





Welcome to our 'Knitting for Quitting' page
On this page we aim to feature stories from people who have managed to give up smoking through knitting and to offer support for those of you who are trying to quit.
Click here to contact us with your story
Click here to read more about 'Knitting as Therapy'
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I came |
I saw |
I conquered |
It's not often we receive emails from male knitters, so we were delighted to hear that knitting had helped Derek give up smoking. (27.04.10)
"Once upon a time. I would smoke twenty cigarettes an hour. Not unusual for a Man in a papermill. Every time I tried to stop, "the devil would find work for idle hands". I found however that when I was engrossed in physical work such as repairing stuff, I would forget to have a fag. One day I watched my Mum knitting and had an idea. I knitted a really rubbish scarf. My workmates got a bit of length out of Me at first, but I'm the one with the pointy sticks! That was fifteen years ago. My favourite knitting is when a work colleague or their wife is pregnant. I knit a bonnet and jumper for them."
If hypnotherapy and acupuncture haven't helped you to give up smoking, take a leaf out of Denise Pettitt's book and take up crocheting (11.05.09)
"I
just wanted to add my story about giving up smoking. I
did it by crocheting! I found it easier to crochet a few trebles when
I would normally have had a cigarette and started a ‘granny’ blanket. I
had my last cigarette at 9pm Saturday 7th March 2009 as
I was going into hospital to have an operation on my leg.
At the beginning of 2008 I decided to take up some form of enjoyable exercise. As
I used to ice skate regularly when I was a teenager and enjoyed it I decided
this would be the one. 5 years previously I had broken my wrist but decided
that it was a freak accident and it would be unlikely to happen again. I
started skating and was doing fine – no major injuries just small lumps
and bumps! For my birthday in March I received skating lessons and was
progressing well working towards my grade 3 Skate UK certificate. After
the lesson on week 4 I was practising the moves ready for the exam in 2 weeks
time when I felt a bit wobbly. I stopped what I was doing but while standing
still, I dropped to the ice with my lower leg at 90 degrees to my upper leg! I
had somehow managed to shatter both the tibia and fibula of my right leg. I
had an operation to insert a 32cm ‘nail’ in the tibia and began the
healing process. By November, no bone had grown around the nail and the
break remained. It was decided that the nail would have to be removed and
the bones plated together to try and get the healing process restarted. There
was no real explanation as to why the bones did not grow back, the only thing
that may have contributed was the fact that I smoked 12 cigarettes a day. When
I broke my wrist I was smoking 20 a day and the break healed extremely well so
I wasn’t convinced that this was the case with my leg. Anyway, my
husband hated me smoking, I had tried about 7 times already to quit, including
hypnotherapy and acupuncture, without success. The longest I had gone smoke
free was 5-6 weeks. I decided that I had to quit smoking to give my leg
the best chance to heal following the surgery. By picking up my crocheting
each time I wanted a cigarette and doing a few trebles I have managed
to be smoke free now for 9 weeks and the leg appears to be healing well. It
is too early to tell if there is new bone growth just yet so fingers crossed!!
I learnt to crochet when I was about 12 years old but never really got on with
it. I knitted when I was expecting my children and for my nieces and nephews
but then stopped again. Now I have a knitting project and a crochet project
on the go at the same time and this definitely helped keep my hands busy and
away from the cigarettes!"
Knit To Quit (13.03.09)
No Smoking Day was 11th March 2009. In America people were also planning to give up.
Click here to read about one such story
"Five Top Tips To Help You Quit Smoking" (11.03.09)
Click here for the latest advice in The Daily Mirror about giving up - top of the list is taking up knitting!
Knitting To Quit (27.08.08)
We don't hear as much about knitting helping to stop smoking as we used to, so it was great to hear from Diane who has sucessfully given up smoking and taken up knitting.
"... you wanted to know if knitting helped in quitting smoking, well it helped me along with help from the Stop Smoking clinic at my GP surgery. It's two year ago now, you know the saying 'kill two birds with one stone' I was looking for a red cardigan to go with a dress I'd bought, without any success, so I decided to knit my own. Bought the wool, out came the needles & pattern (I choose one with cable), I think the cable needle became my substitute cigarette, a couple of weeks later I had my cardigan. "
Well done Diane!
Wolverhampton Express and Star: "Knitting No Drag For Julie" (10.06.08)
Click here to hear how Julie Molineux took up knitting to help give up smoking
Yarn Market News has provided the latest information about 'Knitting For Quitting' in Australia (13.08.07)
"Does knitting really help smokers kick the habit? This summer, two Aussie yarn shops put that theory to the test by instituting a Knit & Quit program conceived by Australian Country Spinners, owner of Patons and Cleckheaton. Since then, Queensland Health put the kibosh on starting a Knit & Quit in Brisbane, citing a lack of evidence as to its effectiveness, anecdotal testimonials from prior London- and New York-based groups notwithstanding. YMN checked in with Kristine Howard, marketing manager of Tapestry Craft in Sydney, to see how things went.
