Hidden Brain - Episode 37: Smoke & Mirrors
Episode Date: July 5, 2016Six months ago, Hidden Brain's Max Nesterak made a resolution to quit smoking. But as we all know... resolutions are made to be broken. This week, we check in with Max to find out how he's fared, and ...give you social science insight to help you quit your bad habits too.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantantham.
Several months ago, I noticed one of my colleagues taking breaks from work during the day.
At first, I thought Max Nestrak was trying to build some exercise into his schedule.
Good for him, I thought.
But when I asked him about it, he confessed that he was stepping outside to smoke.
We did a podcast episode about New York's resolutions
and Max's resolution to quit smoking at the start of the year.
It's 2016 and I have not smoked for two minutes.
Lots of you have written and phoned and emailed to ask how Max is doing and whether he's managed to stick to his resolution.
Ah, I really want to cigarette.
Yeah, about that. We'll get to it in a few minutes.
Today we're going to talk about Max's story and three interventions I suggested to help
him quit smoking.
You can apply these ideas in your own life, whether that's giving up smoking or that three
latte a day Starbucks habit.
When Max decided to quit, he and I sat down to chat.
I asked him how he became a smoker and what cigarettes meant to him.
So you told me that you started smoking when you were 14 or 15 years old.
That seems shockingly young to me.
It seems shockingly young to me too.
I should say the first cigarette I actually smoked, I was 10 years old, it was Christmas
and my aunt smoked so they would be on the back patio,
shivering outside, and I'm like, I wonder what it's like to smoke a cigarette.
My dad was like, sure, go ahead, join Aunt Doe and cousin Jenny and have a cigarette.
And so I went outside and I had a cigarette, and I think his hope was that I would just
vomit or just get so sick that I would never do it again because you never, you know, he never touched cigarettes.
But, you know, I never did and I, you know, I didn't really have an effect.
Um, I like you.
I did like it.
I did like it.
I thought I liked it.
I mean, I liked, you know, being there like with my family outside smoking.
I felt, um, kind of cool.
And, and all the other cousins who are my age were kind of like peering out of the patio
behind the glass door, the safety of the non-smoking kitchen, kitchen-knook, and just
like what is Max doing? And there was in my coat huddling with the other
ostracized family member smokers. What did your mom say about this? My mom I
think rolled her eyes and she was like,
I can't believe your dad said this was okay,
but I hope you vomit too.
But, as Max said, he didn't vomit.
In fact, he liked smoking.
A few years later, when he was a freshman in high school,
he asked an older friend to buy him a pack of cigarettes.
He began smoking regularly.
I used to take the dog on walks, and that was like my smoke break.
And so I think, you know, starting around age, you know,
14, that dog got so many walks a day,
or like, it got increasingly more exercise
as the years went on.
So a scientist would say,
there was an inverse relationship
between the dog's health and your health. Correct. So I scientist would say there was an inverse relationship between the dog's health
and your health. Correct. Yes, I think that's an app description. As he's gotten older, Max says he's
become aware of the stigma around smoking. It didn't stop him, but it did make him think twice
about telling friends and co-workers about his habit. I don't think it makes me cooler or more
interesting, and generally I think when I first meet people
I'm not afraid of being judged, but it's just something that's like
Yeah, it's not something I just want to share right off the bat
But if there's a social stigma to smoking there are also social benefits
One thing Max and I discussed was the Smokers Club that forms outside of offices and libraries
You see
the same people congregating every day, chatting as they smoke. I mean, that's very profound,
psychologically speaking. If you're constantly meeting people only at the times that you're
doing something that you enjoy, those are people you're going to associate in a Pavlovian
fashion with the thing that you enjoy. you're gonna be forming friendships with them,
and now the friendships keep you in that world.
Yeah, I think it's same with activities.
I mean, the more you smoke, the better life gets,
and I mean, smoking and television,
smoking and eating breakfast, smoking and eating ice cream.
But I think that's true with people that there is like,
this shared bond where you're out on the break.
Right, the pleasure center is being activated and while you're talking, so you probably
think the conversation is better.
I think it's the same as when people go out to the bar to happy hour together and they
have drinks.
There's this bond that's formed that's, that just wouldn't be formed at work around the
water cooler in a way.
There are other clubs you get to join when you're a smoker,
but of course, smokers like Max tend not to think of those clubs when they're smoking.
With smoking, I associate myself with the film noir,
the cigarette after dinner, the social smoking,
but not the emphysema or lung cancer or oxygen mask part of the game, if you will.
