It wasn’t that long ago, that I would eat my lunch in the
teacher’s room with my friends under a haze of cigarette smoke. At one point it was fashionable to hold
a burning stick of tobacco between your fingers and now we know it to be
deadly. I never smoked. I tried one night while I was doing my
laundry in the basement of Dakin Hall. I was alone. Beside the rumble of the dryer, I opened the
pack and smelled the leaves rolled tightly. I fumbled badly, felt awkward as I tried to manage too many
things foreign at once-the cigarette, the lighter, the drawing in and
exhaling. At that time, the media
was just beginning to divulge the dangers, while the tobacco lobbyist tried to
reassure the consumer. Fortunately
for me, I just did not understand the allure. Those few mismanaged puffs represented my first and last
cigarette.
Not many years following this experimentation, I watched my
uncle of just fifty years gasp his every breath. And then twenty years later, my mother a medical abnormality
(she had outlived the expected age of fifty years living into her seventies)
was diagnosed with ALPHA-1. This
is a genetic medical condition in which the lining of the lungs can be
irreversibly damaged because the body does not produce an enzyme that normally protects the lining of the lungs. This condition can also damage the kidneys.
For months, I
slept on my mother’s floor on the weekends to care for her. The condition had reduced her lung
function. Clothes became simple and fairly loose for easy dressing and
undressing.. By day, my mother
rested on the couch. Simple
movements robbed her of her breath. Eating became difficult. Stubborn, she did not want to give in
to the condition. Finally, the
rehabilitation center not versed in the correct dosing of medication,
over-dozed. My mother quietly
slipped away.
Thankfully, our understanding has evolved. When I was little the bowling alley was
in a haze of smoke. Tonight when
we bowled, there were no little metal ashtrays attached to the scoring tables. When I was little I would rub the ash
out with my finger to make way for new ash. This evening we bowled, we dined and we traveled home in
the car all benefitting from our smoke-free experience. I am grateful I never got hooked. My mother would hate to see me suffer. Watching
my mother anxiously take in breath after struggling breath now makes me
thankful that I fumbled in the basement of Dakin Hall.
2 comments:
With the knowledge we have now hopefully people will not have to suffer as your uncle and mom. Although, surprisingly there are still young kids not making good choices when we as a society are aware of the dangers.
I too remember those days when the teachers' lounge was full of smoke. I am so glad that so many places are not smoke free. I tried it one time too...and your description of the time you tried sounded quite familiar. So glad you did not take up smoking...and so sorry you had to watch your mother struggle so. Jackie http://familytrove.blogspot.com/
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