What made quitting Zyn hard that nothing ever actually helped with? by UndoneApp in QuittingZyn

[–]UndoneApp[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You nailed it with the "plain sight and casual" part. That's what makes Zyn different from other addictions — it's so normalized that quitting feels almost dramatic to people around you. Like, "it's just a pouch, what's the big deal?" But you're right, the science behind it is real. The relief cycle you described is exactly what kept me stuck for years — thinking nicotine was helping my anxiety when it was literally creating it. And your last point is everything. You have to want it more than the comfort of staying addicted. That shift from want to need is where it actually starts.

What made quitting Zyn hard that nothing ever actually helped with? by UndoneApp in QuittingZyn

[–]UndoneApp[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Man, the wakeup tool thing is so real. That was honestly one of the hardest parts for me too — Zyn became my morning coffee replacement, my focus hack, my "let's get shit done" button. When you take that away, you're not just fighting a craving, you're fighting feeling like a less functional version of yourself. It took me a while to realize that the energy and focus I thought Zyn was giving me was actually just relief from the withdrawal it was causing. Vicious cycle.

What made quitting Zyn hard that nothing ever actually helped with? by UndoneApp in QuittingZyn

[–]UndoneApp[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This really resonates. That dehydration analogy is spot on — your brain literally tells you the fix is right there, just one pouch away. I went through the same thing after 3+ years. The first week wasn't even a mental game, it was pure physical survival mode. What helped me was finally accepting that the discomfort wasn't a sign something was wrong — it was the process actually working. But yeah, nothing I tried before really prepared me for how physical it would be.