Posted on 01/26/2005 3:06:33 PM PST by Rennes Templar
There are two kinds of conversations about Johnny Carson. One kind is the one most of you are having. It is light and interesting, about showbiz, TV, popular culture. Then there is the other conversation many of us have been avoiding.
-snip-
A part of it (the conversation)landed on my desk with a little thump. It was a package, about the size of your palm, with a brown camel on it, two pyramids and three palm trees.
"You can have them," said a friend who tossed them, casual in voice, though there was no missing the symbolism of it, his casting away of the Camels.
"I'm done with them," he said. "I quit."
-snip-
Carson's death could have been due to pneumonia, to infection, or it could have been respiratory failure. Either way it was private, and ugly.
I thought of him suffering amidst tubes.
"You can quit," Dr. Gross said. "You can have a life. You can quit."
I've failed before. And I'm afraid of failing. But Johnny Carson convinced me.
If you're interested in doing the same, you can call the American Lung Association at 312-243-2000.
jskass@tribune.com
(Excerpt) Read more at chicagotribune.com ...
(the failed heater had a 5-year warranty from Sears which allowed them to charge $25 more in labor than the replacement one I bought and wouldn't promise me it would be covered until a factory inspection was made)
I'd guess you were at least 40% points off....
What you might be seeing is...Freepers supporting smokers right to smoke, and concluding that they must be smokers.
FWIW, I don't smoke...although I did smoke for a few years, off and on when I was in my late teens, early twenties. I also happen to be in the health care business....and I see the results of long term smoking every day I work.
FWIW-
Nicotine is one of the most potent vaso-constrictors around....there are some therapeutic uses for it.
So, the answer to your statement is...You are incorrect.
FWIW-
That would be COPD...( Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease )
Sorry to hear of your MIL....
FRegards,
southernnorthcarolina: You are correct in the self-selection methodology in play here.
First time this week......
Thanks,
I quit drinking in October 1997 - it took a near fatal bout of pancreatitis to provide the spark. I quit smoking in September 2002, after landing in the hospital with chest pain (notice a pattern here?).
Currently I'm fighting my last vice - getting my weight and diet under control. I had been doing Atkins for a while and walking, and I had lost about 70 lbs. or so (after gaining at least 50 when I stopped smoking), but had slacked off badly and was again eating all the wrong stuff. The spark that has gotten me serious about dropping the last 100 lbs. or so I need to drop - a diagnosis of Type II diabetes and sky-high cholesterol and triglyceride levels.
Some people can smoke 2-3 packs per day, eat four fried eggs and a half pound of bacon every day, have their most strenuous activity of the day be reaching for the remote, and still live to 90. I'm not one of them.
Sorry. (see tag)
No I didn't mean that. I meant the bell curve that represents longer healthier lives and their relationship to absence of lifestyle risk factors.
My wife and I quit 6 years ago, when we decided to adopt a child. Doctor put us on Zyban, and I never looked back. I seriously have no desire whatsoever to smoke now, although I know that if I did...
Anyway, Zyban works very well, just be sure you do your research on it. My Doctor did not give me all of the facts; mainly that it is just another name for Welbutrin, an anti-depressant. Coming down off of them made my quite an ahole for a while.
My error for not being clear. I was pointing out that they are exceptions to the norm. Sheesh.
I told you that my smoking father lived to be 95, I neglected to ad that aside from a minor operation in the mid-1940s he was never sick a day in his life, lived independently and drove until the day he died.
Your remarks make no sense in relation to my family history.
lifestyle risk factors...
Do you live in a cacoon or is that some macabre joke that our theraputic society is trying to foist on the gullible?
Ok, I'll try again. The fact that your father smoked all his life and lived long is not as common a pattern as people who smoke life long and die of smoking-related disease at earlier ages. Thats all I was saying.
Right, but we all don't have to commit suicide.
Thats what smokers do every time they light up a cancer stick.
You just couldn't beat the endorsers.
Coke ought to good enough, with all that phosphoric acid in it.
Attagirl. Best thing you'll ever do.
now I can even sing along with the oldie-goldie radio station instead of sounding like Clarence "Frogman" Henry
We never noticed. Honest!
Hey Rob.How did you know i smoke?Paranoid in sunny Fla.:)
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