All you can really do is express your concern and maybe open his eyes to all the reasons for quitting. The problem is, regardless of how much you care, how strong a case you make, how much better his voice will sound and how much better he will feel, a smoker is not going to quit until they are ready. I haven't smoked for almost 20 years, but back when I quit it took 8 tries. (I once quit for almost a year, then had a bad day and went back to it . . . how stupid was that?) The time that I was finally successful, I knew it was going to stick because my head was in the right place and I wanted to kick the habit.
I think it's virtually impossible to create the desire necessary for someone to quit smoking for good because it has to come from within that person. Outside forces didn't matter much to me, but work on him positively and patiently and maybe his day will come.
By the way . . . after 20 years I still remember my last Camel Red, where I was and how I smoked it. Smoking is a strong addiction.
I think it's virtually impossible to create the desire necessary for someone to quit smoking for good because it has to come from within that person. Outside forces didn't matter much to me, but work on him positively and patiently and maybe his day will come.
By the way . . . after 20 years I still remember my last Camel Red, where I was and how I smoked it. Smoking is a strong addiction.
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