Fremonter reaps benefits of not smoking

By Russ Krebs/Fremont Tribune
Thursday, Nov 20, 2008 - 11:01:35 am CST

It was a long 35 years of putting cigarettes to her lips, but Darlene Sheets is happy for the 16 months she has now been smoke free.

“I smoked since I was 15 or 16,” she said. “It was cool back then.”

It might have been cool when she was a teenager, but being cool eventually turned into a two-pack-a-day addiction.

“They were my security blanket,” Sheets said. “When I was upset, I smoked a cigarette. When I was happy, I smoked a cigarette. Most people did not think I’d ever quit smoking.”

She said the best way to describe the addiction to smoking to a non-smoker is that cigarettes are your friends ” they’re there any time you need them.

“I was buying roughly two packs a day,” Sheets said. “I didn’t buy them by the carton because then I’d be smoking too much.”

Today is the 33rd annual Great American Smokeout, a day the American Cancer Society urges people to not light up and try to kick the habit. To help, counselors are available free of charge on the organization’s quit line at 1-800-227-2345 and help is available at www.cancer.org.

Working at A.J. Merrick Manor, Sheets said she probably should have known better. However, when Fremont Area Medical Center decided to become a smoke-free campus last year, she knew she’d have to do something.

“When the hospital said it was going smoke free, I thought I’d be fired,” Sheets said. “I thought what if there was a blizzard and I couldn’t get my car out of the parking lot to go smoke?”

Instead, she went to her family doctor who prescribed a smoking cessation medication called Chantix that affects the brain’s pleasure receptors and stops nicotine cravings.

But that wasn’t the end of her days as a smoker. It wasn’t that easy.

“In January (2007) I went to the doctor and got a prescription that laid on my dresser for about two months,” she said. “Then I got it filled and it sat there another few months.”

The hospital went smoke-free July 1, 2007, so she knew she had to do something soon and started taking the medication.

She said she didn’t quit smoking right away, but that the drug helped her and eventually she was able to quit and stay smoke free.

“It was just a God send,” Sheets said. “I’ve been smoke free ever since. But I know I can never pick one up again.”

She saved a lot of money quitting smoking, but said at first she complained at paying the more than $90 for the prescription every month. Then she did the math and quit complaining.

There were surprising effects from quitting smoking.

“I had very thin hair and after quitting for about eight months it started growing back thicker,” she said. “It was the strangest thing. If you’re bald, don’t go kidding yourself that your hair’s going to grow back by quitting smoking.”

Another benefit was no more smoke smell.

“I never realized I smelled that bad,” Sheets said. “Oh my God, I stunk.”

She said she does miss some of the social aspects of smoking, but isn’t letting that bother her.

“I’d just do something else more beneficial. Now I’m into diet and exercise,” Sheets said. “Cigarettes kept me thin, I didn’t have to worry about it.”

She also has other things she no longer has to worry about after quitting smoking.

“I don’t hack all the time and I don’t cough all the time,” Sheets said. “I don’t snore anymore.”

Things she couldn’t do as a smoker she can do again.

“I can walk and I can exercise,” Sheets said. “I could not exercise before. I have more stamina, more go power.”

