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Construction Worker Quits Smoking with Nicotine Gum on the Job

11 min read Updated March 28, 2026

Construction Worker Quits Smoking with Nicotine Gum on the Job

On a construction site, everybody smokes. That’s an exaggeration, but not by much. On my crew, out of fourteen guys, eleven smoked. The other three dipped. Nobody was nicotine-free. Nobody. It’s the culture. It has been for as long as I’ve been doing this work, and I’ve been doing it for 27 years.

My name is Chuck Moreno. I’m 49 years old. I’m a construction foreman in Albuquerque, New Mexico. I’ve been in the trade since I was 22, starting as a laborer and working my way up. I’ve built houses, schools, strip malls, and a stretch of highway overpass on I-25 that I drive under every morning and still feel proud about.

I’ve also smoked since I was 20. Pall Mall reds, then Camel filters, then whatever was on sale at the Allsup’s on Central. Nearly 30 years of it. Quit ten months ago using nicotine gum, and I still can’t quite believe it stuck.

Smoke Breaks Are Sacred on a Job Site

You have to understand what smoking means on a construction site. It’s not just a habit. It’s a social institution. The smoke break is when the crew talks. It’s when you find out whose kid made the baseball team, who’s having trouble with their wife, who’s thinking about leaving for a different contractor. It’s where problems get solved and grudges get aired and jokes get told. You step away from the noise and the dust, you light up, and you have a human moment.

I’ve been part of that circle for decades. Morning break, lunch, afternoon break. Three times a day minimum, plus the before-work cigarette in the truck and the after-work cigarette in the truck and the evening cigarettes at home. By the time I hit my 40s, I was at about a pack and a half a day. Sometimes two packs if the day was particularly brutal or we were behind schedule.

My crew knows me with a cigarette. It’s part of who I am to them. Chuck with the hard hat and the Camel. Chuck who always has a lighter. Chuck who can smoke in 40-mile-an-hour wind and somehow keep the cherry lit.

So when I decided to quit, I wasn’t just giving up a habit. I was stepping out of a social structure that had defined my workdays for almost three decades. That part was harder than the nicotine withdrawal, and the nicotine withdrawal was no joke.

Why I Quit

Honestly? Money. I know that sounds unromantic. People expect you to say it was a health scare or a grandchild or some moment of spiritual clarity. For me, it was math.

In the spring of 2025, cigarette prices in New Mexico hit a point where I couldn’t ignore it anymore. I was paying about $9 a pack for Camels. At a pack and a half a day, that’s $13.50 a day. That’s about $405 a month. Close to $5,000 a year.

I sat down one Sunday with a calculator and a beer and ran the numbers. Five thousand dollars a year on cigarettes. I’d been smoking for nearly 30 years. Even accounting for cheaper prices in the early years, I’d probably spent somewhere north of $100,000 on tobacco in my lifetime. A hundred grand, burned and inhaled. I could have bought a decent truck with that. I could have put a down payment on a house. I could have done a lot of things.

My wife, Linda, had been asking me to quit for years. My doctor had been telling me to quit for years. My knees hurt, my back hurt, and my lungs were starting to join the chorus. I’d wake up coughing every morning, this deep, rattling hack that would last a good five minutes. Linda would lie in bed next to me and not say anything, but I could feel her worrying.

The money was what tipped it. I’m a practical person. I run a crew. I manage budgets and timelines and material costs. When the numbers don’t work, you make changes. The numbers on smoking didn’t work anymore.

Choosing the Gum

I didn’t want patches because I sweat too much on the job. Albuquerque in the summer is over 90 degrees and we’re out in it all day. Patches peel off when you sweat. I’d heard guys complain about it. Plus, I wanted something I could control. A patch gives you a steady dose and you can’t adjust it. The gum lets you respond to the craving when it happens. Chew a piece when you need it, skip it when you don’t.