So that's the interesting thing, of course. And you know all the social science literature
on this, which is that the pleasure and the social camaraderie and the friendships
are real and immediate, and the potential costs are delayed and distant. And there's just
six warehouses filled with psych studies that basically
show that when you set up the incentives this way so that the short term incentives are
positive and gratifying and the long term incentives are horrible, people will ignore the long
term and focus on the short term.
Yeah, I think there's never a good day to quit smoking, right?
You know, there's the part of yourself that wants to wake up at six o'clock
in the morning. And so you set the alarm clock. The you at six o'clock in the morning presses
the snooze button 20 times until it's eight o'clock and then you're rushing to work and
you're late. And you know, there's the part of myself at night who says, okay, tomorrow
I'm going to stop smoking. And then you wake up and you have one and then you're like, well, if I had one
I'm not going to go the rest of the day without without smoking and so it's easy to
weigh the long-term benefits of smoking when you're not craving a cigarette.
An old smoker's joke says quitting is easy. Adonate lots of times.
Knowing that most people who quit go back to smoking, I suggested that Max do three things
to help him stick to his resolution.
All were ideas drawn from social science research.
First, I asked him to put the money he was spending on smoking, about six bucks a day,
into a savings account.
If he succeeded in quitting at the end of the year, he would be able to go on a
nice vacation. But if he started smoking, he would have to donate the money to an organization he
did test. Now, I'm not going to identify it, but let's just say Max picked an organization that
does a lot of lobbying in Washington. Second, I asked him to reach out to a bunch of friends and
ask them to be there for him when he needed support. And finally, I asked him to reach out to a bunch of friends and ask them to be there for him when he needed support.
And finally, I asked him to record a public service announcement about why young people
should never start smoking.
The idea is that when you publicly declare you're against smoking, it makes it hard to start
smoking again.
It produces cognitive dissonance, makes you feel like a hypocrite.
We aired Max's public service announcement in January.
Here's an excerpt.
If you don't smoke, here's what you should know. When your smoker life is lived around
cigarettes. You'll be laughing with friends at dinner or totally engrossed in a good book,
and something will tug at you. And as much as you want to stay in this moment, you'll
be thinking about a cigarette. So you'll get up, walk outside, and light up. And it will
feel really good. But you'll wish you were back outside, and light up. And it will feel really good. But you'll
wish you were back inside, and you'll be so tired of training off these moments for
a smoke. If you don't smoke, you should know that smoking makes a prison out of perfectly
normal situations. Long flights, concerts, class, anything that lasts longer than a couple
of hours. These are your enemies as a smoker. And anytime you go on a date or to a job interview or to your grandparents house, it will
be accompanied by a pang of worry.
You'll wash your hands and pull your shirt to your nose, and I hope they can't smell
smoke.
We also asked something from all of you.
We asked that you call in with your own stories about how you managed to quit smoking.
We were absolutely overwhelmed and moved by your responses. So many of you wrote and called
with words of wisdom and encouragement. the resolutions podcast. And I was actually on the way home from my dad having surgery
on his lungs for lung cancer.
So I just wanted to wish Max good luck.
And hopefully he's able to quit.
And this isn't him in 50 years.
My dad is 74, so.
There's no need to badmouth the old self,
but best to nurture the new direction with
as many creative ways as you can come up with.
I have no doubt you will succeed.
It's been 28 years since the day I quit.
The thing that really helped me was not to focus on the whole project but on the steps.
For instance, I kept repeating to me every time I had the urge of going out
and smoking the cigarette. Well, this one you're not going to smoke it. So, I mean, I just
concentrate my attention and my power on the single cigarette that I was craving. And
that way, cigarette by cigarette, I successfully quit it.
I threw out my cigarettes and in that moment I decided that not only was I going to quit smoking,
but that I would become a non-smoker right then.
And from then on, every time I would want a cigarette, I would ask myself why in the world a non-smoker would want to cigarette.
Go to the places where you usually buy cigarettes and introduce yourself to the person behind
the counter and just let them know that you're trying to stop smoking.
You don't have to tell them not to sell you cigarettes or anything like that, but just
say to them that you're trying to stop smoking.
It's going to be really hard for you to then go back there and buy cigarettes.
We're gonna take a break now. When we come back, we're gonna hear from Max. He kept an audio diary as he went along to document his triumphs and setbacks.
It's like this mental obsession, so you're kind of like,
oh, should I have a granola bar, no one has cigarette.
Should I go for a walk, no, I won't have a cigarette.
Stay with us.
Quitting smoking is kind of like a really bad breakup.
At first, I'm okay.
I feel relieved.
