Thespeckledkiwi
Vice Admiral
I AM sorry to hear about your health problems, but I think that you are very much in the minority here, and a certain amount of responsibility must fall on those who wish to avoid cigarette smoke to... you know... AVOID it.Juan while I understand your argument, may I ask if you know anything remotely about asthma? Wood smoke, for reasons unexplained to me isn't as painful on my lung as cigarette smoke is. In fact, if I am exposed to a small amount of cigarette smoke (and believe me I am, both at the place I work and a place I visit my friends), and given the conditions outside, I can be in pain for more than a week. And I'm not talking about ouch, it hurts. I'm talking, I'm having deep REM sleep and then I get this sharp stabbing pain in the right side of my chest, that I can't breath for a couple minutes, waking up type of pain.
I also can lose my voice due to my lung not inflating enough. Cutting down even a small amount of cigarette smoke is very good for my health. I rather not be couped up inside a house.
Oh I do avoid it, but it is difficult when people crowd around the doors or yes even smoke in their cars and I have my windows down (I do like driving with the windows down more than running the air). Yes, I can smell smoke coming from one car into my effin car EVEN if I pull up the window. It's fairly annoying, especially if it is extremely hot outside.
But when I can, I wear a ski mask...which kind of makes everyone around me very uncomfortable but for the most part for me, I like it because I can breath easier when I wear it but when it is summer out I can't really wear it because well it is hot outside. And if I wore anything else people would think I am trying to rob a place.
I also not really in the minority. Asthma patients have different type of attacks, depending on a lot of factors. Smoke being one of them.
And I'd also bet that smoking isn't the only thing that can trigger an episode - if that's not true of you, than it probably is in others with similar conditions. We can't be held responsible for you being sick to begin with.
Certainly not on both of your parts. For me, barometric pressure can play a factor BUT smoke can exasperate the condition even further and worse than just barometric pressure. The conditions can be varied as well. Allergies (ragweed, pollen and stuff) can also play a factor. But smoking for the most part is a component that can be controlled.
And yes, smokers can't be held responsible for me being sick to begin with, but they can be held responsible where they smoke.
I cannot be held responsible for a natural condition (or unnatural. Who the hell knows?) that I have no control over. I can't tell my lung not to flare up, I can't tell my lung to stop shooting stabbing pains into my chest. What I can do though, is to tell people to stop crowding the doors when they smoke or to stop blowing smoke in the wind so it hits my freaking face.
I have even gone as far as stop contact with many of my friends that do smoke. I am sadden by this and hopefully winter comes earlier this year, but I rarely am outside with many of my friends as they happen to smoke.
Look, most smokers are not evil-minded people. We're not out to cause discomfort, pain, or disgust in others. If you let it be known you have a problem with it, most of us will probably take it elsewhere, or even wait awhile. We already have TONS of restrictions placed on us and are taxed half to death every time we want to buy a pack. How much more difficult do you want to make our lives to make yours a little bit easier?
I agree with that, as I have said many of my friends do not smoke. I do find it funny that public consumption of alcohol is fined, along with many other things but not smoking.