I went to the Walmart on Coors Boulevard and looked at the options. The Nicorette brand was about $50 for 100 pieces of the 4mg. The Walmart Equate brand, same dose, same mint coating, was $24.97 for 100 pieces. Half the price. I bought the Equate. I’m a foreman, not an idiot. If the active ingredient is the same and it costs half as much, you buy the cheap one. Same logic I use when buying PVC fittings.

I grabbed two boxes. Two hundred pieces. That felt like enough to start.

My quit date was May 5, 2025. Cinco de Mayo. Linda joked that I was giving myself a present. I told her the present was the $400 I wasn’t going to spend on cigarettes that month.

Day One on the Job Site

The first morning was surreal. I drove to the site, a new housing development on the west side near the volcanoes, and parked my truck. Normally I’d sit in the cab for five minutes and smoke one before heading in. Instead, I unwrapped a piece of the Equate gum and chewed it.

The taste was sharp and peppery at first. I’d read the instructions on the box the night before and watched a YouTube video about the park-and-chew method. You’re supposed to chew slowly, a few times, until you feel the tingle or taste the nicotine, then park it between your cheek and gum. Let it absorb. Don’t chew it constantly. Most people mess that up and end up swallowing too much nicotine and feeling nauseous. I was determined to do it right.

The gum worked, sort of. It didn’t feel like a cigarette. Nothing does. But it dulled the edge of the craving enough that I could function. I walked onto the site, did my morning walkthrough, talked to the sub crews, checked the schedule. Normal morning stuff. My hands felt empty without a cigarette, so I carried a pencil in my fingers more than usual. The guys probably thought I was being extra diligent about markups. Really I just needed to hold something.

Morning break hit and the crew gathered at the usual spot, a stack of lumber in the shade of the unfinished building. Eleven guys lighting up. The sound of lighters clicking, the smell of fresh cigarette smoke in the dry desert air. My whole body wanted one.

I chewed my gum harder and stood there with them. I didn’t leave the circle. I think that was important. If I’d walked away, if I’d separated myself, I would have felt isolated and the cravings would have been worse. So I stood there and listened to Diego talk about his daughter’s quinceaƱera plans and I chewed my Equate mint and I survived.

Miguel, one of my crew leads, noticed. ā€œWhere’s your smoke, Chuck?ā€

ā€œQuit,ā€ I said.

The reaction was exactly what you’d expect from a construction crew. Laughter. Disbelief. A few jokes.

ā€œFor how long, an hour?ā€

ā€œTwenty bucks says he’s back by lunch.ā€

ā€œWho are you and what did you do with Chuck?ā€

I took it. You have to be able to take it on a site. If you show weakness, they eat you alive, but it’s affectionate. They give you grief because they care, in their rough, sideways way.

By lunch, I hadn’t smoked. Miguel handed me a five-dollar bill. ā€œI bet Tommy you’d make it to lunch,ā€ he said. ā€œKeep going and I’ll split the winnings.ā€

The Social Problem

The hardest part wasn’t the cravings. The gum managed those well enough, especially if I timed it right and popped a piece a few minutes before the cravings typically peaked. The hardest part was the social element.

Smoke breaks are fifteen minutes of connection. Without a cigarette, I felt like I was attending a dinner party without eating. I was there, but I wasn’t participating in the same way. The ritual of lighting up, of inhaling and exhaling in rhythm with the guys around me, that was gone. I was just standing there chewing.

After about a week, it got better. The guys got used to seeing me with gum instead of a cigarette. A few of them started asking genuine questions. How’s the gum work? Does it actually taste like mint or is it gross? Is it expensive?

Eddie, who’s been on my crew for six years, bought a box himself two weeks after I started. He didn’t announce it. He just showed up one morning chewing gum instead of smoking and gave me a nod. We didn’t make a big deal about it. That’s how guys are.

By the end of the first month, Eddie and I were the non-smokers in the group. The other nine still smoked, but the teasing had stopped entirely. A couple of them seemed curious, almost wistful, like they were doing the same math I’d done and coming to the same conclusions.

The Money I Saved

I kept a running count. Not on a spreadsheet or anything fancy. Just a note in my phone. Every day I didn’t smoke, I’d add $13.50, which was my average daily cost. Every time I bought gum, I’d subtract it.