Happy even, that I finally did it.
This isn't so bad.
I go to bed that night looking forward to waking up the next day as a new person.
Tomorrow is January 1st, 2016.
It's going to be the first day of the rest of my so much better life.
Of course, the first thing I think about when I wake up is a cigarette.
I plan to go downstairs and pour myself a cup of coffee, bundle up in my winter coat,
and have the first cigarette of the day, which is, as any smoker will tell you, the best
cigarette of the day.
Then I remember what I'd done. Said I would quit smoking.
And I do not stop remembering it. I started keeping an audio diary. Here's a clip. It's
just, it's like this mental obsession. So you're kind of like, oh, should I have a granola
bar? No, I want to have a cigarette. Should I go for a walk? No, I want to have a cigarette.
Should I watch movie? No, I want to have a cigarette.
So that's, it's just like the obsession,
it's all you want, and that's all you can think about.
I think back to the early days of the romance.
When I would get lightheaded, tingling my fingers,
and just feel giddy.
I started smoking around the time I realized I was gay.
I went to high school in suburban Colorado with a champion football team, and well, by the
time I started smoking at 14, I needed it.
Sometimes I would inhale as much as I could, close my eyes, and just let my head buzz while
I held in the smoke.
The withdrawal feels like just the opposite. I'm sad and frustrated. My headaches,
my muscles tighten up, my thoughts are foggy. I'm acutely aware that there's suffering in the world.
When you're having a craving, you just, you don't think that you're ever gonna feel differently, or half felt differently.
I try to embrace it.
A craving comes and I just lean into it.
You have to love the burn almost.
You know what I mean?
Like you, it sucks, it hurts, and you just kind of lean into it.
And you're like, yeah, this is what quitting feels like.
And yeah, so I'm loving the burn right now.
Loving hating the burn right now.
I'm chewing sugar-free gum and drinking salsa water.
These are my sad romance song and cinnamon bun equivalents.
I bask in the pain and let my mind do what it wants to do.
Think about how much it sucks to not have a cigarette.
Then I think about something I
heard about Buffalo. That when Buffalo see a storm coming they walk towards it
rather than away from it because they know they'll get through it faster. I am
the Buffalo. It's like three minutes away from being 40 hours so it's at the end
of day two. There were some dark moments today. I don't know if I can take another day of this.
I think about the money I've saved on cigarettes that I'd have to donate to that horrible organization
if I smoked. It's actually only $13. I think if I'm going to relapse, I should do it now
while they're so little at stake. Then I think about having to say I failed on this podcast. I Google quitting smoking
timeline. After 20 minutes, your blood pressure and heart rate will return to normal. After 12
hours, blood oxygen level has increased to normal. 48 hours, damaged nerve endings start to regrow
and anger and irritability have peaked. 72 hours, entire body is free of nicotine, number of cravings have peaked,
lung function is improving.
I make it today 3, I go for a run, and I'm surprised at how much my lungs have already recovered.
The cravings come less frequently, just like the quitting smoking websites promise they
will. I'm nearly 3 weeks in a quitting smoking now.
It's day 20 and the most amazing thing happens.
I woke up and I drank a glass of orange juice.
I took a shower, I got dressed, I packed my bag for work and you know as about to head
out, I realized that I hadn't thought about a cigarette the entire morning.
I'd literally gone through my entire routine without one thinking about a cigarette, and
of course, then I was thinking about a cigarette.
But it was incredible because for me, by that time, I would have already had a cigarette
and would have been planning to have my next one right as I walked out the door.
I've made it this far before.
I quit for about six months when I was 18 and last year I
quit for 10 months so this isn't even the longest I've gone without smoking. I Google
how many people successfully quit smoking. It says 90% of smokers who try to quit relapse
in the first year. The last time I quit I relapse on a black and mild, one of those 60 cents
of guards they sell at gas stations. I think I've only smoked one other black and mild, one of those 60 cents a gars they sell at gas stations.
I think I've only smoked one other black and mild in my life, when I was 16 at a house party.
I bought it because they're strong, and you can buy one at a time.
I thought if I could just have one really strong cigarette, it'd be enough to last me the rest of my life.
The next day, I bought a pack of camel lights. This time, I noticed a way from black and miles.
It's been about a month since I quit smoking, and I'm walking home from work.
It's cold, but sunny, I'm happy.
I see a guy about my age step out of his office and start walking in front of me.
He reaches into his coat pocket and puts a cigarette
to his mouth.
Then he reaches into his other pocket,
and I see him do that familiar pause
to light up before he starts walking again.
