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Tobacco
a gateway to alcohol, drugs
Sitting on the sofa with a cup of coffee and book.
Lounging on a patio, watching the summer sun dip into the ocean.
Engaging in after-dinner conversation with close friends. These
are sacred moments in a smoker’s life when it seems unlikely
a cigarette in hand could be harmful.
Sure newspapers talk on and on about the link between smoking and
a list of diseases. And, yes there are times when the reality of
smoking isn’t all that pleasant. (Think Sunday morning, eating
breakfast with head in hand, cigarette butts form last night’s
get-together spilling out of the ashtray.) But, tobacco is a legal
product, after all.
And in the grand scheme of things, cigarettes don’t seem to
be nearly s noxious as other drugs.
I mean there’s a big difference between the girl who uses
cigarettes and the girl who hides in her room with little bags of
crystal meth. Surely there’s a difference between the guy
with a pack of smokes in his pocket and the guy who keeps a Mickey
of rye in his desk drawer.
Or is there?
According
to substance use experts, cigarettes may be much more than just
lung crashers that yellow your teeth. It’s possible they can
influence the way you think and act later on in life.
Results of the 2004 Canadian Addictions Survey reveal cigarette
smoking is a strong indicator of other forms of substance use.
While
it’s still up for debate whether tobacco is a gateway to the
hard stuff, evidence shows smokers are substantially more likely
to drink and use illegal drugs than people who never took to cigarettes
in their teen years.
Among teens, cigarette smoking is linked to involvement in a range
of risky activities, including illegal and excessive drug use.
Canadian
smokers aged 15 to 19 are 14 times more likely than they’re
non-smoking classmates to drink alcohol. They’re a lot more
likely to be reckless drinkers when they do dive into the bottle,
too.
When it comes to illegal drugs young smokers are up to 25 times
more likely to use cannabis than their smoke-free friends. They
toke up much more often, too. And, you guessed it: teen smokers
are 12 times more likely to dabble in illegal drugs – cocaine,
heroin, amphetamine, ecstasy, and hallucinogens – than teens
who have never used tobacco. (According to the CAS, 31 per cent
of smoking youth younger than 20 reported using hard drugs compared
with 3.5 per cent of non-smoking youth.)
And cigarette –related risk-taking doesn’t sop at teens
getting fall-down drunk or taking magic mushroom rides. U.S. research
hints young smokers may be more likely to do other harmful and careless
things, too, like have sex at an early age.
“So, what does this mean to me,” you ask, having outgrown
your teen angst? Why should you quit smoking as an adult who’s
past the more experimental stages of life?
Well, if you have kids, you might want to consider how your cigarette
intake is influencing them. Kids with parents who smoke tend to
have easier access to cigarettes and are more likely to take up
smoking, which means they’re a lot more likely to get involved
in things you might not think so socially acceptable.
In
other words, your smoking may be linked to your child’s future
relationship with drugs.
The other reason to quit is simply because it’s the only way
to protect yourself and those you love form smoking’ related
diseases, lung cancer being the big one, but by no means the only
ailment.
Quitting can be tough, and yes, it would mean giving up those romantic
nights on the seashore with your silver-wrapped cigarettes. But
it is possible to change your lifestyle. For those who need help,
there is Imagine Laser works.
[contact us].
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