Another year and I
made it to another birthday It makes me
think back to years gone by when I thought that the years went by so slow. I
think back in particular the day I started smoking. Don't remember where I got
the cigarettes even. I sat on my bed with the window open thinking that I would
let the smoke whirl out the small holes at the bottom of the storm windows.
When my Dad had built the extension he put two windows in on
the same corner of the room. My bed was positioned under the windows. A perfect
place I thought as I fanned the smoke out those holes not realizing that smoke
would cling to my clothing and hair.
The thoughts of youth. Of course my mother knew, " Were
you smoking?" How I thought I would get away with it. So simple. HA!
Mother's knew. From then on I smoked until thirty three years later when I quit along
with Ron. Cigarettes at that time were five dollars a pack.
There was a sort of freedom in quitting, a freedom I had not
noticed before I quit. I did not have to make sure I had enough money to buy
cigarettes, that I had enough cigarettes when I traveled. Could I buy Canadian
cigarettes in the USA
when we travelled down there. I noticed after awhile that when I stood beside
anyone else that smoke, they stunk of cigarette smoke. (I learned there was no
such word as litterly).
I never realized how the smoke affected all of my
surroundings from coating the walls, windows and everything in the house,
including all of us breathing the second hand smoke. We had moved into a
smaller house and in the process of getting it ready to move, I had to deal
with layers of smoke as the previous owner was a smoker. On a built in cabinet
in the bedroom, I finally had to wallpaper over the glass doors as the smoke
stain could not be removed. Each window I washed took a clean pail of water to
remove the brown stain from smoke. Imagine having to clean the whole house when
wherever I looked was brown from smoking.
A few years later Ron had purchased a Dodge camper van. It
was left to me to clean and make it ready for camping. It took me four pails of
water just to clean the ceiling of the inside of that van, never mind the walls
and the cupboard, inside and out. Yuck, how could I have smoked at one time and
not realize what it was doing to my surroundings. Hindsight I guess.
Its been twenty two years since I quit and have never
regretted it. I don't have any extra money and wonder how in the world I ever
found the money to sustain my habit. Probably never really know. Looking back I
suppose my family had to do without things as between Ron and I we were smoking
three packs a day. Ron smoked two and I smoked one, but as it later shows I was
more addicted to smoking than Ron was or he was more able to handle it than I.
I tried many things to quit until one day I saw an ad on quitting smoking. It
was done with laser and it said there was a sale on, half price. My Doctor had
told me I had to quit but while Ron still smoked I was not about to quit with
someone else still smoking in the house. Ron agreed and with a hundred dollars
in our pocket and two cigarettes left, we smoked the cigarettes and then had
the laser treatment.
The laser of course is only a crutch, just like the
acupunctures, hypnotize, patches, gum and other ways of trying to quit. We
walked out of that clinic and never looked back. The only time I did try to
have a cigarette was when my father died. I took one puff and puked my guts
out. Never again.
It still wasn't easy in the first couple of years, to have a
smoke with our coffee, to tell ourselves to stay away from areas where there
would be a lot of smokers was difficult. But as time went on, it became easier.
A trick we used, was to drink something when we had a yen to have a smoke.
Usually by the time we took a deep breath the urge was gone.
Other things may get us in the end, but no more smoking. The
freedom is unbelievable.
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