The smoke drifts back to me, and I'm just jealous
that he's not doing a radio story about quitting smoking.
He reminds me of how much I miss the ritual
of the afterwork cigarette.
I've had a bunch of cravings like this. So I've had to call my friend Larry Hanson and Minneapolis.
He's a former smoker and one of the support people or shunkers suggested I line up before quitting.
It's like, I don't know. I wish I could smoke without any of the consequences. But that's magical thinking, Max. Don't even go there.
Yeah, don't even go there. I mean, that's foolish.
We can't do it. It's not in the stars for us.
I couldn't light up a cigarette and just say,
oh, I'll have a cigarette and I won't have another one for six months or something like that.
It wouldn't work that way for me, you know, I'm sure.
And I don't want to even experiment and you know,
say, oh, would that really happen?
You know, no, I don't care.
I'm not gonna try.
I asked Larry if it was hard for him to quit.
You know, I told you how I had tried to quit and I would go by cigarettes and then smoke
one and then flush them down the toilet.
And then I tried the various things.
They tried tapering off and then I tried going to smoke low, whatever those, you know,
they were supposed to be like, I don't know, diet cigarettes or something like that.
Then I asked him what I've been most scared to ask him.
Does he still miss it?
Well, I mean, I feel great now.
I mean, I'm 72 years old and I haven't smoked for more than 30 years.
And I know, if I were still smoking now, it would, well, I just, I can't imagine it.
But to answer your question, did, do I miss it?
I don't really, you know?
And you know, when I was in Vienna back in November,
they still allow smoking in some cafes there.
As soon as you walked in the door of the place,
it wreaked of smoke.
And it's just not a pleasant kind of experience.
And maybe that was a line that I crossed when I used to get a whiff of cigarette smoke and
there would be this paying of remorse.
Or, ooh, that smells good.
I wish I could have a cigarette right now.
And then I've passed that point now and I you know I just go oh what's that
smell it stinks you know yeah I have not reached that point yet when I smell
cigarette it still smells pretty good to me but I'm so grateful I don't have to
smoke anymore every time I run I'm grateful I don't smoke I'm grateful I don't
have to get up and leave my desk all the time I'm grateful I don't need a
cigarette when I feel stressed or or sad, or happy.
I used to smoke every couple hours, every hour on the weekends.
Last week, I looked up at the clock and couldn't believe how late it was.
That rarely happened to me as a smoker, but it happens to me all the time now.
It wasn't anything unusual, I cooked dinner with my roommate, we played a few games of
cribbage, and we were laughing about something or other as I ate my nightly bowl of cereal.
Before, each of these moments were bookended by a cigarette. Now, I'm just here, present.
It's been 186 days without a cigarette, but I'm by no means out of the woods.
I thought I'd be able to say, I quit cigarette, but I'm by no means out of the woods.
I thought I'd be able to say, I quit smoking, but I realize it's not something I get to say yet.
I just get to say, I'm not smoking today.
But I think one day I'll get to the point where I can go to a beautiful place like Vienna
full of outdoor cafes with strong espresso and ash trays at every table.
And think, those cigarettes, they just stink.
As I listen to Max, I realized one really hard thing about giving up smoking is that you don't
get to declare victory. You don't get to say, okay, I'm done. The victory is always provisional.
But recently, I was speaking with Tom Frieden, who heads the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, the CDC.
I told him about Max.
Tom told me that getting to 6 months is huge.
Turns out, every day you stay off smoking makes it less likely you'll ever go back.
The longer you quit, the longer you quit.
Max had one big source of inspiration these last six months that he isn't going to have
going forward.
That's you.
Max knew we were going to put together this podcast six months after he stopped smoking
and he knew lots of you were waiting for it.
He didn't want to tell you he'd failed.
On the plus side, he's now put away more than a thousand dollars in that
savings account, and he's going to donate all that money to that evil organization if
he goes back to smoking. They're going to do terrible things with the money max, awful
things. Don't let them do it. If you want to help Max, follow him on Twitter at Max Nestrak.
He's agreed that if he ever goes back to smoking,
he'll announce it the same day publicly on Twitter.
I know you'll have his back.
This episode of Hidden Brain was produced by Maggie Pennman and Max Nestrak.
It was edited by Michael May and Jenny Schmitt.
Our staff also includes Karamagar Galasin and Chris Benderf.
You can find us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and listen to my stories on your local public
radio station. If you liked this episode, please consider giving us a review on iTunes or
any other podcast platform. It will help other people find the show.
I'm Shankar Vedanthan and this is NPR.
I'm Shankar Vedantin and this is MPR.