Monday, March 3, 2008

On Smoking...

I know we all have our vices, it's only human. I mean, right now I have three open boxes of Girl Scout cookies within arm's reach. But smoking is the one vice I just don't get. I understand the "peer pressure" aspect of starting, I suppose. Trying to be a cool kid, trying to fit in, gotcha. It just seems to me that there's so much more negative about the habit than possible positive gains, aside from the obvious.

First there's smelling like an ashtray. Um, yuck? My grandparents smoked throughout my junior high and high school years spent living with them, and the secondhand smoke smell on every last one of my things was repulsive. Granted, I noticed it only when I wasn't home (and especially when I came home on breaks from college), but I still knew that I smelled like smoke. Doesn't that affect the potential pool of suitors to those who can stand to kiss an ashtray? And is that a very big group of fantastic catches? (My instincts tell me no.) Sure, you can cover it up with mass amounts of body spray (as one of my coworkers does after she's taken her smoke break), chew gum, and the like, but that just makes you smell like a minty or vanilla-y ashtray!

Then there's the addiction. I would absolutely hate it if my body so strongly craved something that was so detrimental to my health. It's one thing to crave cookies, but at least they won't diminish my lung capacity and cause cancer. All the smokers at work are constantly trying to find a spare moment to take a smoke break. That's a lot of time spent thinking about smoking and not a lot of time thinking of the tables they're supposed to be waiting on! (And again, walking up to your customers smelling like a vanilla ashtray is just not appealing.)

Another point I can't wrap my head around: the cost. Smoking is one expensive habit (unless you're the guys I work with who get by borrowing smokes from everyone else). Once again, I'd rather spend my money elsewhere.

Of course, there's the obvious health implications. With all the media coverage of the effects, I don't know how people can rationalize smoking. From the risk of clots if used in conjunction with birth control to dying of lung cancer, how does one continue that habit?! What good can come of it in the long run?

I hope this doesn't offend anyone. I just don't get it. Which is probably good because I won't end up smoking (though, starting in my 20s would just be ridiculous).

Any thoughts?

6 comments:

Mikey G. said...

I will not date a smoker. I agree with you on basically every point - it's just disgusting.

I remember a commercial a while back urging people to quit smoking, and they said that with the cost of cigarettes, "If you stopped smoking right now, you could be not smoking in Cancun," or something like that. And it's true - my mom could be taking awesome vacations if she just stopped smoking.

jenomena said...

It goes without saying that I will not date a smoker either. And I won't tolerate my grandparents going back to their smoking ways (they gave up COLD TURKEY my sophomore year of college).

Hell, if the people I worked with stopped spending money on cigarettes, they might be able to pay more of their bills in a month!

Nance said...

As a former casual smoker, I can tell you that it's a hellacious habit to kick, and I wasn't even a hard core smoker. There are still odd moments when I think, "A cigarette would be nice right now." And I haven't smoked in 30 years. But that was back when a pack was 50cents at a gas station! Now...I wouldn't pay those prices as a startup smoker. And in the 70s, there wasn't so much awareness of the severity of the health risks of even secondhand smoke. You're right...it's totally prohibitive. Every time I see a clutch of smokers standing outside in freezing weather, I wonder, "How on earth can any of it be worth it?"

jenomena said...

I get that it's a hard habit to kick...but other than the "cool" factor, why do people pick it up? And I understand why people in the generations ahead of mine picked up smoking...but the kids in my generation and younger baffle me.

And yes, having to go outside to smoke in the freezing weather is another crazy aspect to me. Ack!

Anonymous said...

Ditto to induced homomorphism. I will NOT date a smoker. Even if the guy smells like he's friends with a smoker I get turned off. Who wants to be around that?

My theory is that some smokers our age first did it out of rebellion, got hooked, and it became a habit.

jenomena said...

I guess I never thought of "rebellion". That makes sense, I guess. Still, a bad reason! Silly rebellious kids...