Daddy smoked Camel Cigarettes when I was a kid. Men smoked and Real Men smoked Camels, not one of those sissified menthol filtered brands. Only trashy women smoked. Mother did have one lady friend who smoked, but Miss Frannie also wore shorts and didn’t go to church. I thought there had to be some relationship between those three big sins, but loved going to Miss Frannie’s house, so I hoped Mother continued to overlook her failings. Miss Frannie’s husband hunted with Daddy, so the families’ friendship held fast.
It was manly to smoke, but like drinking coffee, it was a pleasure delayed till adulthood. I hated it when Daddy smoked, especially in the car. We’d all be packed in tight in the backseat and as soon as he backed out, Daddy lit that cigarette. The smoke burned my eyes and made my throat sore. It wasn’t so bad in summer with the windows down, but in winter, we were trapped. Daddy opened his side window vent, so in theory, the smoke didn’t stay in. The actuality was that we all breathed second-hand smoke the whole trip.
My smoking experience lasted two puffs. Daddy told me to toss his cigarette in the toilet, and I took two brief puffs as I walked toward the bathroom. I did enjoy the sizzle as the cigarette hit the water, though. My cousin said he smelled smoke on me and I never tried it again. Something about putting fire in my mouth never appealed to me. It held about as much appeal as poking a stick in my eye.

Daddy started smoking at fourteen or fifteen and often said he wished he’d never started, but never tried to quit. My brother Billy and a cousin swiped some of Daddy’s cigarettes and gave smoking a whirl. They hid in a ditch and were smoking away when a neighbor kid came by and ratted them out. Daddy gave them a lesson in smoking, something that would get him jailed now. He invited them come sit and smoke with him. They were in high spirits and joined him happily. He insisted they inhale so they’d get the full effect. They were sick long before they’d gotten through that first cigarette, wanting to quit.
He reminded them they’d wanted to smoke and insisted they continue. In just minutes they were drooling and starting to vomit. Making them take a few more puffs, they had to endure a lecture on smoking, with a reminder to check back with him next time they wanted a cigarette, he’d be glad to smoke with them. They both held off for a while, but eventually found their way back to smoking. Thankfully, my brother quit before long. My cousin died of tobacco-related disease in his late forties. Daddy put his cigarettes when he was in his forties. My mother never smoked a cigarette in her life, but due to living her first thirty-six years with heavy smokers, has a moderate degree of lung disease today.
I hesitated to write this story, but it illustrates well how things were handled in the past. I’m sure in later life, Daddy would have never done this, but in his thirties, he still had a lot to learn about life, as we all do.
That’s the way it was back in the day. Kids got taught a lesson the hard way.
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Yep. My dad one mean old sun of a gun. He prided himself on being tough. I never saw a kind side. He laughed about that for years.
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LOL! Your dad quit smoking the day you got married – his problems were solved. You are a funny lady!
We are not far apart in age. It was a different time back then, and smoking was acceptable. There was a commercial for some brand of cigarettes that said doctors preferred that brand over others!
Both of my parents smoked heavily. All five of us kids did not. My girlfriend and I tried it once. We were out cruising on a Friday night, smoking a couple of cigarettes, and tossing them out the open windows when finished. She woke up the next morning to her back seat burned out! It had smoldered all night. We never smoked again.
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Oh Lord! What a mess! She paid a high price for that little smoke. My BIL and sister had been given a nice mattress. As they transported it home he flipped out a cigarette and set it on fire. People in traffic flagged them down.
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Yikes! Who knew cigarettes had a mind of their own as to where they want to land once launched. Although, I’m sure physics plays a part. Were they able to keep the mattress or was it flaming?
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It was toast!
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I am a passionate advocate of medicinal tobacco smoke. My own formerly very sick lungs have improved with its use, to the point where I’ve received spontaneous compliments on my lung clarity from the last three providers who put a stethoscope to my chest. The last one couldn’t hear them at all. She kept telling me to breathe ~ I was going like a bellows.
Tobacco is not our enemy. Irradiated fields of low-grade leaf, overdried and placed sparingly with copious shredded paper towels sprayed with concentrated nicotine juice and (count ’em) 7000 chemicals, are.
The kind I use is mandated to be processed with only food grade chemicals, and unlike any other it is processed with steam at drying. I understand it has been traditionally actually prescribed all over the world, for people sometimes still in childhood, for certain classes of lung ailments.
It’s a practice I swear by ~ as different from a factory rolled cigarette as an orange is from an orange lollipop.
But I must say I wouldn’t subject anyone who didn’t like the smell (many do) to it in a closed car. Shame on your dad for that.
Thank you for giving fair consideration to my experience and research. 👌🙋
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This is a different view.
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And that was a diplomatic response! 👌
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Well, I know absolutely nothing about medicinal tobacco.
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Most people don’t. The baby is being thrown out with the bathwater, which is indeed foul ~ I would not touch a cigarette under any circumstances.
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Haha.. I can picture that! Absolutely love it! I always choose a quiet time in my day to read them so that I can really soak them in.. it’s become one of my favourites things 🥰
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I do my writing in the evenings while Bud watched TV.
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My grandmother used to sing a song:
I wish I had a cigarette to smoke.
I wish I had a cigarette to smoke.
I’d smoke and smoke, and never choke.
I wish I had a cigarette to smoke…
Often when I think of her, I sing the song. It’s quite catchy.
I’m singing it now again…
The song stuck with me my whole life.. she died of lung cancer when I was 9…
Anyway.. I really love reading your stories.. ❤️
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Thanks for telling me. I know I rattled on.
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The way you write doesn’t feel like you’re rattling on.. I love hearing all about you, especially the stories with Bud..
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Bud and I grew up together. We are sitting together having coffee now. Picture two seventy somethings in their recliners with two dogs comfortably talking about this and that.
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He’s a good guy and handles my teasing well.
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It’s not rattling on… I love reading your stories… also the ones you tell about Bud.. today’s pie one was lovely…
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And it was 100% true. All cooked food is instantly converted into his. Especially leftovers with gravy and desserts.
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I started smoking at 9 and quit smoking 20 years ago. I look back and question why I smoked for so long. David has not smoked so that’s good. You dad did teach them a lesson and that’s what life is all about.
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Yeah. It was hard to watch.
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I tried smoking when I was 19 or 20 but it wasn’t for me, my dad smoked on and off for most of his life I can’t remember if he gave up before he was diagnosed with lung cancer or after.
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I’ll bet you saved yourself some misery. I know you dad wished he never started.
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Excellently written! I grew up with secondhand smoke, too. My dad quit smoking years after I grew up, but he lived to be 89 years old.
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My dad quit smoking the day I got married. Maybe he figured all his problems were solved.
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