Got back to my COP where everyone smokes or dips.....and gave in 
Definately cut way back from what I was at...trying the wheening method.
(Use a bit of Obama here)
Let me be clear...my life is more stressful then yours might ever be and I've been smoking a pack a day for a long time...and all the people I work with can actually buy cigs legally kid
Heh. Buddy of mine was a crew chief. He was trying to quit, after 4 days at work, one of the guys on his crew walked up to him and held out a pack of smokes and just said, 'Please take them.'
I've only quit twice in my life. I've been off them for almost 2 years now.
What worked for me was straight out cold turkey. The first time, I quit on a Thursday, toughed it out Friday and locked myself in my house and avoided all human contact all weekend. After that, it got better and I was able to function. A month later my girlfriend moved in who smoked, and 3 days later I was back at it.
The second time, I got pneumonia and was pretty much in bed for a week. It was one of maybe 2 times in my life I'd been too sick to want a cig. After the week was up, the wife and I figured 'If I've made it this long, why not keep on?' so I did.
Tyrannis's other stuff aside, the initial comment about not feeling 'cravings' when he doesn't have a smoke does occasionally happen. My dad has smoked all his life, he was 2 pack a day when I was a kid. He can have a pack around, and pretty much pick them up and put them down at will, with little to no discomfort. I don't understand how he does it, but that's the way he operates. If I bought a pack, it would be gone in a day and I'd be buying another tomorrow. But, everybody's different.
IMO cutting down just prolongs the agony, but I also think quitting is different for everybody. I seem to get over the chemical addiction quickly, it's the habitual things and psychological addiction that get me.
Good luck with it, the one other thing I'll say is IMO you've got to want to quit, it's not going to work if you're doing it because you feel you should, or that it's the smart thing to do. You've got to want to.
Wiley.