Por que si fumas.. APESTAS!!!!!
Publicado por Leo Medelllin en Enero 5, 2008
Top 10 Reasons Why Smoking Stinks |
| By Jennifer Gruenemay, LifeScript Staff Writer |
| Saturday, January 5, 2008 |
If smoking wasn’t bad for you, there wouldn’t be so much controversy surrounding it. There wouldn’t be the Truth® campaign or 10-step programs that help you quit smoking, and there certainly wouldn’t be a “how to quit smoking” section on the Philip Morris tobacco company’s web site. So if you’ve ever wondered why your doctor jumps down your throat about not smoking, there’s good reason.
In fact, there are 10 good reasons:
1. You Stink!
You don’t just smell like cigarettes while you’re smoking, you reek of them all day long. The scent of stale cigarettes saturates your hair and clothes and follows you wherever you go, including your vehicle, your work and your home. Smoking also gives you terrible breath, and there’s no mint in the world that can get rid of the smell of a pack-a-day habit.
2. You Have 10 Times More Wrinkles
You can always pick a regular smoker out of a crowd, not just by the stench but by his or her skin quality as well. Smokers have 10 times more wrinkles than non-smokers. They also have pale, ashen skin and yellowing teeth, fingers and fingernails. In fact, a study published by the British Medical Journal found that smokers with prominent wrinkles are five times more likely to suffer from chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases like emphysema and bronchitis than non-smokers. (See related article: Restore Young Skin and Fight Signs of Aging)
Smoking causes sticky, black tar to build up in your lungs, reducing the exchange of oxygen, carbon dioxide and nutrients between its tissues and the bloodstream. This negatively affects your entire body, but you’ll especially feel it in the lungs. Smokers have more of a difficult time breathing and are more likely to develop painful chronic coughing due to the increase in phlegm production. The good news is that if you stop smoking, your lungs can clear some of the tar and heal significantly. According to the National Cancer Institute, your body begins the healing process just 12 hours after your last cigarette. Improved lung function and circulation can take up to three months.
Feeling moody lately? Outlook on life a bit pessimistic? Smoking has been shown to be a major cause of depression, so don’t just blame the rain if you’re feeling blue. A study published in the Archives of General Psychiatry followed more than 1,000 smokers and non-smokers over the span of five years and found that the smoker group was twice as likely as the non-smoker group to suffer from major depression.
If the fact that smoking is burning a big hole in your health and happiness doesn’t move you, maybe the fact that it’s burning a big hole in your pocket will. Depending on where you live, a single pack of cigarettes can cost up to $6, and if you smoke a pack a day, that’s almost $2,200 a year!
Just to drive the point home, let’s say you start smoking at age 18 and live to age 68 (since you’ll most likely die young from smoking). Over the course of those 50 years, you will have spent almost $110,000 on cigarettes alone. And that doesn’t include the extra gum and breath mints, in addition to higher dry-cleaning bills for getting the smell of stale smoke out of your clothes. (See related article: How Do I Stop Smoking?)
It has long been known that male smokers generally have a low sperm count, but recent studies also show that genetic mutations of sperm from male smokers may also be to blame for infertility. Male smokers are also at a higher risk for erectile dysfunction. Female smokers may also have a harder time getting pregnant.
If you do actually become pregnant, you’re in for a rough ride. Women who smoke during pregnancy are more likely to experience ectopic pregnancies, which occur when the fertilized egg begins to develop in the slender fallopian tube instead of the uterus. Ectopic pregnancies can be fatal for both mom and baby. Other risks to the baby’s health include lower birth weight and birth defects. Women who smoke during pregnancy are also more likely to deliver prematurely or miscarry.
Kids imitate their parents. So if you smoke in front of your kids, they’re likely to copy you.
Not only is smoking a bad influence on those around you, it’s killing them too. You can’t contain cigarette smoke, which means that innocent people breathe in your second-hand smoke. Children and adults who are exposed to second-hand smoke are at a higher risk of developing lung cancer and heart disease, as well as other respiratory problems including shortness of breath, coughing and increased production of phlegm. Children exposed to second-hand smoke are particularly at risk for developing asthma.
Smoking is the #1 leading cause of preventable disease and death in America. And it’s not a pleasant way to go. Smokers risk developing cancer of the mouth, throat and lungs, as well as asthma, chronic bronchitis and emphysema. Smokers are also more prone to high blood pressure, high LDL (bad) cholesterol, stroke, and heart disease. In fact, a smoker’s risk of dying from sudden cardiac death (heart attack) is anywhere from 2-4 times greater than non-smokers.
Are You Ready to Quit Smoking?
By now you should know that smoking increases your risk for heart disease, lung cancer, stroke, and more. You know you should quit, but do you have a clear game plan of how you’ll overcome your addiction? Find out if you’re really ready to quit smoking once and for all. Take this smoking quiz.