Twelve years a non-smoker
Feb. 29th, 2008 04:48 pmToday is the third quadrennial anniversary of my quitting smoking. I almost said "quitting smoking for the last time" but I know it doesn't do to get complacent about this addiction. February 29, 1996, was at least the 20th time I'd quit smoking since I started at age 13, and the third time I've managed to stay off cigarettes for over a year. I am for the most part repelled by the smell of cigarette smoke and always was, yet still to this day, every once in a while when I walk past someone smoking, my nostrils will flare and I'll breathe in the smoke deeply before i even know what I'm doing.
It continues to astound me that this drug, which has no benefits and is a known killer of millions, is legal while something as innocuous and useful as marijuana can net someone growing it for his own use a 93-year prison sentence. Seems to me a sane society would be putting tobacco executives in jail.
It continues to astound me that this drug, which has no benefits and is a known killer of millions, is legal while something as innocuous and useful as marijuana can net someone growing it for his own use a 93-year prison sentence. Seems to me a sane society would be putting tobacco executives in jail.
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Date: 2008-02-29 10:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-02-29 11:20 pm (UTC)I know better, but every once in a while I skip the preview step for a short entry....
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Date: 2008-03-01 05:04 am (UTC)I didn't know you were a smoker!
Date: 2008-02-29 11:44 pm (UTC)As for marijuana, it has many of the same issues as tobacco when it's smoked, in terms of causing various lung diseases. Tobacco has benefits in that it's a stimulant, much like coffee, though arguably marijuana's anti-nausea and other properties are more useful. (I've never tried either.)
As for a sane society putting tobacco executives in jail: the people in charge of the country are getting *lots* of funding from the tobacco industry, and it's a huge boon to our economy - these days we sell mostly overseas, due to the anti-smoking movement here in the U.S. - so there is (economic) logic behind allowing them to get away with it.
Mind you I'm just about as anti-tobacco as people get; I've actually ended friendships over finding out that people I knew smoked - but I'm just saying, it's not completely black and white. I'd love a tobacco-free society, but it's not going to happen anytime soon.
Re: I didn't know you were a smoker!
Date: 2008-03-01 01:37 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-03-01 02:05 pm (UTC)so, as someone with some success at both, which is harder? quitting smoking, or losing 100 pounds?
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Date: 2008-03-01 02:57 pm (UTC)Quitting smoking, hands down. I'm not sure it's ever even occurred to me to compare them. The thing about cigarettes, that it took me a lot of failed attempts to really truly understand, is that a single slip-up can ruin you. If I have a bad day and stuff my face, I feel stupid — and then the next day I put it behind me. If I were to have a bad day and smoke a cigarette, my experience is that the next day will be just as bad until I have another. Alcoholics in AA will tell you "I cannot have just one drink"; it's the same story for me with cigarettes. The only food that has an even remotely similar character for me is chocolate. But it's a couple of orders of magnitude less so: if I have chocolate around, I'll eat it til I run out, but I've never gone out in a driving snow storm to get a Snickers.