Guest guest Posted July 26, 2005 Report Share Posted July 26, 2005 [ wrote to Chris] Forget about stroke and digestion. Smoking isn't doing your lung capacity any good, regardless of your feelings that it's at least not making much of a difference yet. --------------- , These stroke concerns are not immediate, but there is a strong link between smoking cigarette smoking and stroke. Dr. Byrnes died of a stroke in his 30s just last year after smoking for 18 years. I realize he had other health issues, but it's something to consider. Respectfully, Deanna http://www.powerhealth.net/articlescigs.htm (excerpt follows) For the first few years I smoked very little, maybe 5-6 cigarettes a day. At one point, I quit. Lean financial times forced me to give it up. But when things turned around, I started up again. Slowly but surely, my 5 cigarette-a-day habit grew into a 40 cigarette-a-day one. By the time I quit, I was smoking $5.00 a day. Overall, I enjoyed smoking but was annoyed at several undesirable qualities that came with it. On the top of my list of peeves was the smell. While tobacco may be a richly scented plant, with some species having beautiful flowers, processed, burning tobacco stinks. That ghastly odor permeated everything around me, my clothes, my knapsack, my books, my newspaper, my hair, my mouth, my fingers, and my body. Even if I had not had a cigarette for awhile, people still knew I smoked from the reeking smell. I'd always be a little chagrined when someone would back slightly away from me to get away from the odor. I constantly sucked on mints to keep my breath fresh. On top of the smell was the mess: the ashes, the used up butts, the dirty ashtrays. What also bugged me was the addiction, the overwhelming necessity to smoke to avoid going through the roof with nicotine cravings. This was one of the things that prompted me to quit. At rock bottom, I was a junkie. An addict. A slave to nicotine. I was not comfortable with something controlling me that much. When I was 33, I helped a friend overcome a serious illness using various nutritional and herbal methods. The experience had such a profound impact on me that I decided to go back to school and get advanced degrees in nutrition and natural therapies. Believe it or not, I was still smoking when I began my studies! The incongruity of it all, however, began to weigh on my mind: " What am I doing?! How can I help people overcome disease when I'm doing something that causes it? What kind of example will I be to my future clients? " I realized I had to quit, but I did not have enough motivation yet. The motivation came. For the past two years I'd been having episodes when I would begin gasping and gulping for air. These episodes did not happen often, but when they did occur, it was scary. I felt like I was drowning. This was, I learned later, one of the first signs of emphysema. Additionally, I was getting my once a year bout with bronchitis twice a year. On top of this, I had no energy. I'd look at myself sometimes and think, " For God's sake! I'm only 33 and I have virtually no stamina! " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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