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skip
Nov 20, 2008 12:24 PM
good for u on quitting. i smoked 1 1/2 to 2 packs a day for almost 44 years. i finally (after 3 tries with the patch) quit on april 1, 2005. it was the hardest thing i have ever done. i feel alot better but unfortunatly i lost about 40% of my lung capacity. it was my own fault. i didnt listen to anyone years ago. wish i had now of course.
former smoker2
Nov 20, 2008 1:08 PM
Great job!
Gretchen
Nov 20, 2008 3:49 PM
Awesome!!! I guess it has been a while since I saw you last. Keep it up what a great thing to do for yourself.
former smoker 3
Nov 20, 2008 5:21 PM
Congratulations on quitting!! I also started smoking in my teens. I quit cold turkey Oct 23, 1993. My child's dr told me my son was always sick because I smoked. What an incentive to quit. Am now 15 years smoke free and my son is healthy. One suggestion though. Have your dr watch your thyroid closely. Shortly after quitting I developed symtoms of Hashimoto's Hypothyroidism. Was probably there all along. Just never noticed the symtoms prior to quitting.
bill
Nov 20, 2008 5:26 PM
Tobacco is a primary cause of oral cancer. All of us should help our loved ones and friends to avoid the suffering that comes from undiagnosed oral cancer which, if detected and treated early, is one of the simplest cancer types to cure. EVERYONE should ask their dentist for an oral cancer exam, preferably with ViziLite, a 3-minute pain-free technology using an FDA approved light-stick and rinse. Dentists are finding PRE-cancer as well as early-stage cancer using it. And most insurance companies now cover it. Info and a zip-code directory of ViziLite dentists are at ViziLite.com.
Mercorey
Nov 20, 2008 5:29 PM
What a story. If you never smoked before, it will be hard for you to comprehend what smokers feel and go threw. I was lucky, I worked out doors (delivery driver for that brown company) so I could smoke all day long and not worry about a “smoke free work place”. She was afraid of losing her job. WOW! (scary)
I use to smoke a pack a day for eighteen years. I had laser surgery which cost $150.00 and it only took 5 minutes for the surgery and I was smoke free as soon as I left the surgery center. It was the best $150.00 that I ever spent. I have been smoke free for 2 years now.
sam fiorito
Nov 20, 2008 5:35 PM
To all you smokers I smoked for 20 years and increased to 4 paks a day. I quit 28 years ago. In 2007 I was diagnosed with bladder cancer and was told by specialists that the type of cancer I had was 96% guaranteed it was directly related to smoking. So do not start. I had to have my bladder removed and have been cancer free so far for a year.
Michael Fortunato
Nov 20, 2008 5:35 PM
Well Darlene you are famous now. This story has become one of Google's top five stories. I picked it up in NY and I am an ex-smoker who finally managed to get it done 16 years ago and the thing that rang truest in what you said is that you know you can't ever have one. Good luck to you the rest of the way and isn't it great how good the world looks, tastes and smells.
Smoker
Nov 20, 2008 5:38 PM
QUITTER!!!!
VC
Nov 20, 2008 5:41 PM
I was a smoker for 25+ years and called it quit almost a year ago, without any medication, patch - just cold turkey. And everything Ms Sheets had to say above applies to me (except for the hair)..
Sherman Sawin
Nov 20, 2008 5:42 PM
That's one of many great success stories of someone who finally kicked the stinking, cancer causing addiction. And to all those who have quit before you, only they can fully appreciate your accomplished determination.
For those still smoking, this message probably will fall on deaf ears. So sad, because smoking (cancer) will continue to take lives, for those who continue to smoke.
For a young person contemplating starting smoking, do yourself the biggest favor of your life, DON'T START.
Janie Clopper
Nov 21, 2008 1:42 PM
Darlene,

I am so very proud of you!!! Way to go! This is such awesome news! Tell everyone hi for me at Merrick Manor.
June
Nov 21, 2008 11:29 PM
Sheets,
You go girl. I'm still smoke-free also quitting in Sept. 07. It was the 3rd time for me and I also know I can't have even a puff or I'll start the nasty habit again like the last 2 times.
And yes it one of the hardest things to do.
If you're a teen or young adult and think it is cool to smoke, it's much cooler not to.
Congratulations Darlene!
Mike
Nov 22, 2008 7:36 AM
Great Job! I smoked a pack+ for 13 years and quit about 14 months ago, it is very difficult, it took me about 10 months just to get past the cravings, but I think I am finally in the clear. There is no doubt that that it is a powerful adiction, I am now looking forward to the smoking ban as it will help separate me from cigarettes even more. Non-smokers will never truly understand how hard quitting is. I just hope everyone can be supportive of current smokers rights as we all try to move forward.
To Mercorey
Nov 23, 2008 1:39 PM
What is the laser surgery you're talking about?? I've had Chantix sitting in the cupboard for a year and am too scared of it after hearing how most people become severely depressed from it. Life itself is depressing enough, I don't need any help with that!
JR
Nov 23, 2008 6:47 PM
Congrats Darlene on saving your life!
My husband smoked 2 packs a day or more. He was hypnotised in Feb 08 and is now smoke-free. I hope your story inspires more people to quit. Smoking affects everyone around you especially children!
jill
Dec 2, 2008 2:40 PM
congrats! i'm smoke-free for 15 days and for the most part feeling better - but a little heavier. i'm gonna join a gym next. I too hated the way i smelt, esp when i cam e in from having a cig and my daughter would yell at me... Enough!
NicePerson
Dec 3, 2008 12:17 PM
I have been smoke-free 5 weeks. I quit cold-turkey because I could not afford any of the smoking cessation aids. I still have urges, but it is only a couple of times a week now and not every hour, of every day, like it was a few weeks ago. Mind-over-matter was the stratedgy of my cessation. I left 2 cigarettes in the pack and refused to smoke them. To refuse them is to not feel deprived of them.