I've seen some posts lately by people who've stopped smoking. God bless you and more power to you! My dad died a slow agonizing death from lung cancer and the treatments for it. He smoked off and on for 50 years, always joked about how he could quit whenever he wanted to -- he had done it lots of times. I just wish my last memory of him didn't have to be the one of him gasping for breath, grabbing at the oxygen mask in the hospital because he couldn't breathe with it or without it. My mom did most of the home care, cleaning him up when he soiled himself, etc., etc. I wish we could have spared her all of that. I quit smoking myself when I got married 32 years ago, and have never regretted it for a minute. How can anyone be so selfish as to believe that their habit only affects themself?
My mother-inlaw Died of a heart attack before the lung cancer had time to spread. She never smoked but lived with a smoker for 40 years. I have never smoked, but both my Mother and Father smoked. I have spent many hours , years actually as a child inhaleing thick second hand smoke, Lucky Strike and Cammel's unfiltered (along with the Menthol ciggs that my grandmother smoked when she lived with us) 24/7. I used to dread going anywhere in the car in the winter time because it became a smoke filled chamber.
As an adult I have worked in offices with poor and no ventilation and smokers everywhere. I have been exposed to a lot of second hand smoke, as have many other non smokers. I quit bowling because I couldn't stand the air quality in the bowling alleys. Just because a person doesn't smoke themselves doesn't mean they haven't been a smoker.
My grand daughter's mother and father both smoke, therefore she has been smoking for the last ten years, since she was a baby. Will she get lung cancer? I hope not, but she will probably be a smoker for 18 years before she has a chance to quit, all without ever lighting up.
I think that people who tell these these stories about older people, my generation and older who have died of lung cancer without ever smoking should consider the fact than many of us, myself included have smoked for 30years or so without ever lighting up.
If I should happen to die of lung cancer people will be saying..."see the doctors are full of chit, I have known that dumb SOB all my life and he never smoked".........
WRONG, I smoked a lot for 18 years, and then cut back a little when I moved out of the house and was only exposed at the work place.
I had a heart attack and quadripple bypass surgery about ten years ago at 50. The doctors kept telling me I had to quit smoking. Every time I told them I didn't smoke they just rolled their eyes and said hmmmm
I have nothing against people smoking. It is a cruel and expensive addiction that they have allowed themselves to be caught up in and for many it is almost impossible to quit. I understand how addictions work and they are helpless to quit.
On the other hand I do believe that they have no right to poisen the air that other people are forced to breath any more than I have the right to take a dump in their drinking water supply. Neither action is acceptable.
I think the ultimate solution is to develop a filter that will electrically charge the smoke particals as they are inhaled at the same time placing a negative charge on the outside of the filter housing, causing 100% of the smoke particals to plate out and bond with the inside of the lungs, much like an electrostatic percipitator. This would result in zero emissions and the user would get 100% benefit of each cigarrette, they could probably then smoke only half as much and get the same satisfaction.....hmmm I see the problem with this already

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Phillip Morris sales would drop in half, the inventer would probably wrap chains around his ankles and throw himself in a lake......before he ever gets a chance to get the product to market....
It is true that Radon, asbestess and other agents can cause cancer also and many people have been exposed to it without even knowing. People in my generation and older did not know of these dangers untill after we were exposed. Hopefully younger generations will be smart enough to reduce the risk by reducing the exposure to the things that we now know are bad for us. These risks seem to compound the chances of getting disease at an expotential rate as the exposure to multiple carcinigens is increased.
O.K. I am getting off my soap box now, there are a lot of things out there that can get you, try to avoid the ones you can.
I was almost killed by a flying snake once but that is another story, but at least I am not the one responsible for getting him airborne in the first place.