“We started out with 25 women—from twentysomethings to grandmothers—and probably had another half-dozen join in later. Most of the participants started smoking in school and had been trying to quit for years,” she says. “We never promised that learning to knit is the magic bullet for quitting. Our view is that it’s a complementary strategy, something to help people cope with the stress of giving up smoking.” Patons donated sticks, string and learn-to-knit guides. “Within the first 30 minutes of the first class,” Howard says, “they were trading stories about previous attempts to quit. People who were having success offered advice to those who were struggling. When someone had a setback, everyone commiserated and encouraged her to keep at it.”
About half of the group was composed of new knitters, though “nearly everyone rated herself as a beginner,” Howard says. “Some were happy to slog away on a garter-stitch scarf while others immediately moved on to hats, cushion covers and even jumpers. One of our teachers is an ex-smoker, and she’s been an invaluable source of inspiration and advice.” Several K&Qers are now taking regular classes at the shop and a few even asked Howard for job applications.
As to how many knitters met their goal, it’s difficult to say. “We’ve had varying levels of success,” says Howard. “The same night one participant announced she was 35 days’ free of cigarettes, another confessed she’d broken down and had one after a stressful day of work. We tried hard to make everyone feel valued and welcome. There was some drop-off in attendance, and my gut feeling is that some people started smoking again and felt ashamed to return to the group. I hope at least we were able to teach them a new skill and give them some support for their next attempt.” The first session ended in September; Tapestry Craft is continuing the program and has already offered spots in the sophomore class to those who were wait-listed for the premiere outing."
HealthDay News in America advise: "Kick the habit for Good and keep your hands busy with activities like knitting," written by Diana Kohnl
Click here to read more
If you've tried patches and been to hypnotherapy to give up smoking, consider taking up knitting as Ed Barrett did:
"I thought I would drop you a line to
explain how knitting has helped me. I am by nature a fidgeter when
sitting at my desk I jiggle my legs, making tea I practice
tap dance steps. I can't help it I just can't sit or stand
still. I also used to smoke, I think it was another means of
not standing still if I got fidgety I could always go outside
for a smoke. I was, however, determined to stop and having
tried patches and hypnotherapy nothing seemed to work. Then
I started knitting, it was not with the intention to use this
as an aid to stopping I just asked my partner to teach me as
I wanted something to do while watching the TV. Well I was
hooked and have been ever since. But what interested me most
was
that if I was knitting I was less inclined to go out for a
smoke. Just one more row became my mantra.
I did get outside help with quitting, I spent some time with an NLP practitioner, but in the end it came down to will power and knitting. I decided that I would put off having a cigarette by an hour each day. The first day it was Noon, the next was 1pm and so on. If I slipped, there was no telling off I just stuck to the hour I got to until I wanted to move on. I found knitting took my mind off wanting a cigarette running up to the hour that I could have one. I also didn't tell anyone I was giving up. I didn't need the pressure of other peoples expectations.
In conclusion I think that Knitting, at least for me, was a huge benefit in giving up."
'Knit to Quit' is a new group being run by Lambeth Primary Care Trust in London to help people stop smoking through knitting. This article written by Juliet Rix, appeared in The Guardian newspaper (01.02.06).
In
a cosy front room in Brixton, half a dozen people are sitting in front
of an open fire, knitting and chatting. It is no grannies' get-together
though, the average age is about 30. This is Knit to Quit, one of
a number of new stop smoking initiatives outside normal clinical settings
supported by Lambeth primary care trust (PCT) and the Centre for Public
Innovation.
"The knitting is not just a gimmick," says Rachel Heywood, who runs
the group from her home, helped by a small grant from the PCT, and was herself
on 40 a day until a few months ago. "It keeps your hands busy, and at the
end of an evening you have produced several inches of scarf rather than an ashtray
full of fag ends."
"I came for the knitting," admits Sandra, in her late 30s. "I
had no real intention of quitting."
In the event, she found Heywood - who had just reached four weeks without a
cigarette - so inspiring, and the straightforward and non-judgmental facts
provided by Julie Browne, the PCT's stop smoking counsellor, so compelling
that she gave up after the first meeting and has not smoked since.
"When I got a craving at home, I'd start knitting," she says. "I
couldn't have done it without the support of the group, though." Sandra
is sure she won't go back to smoking now: "The benefits are too great." Her
autistic son, who hated her smoking, now snuggles up to her in a way he never
used to and, she says: "I feel as though I've come out of a cloud - a cloud
of smoke, I suppose. I've started going to keep fit, which I would never have
done before."
The group, which started in the autumn, has been so successful that it is now
recruiting new members and starting a daytime session. Three new people have
arrived tonight. None are regular knitters, but they are already chatting away
over the tap of needles, casually discussing why they smoke and being offered
nicotine patches along with knitting patterns.
"Some people are too embarrassed to go their GP, or feel uncomfortable in
a clinical setting," says Browne. "This works because it is relaxed
and without pressure." More quit smoking groups are now being set up around
different activities including a mother and toddler group, a library, and a rock
climbing club."
BBC News (23.11.05)
Click here to read about 'The Knit to Quit' stop-smoking group in South London
Knitting (28.02.06)
Click here to read how one knitter replaced smoking with knitting
Review about Knitting (11.10.01)
Click here here to read 'An aid to give up smoking'
Click here to visit our 'Knitting as Therapy' page