Month one: saved about $350 after gum costs. The gum was maybe $50 that month because I was chewing a lot, 10 to 12 pieces a day.

Month two: saved about $370. Down to 7 or 8 pieces a day.

Month three: saved about $385. Down to 5 or 6 pieces a day. Buying one box of Equate a month.

After six months, I’d saved over $2,200. Linda and I took the kids, all three of them, they’re 16, 19, and 22 but they’re still my kids, to Red Lobster for a nice dinner. I paid with cash, which I never do, and told them it was cigarette money. My youngest, Sofia, asked if she could have all my future cigarette money. I told her she could have some of it.

The yearly math is staggering when you look at it. If I stay quit, I’ll save about $4,500 a year even accounting for the gum. Over ten years, that’s $45,000. I told the guys at work that number and the ones who were on the fence about quitting got a little more interested.

Chewing on the Job

One unexpected advantage of the gum is that I can use it while working. You can’t smoke while you’re operating equipment or up on scaffolding or in a confined space. But you can chew gum anywhere. I started popping a piece before tasks that used to be preceded by a cigarette. Before climbing. Before operating the track loader. Before walking a site with the general contractor.

The gum became part of my work flow. Hard hat, safety vest, steel toes, piece of gum. It sounds silly but it helped. I wasn’t stepping away from work to satisfy a craving. I was satisfying the craving while working. My productivity went up, which I noticed and my superintendent noticed. Less time walking to the smoking spot, more time on task. On a site where time is money, that matters.

I also noticed my endurance improved. Construction is physical. By month three of not smoking, I could move through a full day without the afternoon fatigue that used to hit me around 2 PM. My morning cough faded. My breathing during physical exertion was easier. I could climb two flights of scaffold stairs without stopping to catch my breath at the top.

These aren’t dramatic changes. Nobody’s going to make a movie about a 49-year-old foreman being slightly less winded on the stairs. But when it’s your body and your lungs and your life, it feels significant.

Ten Months In

I’m ten months smoke-free. I still use the gum, Equate mint 4mg, usually 2 or 3 pieces a day. I’ve thought about stepping down to the 2mg but honestly, the 4mg is working and I’m in no rush to change what’s working.

Eddie is still quit too. Seven months for him. We don’t talk about it much at work, but sometimes during break, while the other guys are smoking, we’ll exchange a look. A small nod. It’s enough.

Two more guys on the crew, Tommy and Raul, have started asking me where I buy the gum. I told them Walmart, Equate brand, mint flavor. I didn’t push it. On a construction site, you don’t push. You do your thing and if it works, people notice, and when they’re ready, they ask.

Linda is happy. She doesn’t say it in a dramatic way. She just stopped worrying. I can see it in the way she relaxes when I come home. She’s not bracing for the smell. She’s not mentally calculating how many I smoked that day. She just hands me a plate and asks how work was.

My doctor did a full workup at my last visit and said my blood pressure is down, my oxygen levels are better, and my lung function has improved slightly. He said ā€œslightlyā€ like it was a small thing, but for a 49-year-old who smoked for nearly 30 years, any improvement is a win.

What I’d Tell Other Tradesmen

If you work construction or any trade where smoking is the norm, I know what you’re up against. It’s not just the nicotine. It’s the culture. It’s the guys. It’s the break ritual that’s been the same since your first day on a site. Walking away from that feels like walking away from the crew.

You don’t have to walk away from the crew. You just walk away from the cigarette. Buy the generic gum from Walmart. Equate brand, mint, 4mg if you’re a heavy smoker. It costs $25 for a hundred pieces. That’s a few days of work on a site versus a few days of cigarettes. You’ll save money the first week.

Chew it during the smoke break. Stay in the circle. Take the grief from the guys because it will come. And then watch their faces change when you’re still chewing gum a month later and they’re still coughing every morning and doing the same math you already did.

The math always wins. I’m a foreman. I know budgets. Smoking doesn’t make financial sense and it never did. I just took 30 years to run the numbers.