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Smoking increases anxiety and tensionYou have heard how quitting smoking can improve your physical health, but you may continue because you believe smoking reduces your stress and anxiety. It is not necessarily true. ![]() What happens to your brain when you smoke?When you smoke, nicotine enters your brain within 10 seconds. It mimics dopamine (the happy hormone) which your brain recognises as a feeling of relaxation and calmness. Because your brain has become addicted to the stimulation, withdrawal symptoms increase the need for another cigarette. This cycle decreases your brains’ natural production of dopamine. Effects of smoking on your mental healthYou may smoke because you think it keeps you calm. However, it increases the level of stress in your body and has the following adverse reactions:
According to Dr Desere Ferreira, good mental health is not simply the absence of diagnosable mental health problems. Mental health is about being cognitively, emotionally, and socially healthy. It affects the way we think, feel, act and develop relationships. Download the Mental Health Matters ebook by Dr Ferreira. Can quitting smoking reverse these effects on the brain?Once you quit smoking, the withdrawal symptoms may leave you reaching for another cigarette, but here’s what you should know. Once you’ve stopped, the nicotine receptors in your brain will gradually return to normal, and, in time, the craving response will subside. Quitting tobacco can benefit your body in many ways, such as:
Quitting smoking does not deal with the root problem. Talk to a doctor for guidance in dealing with underlying challenges that may lead to higher stress levels or increased anxiety. Help to quit smokingQuitting smoking may be easier said than done, but with the right help, you can have a nicotine-free life.
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