Friday, January 24, 2014

Secondhand Child Abuse

Each day, 3,600 young people under the age of 18 smoke their first cigarette. From that, 900 of those young people become daily smokers. 88% of adults who smoke on a daily basis smoked their first cigarette before the age of 18. Kids with smoking parents are more than twice as likely to begin smoking between the ages of 13-21 as kids with non-smoking parents.

Cigarettes cause nearly 443,000 deaths each year. Around 49,400 of those deaths were caused by exposure to secondhand smoke. An estimated 3,000 NON-SMOKING Americans die each year from lung cancer and more than 46,000 NON-SMOKERS die each year from heart disease. Secondhand  smoke is responsible for 150,000-300,000 new cases of bronchitis and pneumonia and is the cause of almost 7,500-15,000 hospitalizations each year in children 18 months of age and younger. Out of the estimated 88 million non-smoking Americans 54% are children.

Alright, enough with the sad and sickening statistics. Here is my real life example of why secondhand smoke and smoking around kids in general is not only a bad idea, but why it should also be considered child abuse. I’m a 29 year old male. I’ve been a firsthand smoker for just over 11 years now. Yes, 11 years too long and if you add all my years of secondhand smoking that total number of years would probably be closer to 21. Over the years, I’ve tried repeatedly to quit but just haven’t been able to quite kick the habit.

My parents have smoked around me my entire life including, but not limited to inside the house, inside the car, family gatherings, outside, school and sporting events and other public events. Throughout the years, I have not only inhaled their endless amounts of secondhand smoke but also their bad…no, their deadly habit. It’s not just the secondhand smoke that’s dangerous for our young. The message you send by producing the secondhand smoke in front of a child is a dangerous message to send. Those are things that I never have and never will expose my 8 month old daughter to, no matter what age she is. It’s one thing to show or teach your child a bad habit. It’s another thing, a completely different and wrong thing, to show or teach your child a deadly habit.

The first encounter I had with cigarettes, other than my parents puffing them down, was when I was about 3 or 4. I can’t remember all of the exact details surrounding the incident but the main details are still fresh in my memory. I’m not sure if I was just being sneaky at the time or if my parents just took their eyes off me for a few moments-maybe they ran into the kitchen for a quick snack or they may have been “just resting their eyes”-but there it was right in front of me. A large shinny ash trash completely full of cigarette butts. Being the youngster that I was at the time, I figured it was just another toy for me to play with. So, I did what any young child would do, I dug in. I was throwing butts in the air, blowing ashes around the living room and having a really fun time. Sure, I wasn’t putting the butts in my mouth or acting like I was smoking because it “made me look cool” or anything like that, but the point is that I was exposed to that habit. I, for some strange reason went on to play in numerous ash trays after that. I know, right? Kids…

And years later, after I had first made a toy out of my parents ash tray, it’s no coincidence that my first few cigarettes came straight out of my parents packs after they went to bed one night. And it’s no coincidence that for most of my smoking life, I smoked my dad’s brand of choice after my first full pack of smokes was a pack that I stole off the top of his refrigerator. That pack of cigarettes sat on top of the fridge for weeks before I even thought about jacking them. They were there for the taking.

I honestly don’t blame them for me smoking though. It was ultimately my choice to light up and nobody else’s. I take the blame for starting and not being able to quit. As a new parent, I take responsibility for the fact that I have to quit, not only for me and my kid but for everybody around me. Facts are facts and the fact is, parents have the biggest influence in their children’s lives and it’s the parent’s job to set a good example for them.

Unfortunately though, there are still people out there-parents, role models, etc.-who don’t understand the risk of smoking in front of and around their kids and other peoples kids as well. Not only are they increasing the chances of those kids becoming smokers one day, they are putting those kids health in jeopardy by increasing their chances of developing asthma, bronchitis, pneumonia, diabetes, heart disease, lung disease and numerous types of cancers. That’s just a small list of the many negative health effects of not only firsthand smoke, but secondhand smoke as well.

There are also new studies being done about the effects of thirdhand smoke-smoke that
lingers on things like furniture and clothing and sticks to your hair and even walls-and
how it could be just as dangerous as first and secondhand smoke. That’s a whole different
blog post though and I’ll have to do more research before I write anything further on the
matter.

 I can only write today, about what I know and have researched on first and secondhand
smoke. You can pretty much find whatever information you want on these subjects. The
facts are out there and they have been for awhile now. Yet, despite having the warnings
pretty much slap them in the face, like I have previously stated, people still continue to
smoke around children. How much longer do those children have to suffer before
something clicks inside the minds of those ignorantly blind and arrogantly stupid,
thoughtless, careless parents and people?

How many children and people have to die from smoking for something bigger to be
done? Something that many Americans aren’t going to agree with or like…something
like the government stepping in and passing legislation to not only ban smoking in
certain public areas like so many places have already done, but also ban smoking
around children everywhere.

Ok, before you go off on me about why the government can’t and shouldn’t do that, this
idea comes from an article I read on the State of Oregon passing a law banning people
from smoking with kids in the car. You can read that article here: 
The topic of that article, just like the topic of thirdhand smoke will be blogged about in
other post to come. 

I will, however, give you a little preview of one of the future post with the ending to
this present one. As I briefly explain why along with a cigarette smoking ban in place at bars, restaurants and other public areas, an all around ban on smoking around children-not just in the car but in all places-should be adopted, too. That’s just how serious this issue is.

Now, don’t get me wrong, I’m all about freedom and our rights as American citizens. I’m for the freedom to be able to do what we want, when we want. I’m for my own personal rights and the rights of others. But when it comes to our children, those freedoms and those rights should be put on the back burner in every situation in order to keep our youth safe and healthy. Children have the right to breathe in the cleanest air Mother Nature has to offer wherever they are and wherever they go without having to smother in the chemically polluted air that comes from cigarette and tobacco smoke.

I hope that I can find the strength and will power to quit before my daughter is old enough to understand just what it is I am doing to myself. But if I can’t, make no mistakes about it, I will NEVER smoke in front of her or AROUND her. And I will do everything that I’m capable of doing to keep her from lighting up like so many other young people out there are doing today. I beg of all you smokers, whether you’re a parent or not, to please, do the same as well.


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