaning is often symbolically very powerful.
- Establish clear rules: if you live together, declare the house a strict no-smoking zone.
Modifying social rituals
Cessation is the moment to reinvent one’s habits. If the 10 a.m. coffee is systematically associated with a cigarette, suggest replacing the coffee with a tea or an infusion, or going for a short walk instead. It is known that transforming one’s social relationships and rituals is one of the pillars of long-term success.
4. Anticipating and managing withdrawal symptoms
Nicotine withdrawal is not just in the mind. It is a biological upheaval. If you wish to help someone in your circle to quit cigarettes, you must be ready to face the side effects of withdrawal with them.
Coping with irritability and anxiety
Nicotine acts on the reward circuit and artificially calms the nervous system. Without it, the smoker can become irritable, impatient, even depressive.
- Do not take it personally: their mood swings are due to withdrawal, not to you.
- Be a source of calm: suggest relaxing activities. Encourage them to learn about anxiety related to quitting smoking to play down the situation.
- Encourage rest: the body works enormously to detoxify itself. Significant fatigue is normal.
Managing physical symptoms
Understanding the body’s reactions
Cough, phlegm, headaches, sleep disorders… When you quit smoking, the body begins a true regeneration process. These symptoms and effects, sometimes uncomfortable, are not worrying signs but on the contrary the normal manifestations of withdrawal and detoxification.
It is essential to help your loved one change their perception: these inconveniences are not a problem but proof that the body is repairing itself. For example, coughing and phlegm after quitting reflect the resumption of activity of the bronchial cilia, responsible for eliminating accumulated toxins. The lungs gradually clean themselves and recover their natural function.
In the same way, headaches or fatigue are often linked to the body’s adaptation to the absence of nicotine, a substance that until then altered the neurochemical balance. This adjustment phase is temporary and generally diminishes after a few days to a few weeks.
Adopting the right reflexes to relieve symptoms
It is important to put in place simple but effective actions:
- Encourage good hydration to facilitate the elimination of toxins
- Promote rest, essential to the recovery process
- Suggest gentle physical activity to stimulate circulation and reduce stress
These adjustments make the withdrawal phase more comfortable and prevent the discomfort from becoming a relapse factor.
The role of nicotine substitutes
In addition, nicotine substitutes (patches, gums, lozenges, inhalers) can be a precious help. They make it possible to gradually reduce physical dependence on nicotine while limiting the most intense withdrawal symptoms, particularly during the first days. Used well, they therefore offer a reassuring framework and significantly improve the comfort of cessation.
However, it is important to understand their limits: these solutions maintain a dependence on nicotine, even if it is controlled. They therefore fit into a logic of gradual reduction but do not immediately eliminate the physiological need.
To go further, do not hesitate to consult all our tips on our blog as well as our complete guide on how to overcome withdrawal symptoms, which details each stage and the appropriate solutions.
5. What to do in case of a relapse?
Relapse is part of the learning process. The way you react to a “slip-up” will be decisive for the rest.
- Avoid making them feel guilty: saying “All that for this” or “You have no willpower” is devastating. It reinforces the feeling of failure and often pushes the smoker to fully resume their consumption out of frustration.
- Analyse the situation: help them understand what triggered the urge. Was it particular stress? A glass of alcohol? An annoyance? A specific social setting like an evening with friends?
- Restart the engine: one cigarette does not mean the counter starts again at zero. It is just a misstep on a long road. Remind them of the benefits already felt and the positive physical changes after quitting that they have already begun to experience.
6. Directing towards a professional solution: the strength of Reset Laser
Sometimes, despite all the love and support in the world, physical dependence is too strong. This is where your role as strategic advisor takes on its full meaning. You must also know when to pass the baton to experts.
Why suggest the Reset Laser method?
Unlike nicotine substitutes (patches, gums) which keep the body under the grip of nicotine, or chemical medications with heavy side effects, Reset Laser offers a disruptive approach:
- Laser auriculotherapy: a gentle and painless stimulation of precise points on the ear that instantly disconnects the physical need for nicotine.
