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Inside the shed we would take turns tossing baseball cards at a wall and if your card landed on top of another card you got to keep all the cards thrown. I wish I had those cards now, they would be worth a fortune to collectors. Whenever I was able to get a cigarette I would retreat to this shed so no one would know I had it but mostly so no one could see me coughing and wheezing trying to learn to inhale the smoke. I don't remember if I liked it or not, I just remember everyone else I knew was smoking and if it was good enough for them it was good enough for me.
I remember the first time I had a full pack of cigarettes of my own. Before I left the house I purposely put on a white shirt with a pocket because I knew that anyone who saw me could see the pack through the pocket and tell What a big deal I was as I had my own cigarettes. It was like badge of distinction for all to see. Whenever I had some money to spare I used to go to downtown Cincinnati to a tobacco shop on the corner of Sixth and Walnut street. I remember they always had a display of old gold jewelry in an big black kettle in the window with a sign that announced they would pay $35 an ounce for old gold. In those days that was a fortune. I liked to go there because they had cigarettes from all over the world. I liked to experiment with such as brands such as English Ovals that were about three times in diameter the size of a regular cigarette and oval in shape and about six inches long. Each came in a small glass tube with a cork sealing them in. Another one I tried but didn't like was Clove cigarettes which came from Turkey. This was also the time I tried my first cigar, I almost threw up. From these humble beginnings I went on to become "A Smoker!"
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Wouldn't you know it that later in life I started working as a buyer for a Candy & Tobacco wholesaler. One of the perks of working there was that I received FREE cigarettes. This is probably when I noticed I had developed a hacking, rasping chocking cough. I ignored warnings like "Those things are gonna kill you" or people called them "Cancer Sticks or Coffin Nails" I kept coughing and wheezing until 1995 when visiting my daughter at her house I had my first heart attack. While in the hospital I was informed I had a blood clot which had blocked the veins to the right side of my heart and had in effect turned half of my heart into scar tissue. I was now pumping on just half a heart. Quiting smoking now would have to be a "Half Hearted Affair" (Ha Ha!) but quit I must warned the doctor. I assured him I would. Smoking then was permitted in hospitals. Somehow I still had cigarettes with me and once while hooked up to an oxygen tube on my nose I attempted to light a cigarette, A blue flame erupted in front of my face and I suppose I was very lucky the whole place did not explode. After a period of recuperation at home I suppose I quit smoking dozens of times without success. I now know how drug addicts feel when they try to kick their habits because nicotine addiction is as powerful as any drug known to man, the big difference it does not seem to alter the mind like chemical drugs do. But what to do? I had to quit.
I realized that abstinence does not work for me. The first thing I tried was substitution. Hard candy, mints, gum and any thing I could carry and pop in my mouth when the need arose. These had varying degrees of success. I tried a pill that had no effect at all. I bought some nicotine patches at the drug store and about the same time I started chewing Wrigley's Extra Bubble Gum flavor chewing gum along with wearing a nicotine patch. I could tell they were helping some but that old nicotine desire kept raising it's ugly head. There came a day when I said to myself, "Self, this is the day you will quit smoking!!!" I realized that if I chewed a few sticks of gum, not just any gum, it had to be Wrigley's Extra Bubble Gum flavor chewing gum I had tried every other brand and flavor on the market and this one seemed to be the only one that worked. The greatest single thing that helped me to quit was realizing that when I got that overwhelming urge to light up, if I could just hold out for about 15 minutes and not yield the urge would subside. Soon the urge only came about every 20 minutes and then 30 minutes and the an hour. This is the secret to quiting smoking. "Realize the urge will subside if you can only wait it out" When I had gone a week without a cigarette I was really proud of myself, then a month and when I had made it to a whole year my kids gave me a giant greeting card about 3x4 feet that announced "Congratulations" I still have it, framed in a poster frame with my last pack of Pall Mall cigarettes attached to it. I still get the urge to light up again occasionally, of course I never will again as it has been 12 years since that last cigarette but there are still times I have been known to stand close to someone who is smoking to smell the smoke once more.
2 comments:
Great Post!!!!!
I still remember both your Lucky Strikes and your Pall Malls. I remember hearing at school that smoking kills, and coming home and breaking all of your cigarettes in two. I got in a little trouble for that! Still proud of you for quitting - every day - since it was such a part of your life for so long.
Congratulations on 12 years of being nicotine-free!!!
I think a feel a blog coming on over my own family's addiction.
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