I was a smoker for about 13 years.
What I wanted to say is that exercising and serious water consumption not only kept weight off me while quitting smoking: it also reduced the cravings and made the withdrawal symptoms much easier to deal with. I actually *lost* 10 lbs when i quit. Sometimes people go inot quitting smoking with the mindset that oh, gaining weight is inevitable, can't be helped, may as well eat up and make myself feel better about the withdrawals. Well I say Bull**** to that noise.
In fact, that weight gain belief is what kept me from quitting for many years- and I didn't realize that it was also ultimately keeping the weight *on*. Here's why. We tell ourselves, "I'm already overweight. If i quit smoking i'll be even more so, because quitting makes people gain weight." We use this to rationalize keeping ourselves in that comfort zone, and there is a lot of rationalization and junkie thinking when it comes to smoking cessation.
The truth is, unless you put those smokes down, you won't have the energy or oxygen to work out properly. Working out is actually painful when you're not getting enough oxygen, and a painful workout is a surefire way to get fed up and stop working out.
People put on weight when they quit smoking because 1) society tells them that's what they can expect 2) they eat more than normal, and often less healthy foods than normal, because they are trying to sooth the withdrawals. Both these factors are completely under the control of the individual.
The way i did it was thus: The first thing was to start smoking ultra lights. Then I got myself down to only about half a pack of those a day. Then I quit cold turkey. The first day i spent just drinking as much water as possible and reading inspirational junk from smoking cessation websites. I took tylenol to combat the aches. I went to bed super early. The next day, I made myself walk like 2 miles, and also drank as much water as I could stomach. The next day I did aerobics, ditto the water. I did stuff like this the first week, as much water as possible, avoiding caffeine, sugar, etc. Then i began to cough up brown stuff. Once that was all out, I was feeling super good and stepped up my workouts.
You'd be amazed at how much farther you can go on a workout when you can actually breathe normally. You don't know how much air you are missing until you get it back again.
Good luck!
