Steve C
Platinum Member
Yep, a lot of doctors figure if you smoke, that's the cause of ALL your health problems, and if you don't smoke, then it's because you've overweight, and if you aren't overweight, then they have no idea what could be wrong.
Second hand smoke? Yeah, terrible stuff. My mother grew up with a father who chain smoked roll your own Prince Albert cigarettes, then married my dad who smoked all his life. I guess it was conditioning because she said she liked the smell of the smoke, tried a cigarette once in her life and liked it, but decided it wouldn't be worth the cost, so she never smoked. And she died in 2006 at the age of 85. No one else on either side of my family ever lived to be that old. And she did not have lung cancer.
Second hand smoke is terrible stuff. Everyone who smokes isn't going to die of lung cancer, only a small percentage of them are. Heart disease will probably get most of them first. This applies to those who smoke second hand also. By the time our generation gets old we have so much crap in our bodies that isn't by nature supposed to be there it is hard to point at one cause and say "ah ha" that is the stuff that made him sick!. We have inhaled smoke from trash fires containing every concievible plastic product ever made, perhaps our neighbors are burning treated wood scraps in their wood burners. In factories we have been exposed to all kinds of chemicals and airborne hrdrocarbons in solvents that we have inhaled and ingested in small quantities over the years. Much of the information linking exposure to toxic substances with disease wasn't discovered untill it was to late for many people. A good friend of mine has recently been diagnosed with a rare form of lukemiea that has been linked to Benzene.
It isn't a nice way to die.
Years ago he worked at a refinery and was exposed to Benzene almost every day for several years, before anyone knew it was bad for you.
So did he develop the lukemiea from the exposure at the plant? It is impossible to say, but "the Department of Health and Human Services has determined that benzene causes cancer in humans. Long-term exposure to Benzene in the air can cause leukemia, cancer of the blood-forming organs."
The chemical industry no longer permits its workers to be exposed to Benzene at the work place.
Knowing this would you expose yourself to Benzene every day of your life if you could easily avoid it?
I sure wouldn't. The risk is very small, everybody who is exposed isn't going to die from it, only a small percentage will. Am I in that percentage? I dunno! If there is no benifit to me being exposed (for instance It isn't involved in my earning a living and supporting a wife and kids, no one is paying me to do it) why would I choose to breathe Benzene?
The same Center for disease control also says this about Benzene.
A major source of benzene exposure is tobacco smoke.
I choose to limit my exposure to things that have been proven to be harmfull to people. I avoid stepping in front of moving vehicles and I avoid injesting or breathing substances that have been proven to have the capacity to cause slow agonizing death.
A friend and co-worker of mine, Fred Corenet of Pittsford Michigan died a couple years ago at a very young age with lung cancer. It took him a very long time to die. He left a wife and 3 kids. Did he smoke? Yes. He also worked in a manufacturing environment where he was exposed to many solvents over the years. He also lived his entire life in an area that has a high Radon gas concentration. Did he spend a lot of time as a kid playing in the basement in our long Michigan winters just soaking up Radon? I don't know. The only thing I know for sure is that it makes good sense to learn from our past experiences.