Effects of Smoking on Family Life

1420 Words3 Pages

Smoking has been around as early as six-hundred A.D. Now it is very popular and common in society. We all know that smoking can cause a large variety of diseases, such as lung cancer, yet people still do it. Cigarette smoking is responsible for about one in five deaths annually. Smoking causes health issues not only on the smoker but also on the smoker's family both physically and mentally. So the question is, if it hurts you and your loved ones, why don't you stop?
By smoking you're harming yourself in so many ways. Smoking increases your chances of having Coronary heart disease, a stroke, developing lung cancer, and/or dying from chronic obstructive lung diseases. Smoking is one of the main causes of death. Your life is at risk every time you smoke a cigarette. You risk the chance of dying and leaving behind a family who needs you, a bad influence to your children, and even causing them health problems.
Secondhand smoking (SHS), also known as environmental tobacco smoke, is very common among families. There are two types of secondhand smoke, side-stream smoke and main-stream smoke. Side-stream smoke is smoke that's from the lit end of a cigarette, pipe, or cigar. Main-stream smoke is the smoke exhaled by the smoker. Main-stream is less dangerous than side-stream because side-stream smoke has a higher concentration of the toxins than main-stream smoke. It can also be inhaled into the body a lot easier. When a non-smoker inhales this, it is called involuntary/passive smoking. Passive smokers are just as vulnerable to all the diseases and health issues related to smoking. In the United States secondhand smoke causes about forty-six thousand deaths from heart disease in people who do not smoke, as well as about three thousand fo...

... middle of paper ...

...to think he might get a terrible disease, like cancer, or die at an early age. I don’t want to lose one of my best friends to something that could have been prevented if it weren’t for his stubbornness. My grandfather is a heavy smoker. He smokes at least one pack of cigarettes (twenty cigarettes) a day, and buys about one carton of cigarettes (10 packs of cigarettes) a week. His addiction has cost more than just money though. It has caused my grandmother to have lung problems, it has set a bad example to my siblings and I, and it has caused our grandfather/granddaughter relationship to start to fall apart. I will always love my grandfather, but I will never understand his decision. My father has also recently started to smoke, which I find very disappointing. I have constantly told my father to please stop for the sake of his and our health and also for our family.

More about Effects of Smoking on Family Life

Open Document