- A single session: ideal for those who are afraid of a long and tedious process. In one hour, smoking cessation is set in motion.
- Zero stress, zero weight gain: by acting on the relaxation and satiety points, the method avoids compensation through food.
- A guarantee of success: Reset Laser offers personalised support and a guarantee in case of difficulty, which greatly reassures the worried smoker.
Suggesting that a loved one consult a natural method to quit is often the trigger that was missing to move from intention to concrete action.
Conclusion: your support is the catalyst of their new life
In summary, to support a loved one in their wish to quit smoking, you must be at once a patient psychologist, a motivating coach and a rigorous organiser. Your role is not to do the work in their place but to make the path more passable.
By combining your unwavering support with a cutting-edge technological solution like that of Reset Laser, you offer your loved one the best possible chance of recovering their freedom and improving their health. Remind them regularly that quitting smoking is an investment whose dividends they will collect every day of their future life.
Take action with Reset Laser
Supporting a loved one in their fight against tobacco means offering them the right conditions to succeed, but also offering them a solution adapted to their level of dependence. With Reset Laser, you choose a natural, painless and nicotine-substitute-free approach, which acts directly on the dependence mechanisms. In a single session, it is possible to set in motion lasting cessation, without stress or intense feeling of withdrawal. Free yourself lastingly from smoking with Reset Laser!
FAQ: everything you need to know about quitting cigarettes
Quitting smoking brings rapid and progressive benefits for health. As soon as 20 minutes, blood pressure decreases. After 24 hours, carbon monoxide disappears from the blood. In a few weeks, breathing improves and fatigue diminishes. In the long term, the risks of cardiovascular and respiratory diseases and cancer are greatly reduced. You therefore recover a better quality of life.
Nicotine substitutes (patches, gums, lozenges, inhalers) can be useful to reduce the signs of withdrawal by providing nicotine in a controlled manner. They facilitate the first stages of quitting smoking by limiting irritability and intense cravings. However, they maintain a dependence on nicotine. Their effectiveness therefore depends on their proper use and the overall support put in place.
They are at once physical, psychological and financial. On the physical level, breathing improves, energy returns and the body regenerates. Psychologically, dependence diminishes and the feeling of freedom grows. Financially, quitting smoking allows for significant savings since you no longer need to buy packs of cigarettes, lighters, etc.
This requires a specific approach, based on dialogue and understanding rather than guilt-tripping. Among teenagers and young adults, tobacco is often linked to social image, stress or the influence of the group. It is therefore essential to create a space of trust to allow your loved one to feel safe.
Calling on a professional makes it possible to significantly increase one’s chances of success thanks to support adapted to one’s level of dependence. Several solutions exist: a doctor can offer follow-up and treatments, a tobacco specialist offers specialised support and innovative approaches such as the anti-tobacco laser (Reset Laser) act directly on the physical withdrawal.
There are several treatments to support quitting smoking. Nicotine substitutes allow for a gradual reduction of physical dependence. Certain prescribed medications can also be offered under medical supervision.
In parallel, alternative methods such as the anti-tobacco laser offer an approach without nicotine or medication, by acting directly on the mechanisms of withdrawal. The choice of treatment depends on the profile of your loved one and their level of dependence.
Why choose RESET Laser Institute
The best method to quit smoking
Specialist
Our practitioners are trained to support you effectively throughout your journey.
Effectiveness
Feedback from our clients reflects our success. Rated 4.9/5
Painless
Non-invasive and painless, our method is accessible to everyone.
Stress-free
You free yourself from your addictions and quit smoking without weight gain, without stress, and without compensation.
Personalized support
Because each person is different, we offer personalized support.
1-year guarantee
Confident in the effectiveness of our technique, we guarantee our laser therapy for 1 year in case of relapse.
