Flamy Resources
Tips for cravings
Short, practical strategies for intense cravings, stress, routines, and common triggers.
Tips by quit-smoking situation
Choose a category when you want targeted help for a typical moment.
Motivation and why
Missing motivation
When motivation is missing: tips for guiding sentences, reasons, rewards, and routines that keep your smoke-free why visible.
6 matching tips
Stress and irritability
Irritability
Tips for irritability and stress while quitting: relaxation, movement, clear communication, and short routines against relapse pressure.
10 matching tips
Mood and reward
Low mood
Stay smoke-free despite low mood: small rewards, me-time, gratitude, conversations, and strategies against emotional dips.
9 matching tips
Cravings and weight
Increased appetite
Tips for food cravings after quitting: steady meals, snack alternatives, water rituals, and routines against snack autopilot.
13 matching tips
Energy and sleep
Fatigue and exhaustion
Practical tips for tiredness after quitting: sleep rhythm, power naps, light, movement, and new energy rituals.
25 matching tips
Acute cravings
Strong cravings
Fast strategies for strong cravings: breathing, replacement actions, and small routines that interrupt smoking autopilot.
13 matching tips
15 tips
Primary triggers
Break the coffee-cigarette routine
Matcha replaces the usual coffee-cigarette routine and creates a new ritual.
Acupressure against the afternoon slump
Acupressure can help briefly break an afternoon slump before you automatically reach for coffee or a cigarette.
Water ritual against the desire to smoke
Keeps your mouth and hands busy without activating the old smoking routine.
Refill smoke breaks
Give your break meaning again – without a cigarette.
Fresh air against tiredness and pressure
Fresh air combines light, exercise and a short change of location - without having to turn into a smoke break.
The apple trick for your mouth and hands
An apple engages the mouth, hands and senses at the same time and can interrupt typical smoking habits.
Chewing gum instead of cigarettes
Chewing gum can help keep your mouth and jaw busy if the craving is mostly habitual.
Defuse smoke situations before they start
If you plan typical triggers in advance, you don't have to make spontaneous decisions at the crucial moment.
Exercise against acute cravings to smoke
Just a few minutes of exercise can help the strongest part of the craving pass.
The 60-second rule for acute urges to smoke
Just 60 seconds can be enough to stop automatically reaching for a cigarette.
Liquorice root as a smoke-free mouth ritual
Licorice root can keep your mouth and hands busy and help replace typical smoking habits with a new ritual.
Power nap for new energy
A short power nap can give your body and head noticeably new energy.
Arm circles for new energy
Arm circles get your circulation going and can help break through fatigue in just a few minutes.
Mate tea as a new energy ritual
Mate tea can give you new energy and help replace old coffee-cigarette habits with a new ritual.
Yoga for irritability
Yoga can help to reduce inner tension and become calmer in stressful moments.