2006: The Year I Quit Smoking but Die from Repeated Stabs to the Chest…Via a Spork.
The other day as I was sitting on my couch looking for the remote, I realized the exercise of pivoting my head from the left to the right had caused me to be short of breath. It was then I decided a couple of things.
I’m going to quit smoking this year. I’ll keep quitting until I actually quit, really. I’ll quit everyday.
I need to start running again. I think I am as large as I have ever been. And that is large. And I don’t feel good about it either. Like, I’m not a happy fat person. In other words, I am fat but not jolly…which is surely some type of metaphysical injustice.
So since the other day, I have quit smoking at least four times. The longest I have made it without smoking is 41 hours, which is pretty good. But, I was so irritable I found myself going to fast food drive-thrus (note the fast food spelling of through) and trying to pick fights.
KFC told me they didn’t have sweet tea, which I knew to be a damn lie. A restaurant frequented by fat southerners such as myself allows itself to run out of sweet tea? Not likely. Something in all that was fishy, and I said as much. This is how I remember it going down:
Doom: “And I need a medium (note the restraint) sweet tea.”
KFC Drive-thru voice: “I’m sorry but we are out of sweet tea. Would you like a Coke?”
Doom (who hadn’t inhaled sweet, sweet nicotine in a day-and-a-half): “I’ll wait while you sweeten the unsweet tea.”
KFC: “I’m sorry, but we can’t do that. Would you like a Sprite?”
Doom: “Can’t or won’t? Had I wanted a Sprite, I would have ordered it, and doubtlessly you would have told me you were out of that too. I am not playing games here. I see the game of intrigue and deception you are playing, KFC voice, and I find myself tempted, even now to drive up and speak to you about this matter face-to-face.”
KFC: “But I haven’t given you the total. Hold on for a total.”
Doom: “If you think I will be bound by your ancient drive-thru etiquette and superstition, then you are even thicker than I would have judged you for.”
KFC: “Pull forward.”
(I pull forward only to find a man or a woman dressed in KFC attire, still can’t be sure as to the gender, wielding a spork in a menacing way)
KFC: “Be rude again, and you will die from repeated stabs to the chest via the spork that now points at your heart.”
Doom: (Paying my money, and carefully taking my food from the KFC Voice) “Perhaps I was a bit hasty in my judgements and my speech.”
KFC: (handing me a Sprite) It’s ok, have a nice night.
Doom: (looking coldly into the KFC Voice’s eyes and emptying the Sprite onto the ground) “If I knew for certain that you were man, I would challenge you to a round of fistacuffs near the dumpster. But since science still has limitations, and your gender…nay species won’t be determined any time soon, I’ll leave you with an admonishment. Bojangles never runs out of tea. Sweet or otherwise. Now, I bid you goodnight.” (Driving away while feeling in my ashtray for a longerish ciggarette butt)
Well I may have imbellished the dialogue a little bit, but this is about how I remember the whole thing going down.

Good for you, Jamie.
I’m making the Year of the Dog the one in which I can simply be jolly, not fat and jolly.
Comment by John — January 26, 2006 @ 12:46 am
good on you jamie. i, as well, have decided that this is the year for smoking and fat to go away. i said id do it after my grad app was finished. i finished last night so i suppose i need to pick a date and start beating up minimum wage workers. maybe we can start a twelve step program thats vastly more interesting than the others.
Comment by shutty — January 26, 2006 @ 11:49 am
go to the doc and have him/her tell you he/she needs to take a biopsy of your lungs. that will help you quit! it worked for me and you know how stobborn i am about quitting ANYTHING. start eating sunflower seeds or snorting crack, that will help.
Comment by robb — January 28, 2006 @ 10:06 pm
That’s great! It’s always inspiring to see the support for people who wants to quit smoking. I have been an ex-smoker myself for 15 years. That is why I know exactly how it feels and also how to deal with the withdrawal symptoms and the psychological aspect of it.
I now publish a newsletter to help people quit smoking with ease without the discomfort of cravings.
It is at:
http://www.easyquitsmokingsecrets.com
Feel free to subscribe to it,
All the best to attaining a smoke-free life!
Comment by Tony James — April 3, 2006 @ 1:32 pm