Hope you don't mind this in your thread, OP. =)
I never had the willpower to stay off drugs for long, I had to rely on bipolar meds, bupre, weed and total seclusion for over a year while I worked on it in tiny steps and began to regain some basics aspects of 'normal' life (but it has worked). It looks like the same goes for smoking, I need to create alternate ways of coping without it and not just try a medication or replacement alone.
Recently started a Paleo diet and exercising to speed up the after-shittyness of long-term opioid dependency and thus be able to stay off. The feeling I get in my throat after 5 minutes of working out is a nice reminder of how bad smoke is, the idea of smoking sickens me afterwards. When clean air hurts your throat, alarm bells should ring. Despite being told on numerous occasions I had no idea how much the 'high' of exercise improves both mood and mental well-being (sedentary lifestyle for years) and I might be able to abuse my own addictive personality here with the natural endorphines. Or maybe not, but it would be funny. In any case I'm sure the key to finishing this whole lifestyle change is a combination of many such factors and being aware of my weaknesses instead of an instant cure.
Cigarettes kill me slowly and surely, opioids don't let me live life in the first place. Both need to go. Perhaps it's cowardly to put it off but in the last 14 months I've made a lot of progress changing my drug life (no more alcohol, benzos, full opioid agonists, meth and random poly use) and still occasionally I get a craving for a something, usually when I associate it with an activity or memory. Smoking I associate with everything from taking a shit to finishing a meal. Based on this recent experience it becomes clear I can only quit when I have the mental fortitude and other needed supports to succeed than fail n+1 more times for the same reasons as every other time before. Otherwise it's just banging my head against the same wall and wondering why I keep failing. Isn't that the definition of madness? =)
I'm lucky to have an open minded psychiatrist who gave me the bupre in the first place and now even l-DOPA on my request just to see if it helps with staying off (I figured it's more efficient than l-tyrosine). I guess he trusts my recent results as he watched me dive to the bottom repeatedly for 12 years since I first met him and nothing like this has lasted long since. Pretty sure he will prescribe what is needed for smoking as well. Seeing him next when I am completely off the bupre so I'll look into the variety of options presented here. And I have you guys at BL to complain to when it gets hard
I wonder what effect l-DOPA would have on cigarette cravings, isn't addiction in general based on the dopamine reward system? There's a few week/month period very soon when I'll be on it. Cigarettes are next in line regardless, doesn't matter if anyone understands the reasoning behind the priority.
Anyways thanks for the support and info. Recent effects of brain chemistry returning to normal produce verbose posts so I'll move on before I crash the internets. =)