@Nick_Searles I have always had a dark sense of humor, even as a kid. I was born into a family that used dark humor as a way to cope with emotionally difficult situations. Does that mean it runs in the family? Because mom and dad were both pretty with it when they passed.
@cjcrew Dad had Alzheimer's and mom, Dementia. I'm just not sure if I'm taking the A or the D train.
@Nick_Searles Four packs a day, that doesn’t leave a lot of room for breathing does it. Poor guy, cigarettes are so addictive and such a difficult addiction to break.
@cjcrew That's what they did back then. He did quit, joined a gym and took walks. But the damage was done. Made it to 83.
@Nick_Searles 83 isn’t anything to sneeze at. Pretty damn good for a heavy smoker. I’d be good with 83.
@Nick_Searles Yeah pretty much everyone smoked back in the day. We smoked in restaurants, hospitals, offices. In fact when I first started at MSU as an intern in 1991 they were able to smoke inside the building, in bathrooms, most offices. We smoked in the break room and bathrooms. Before I started they smoked in the computer room and the offices. Second hand smoke was everywhere. Now you can’t smoke on MSU property, inside or out.
@Nick_Searles My mom and dad were heavy smokers. I grew up in a haze of cigarette smoke, I remember visiting and when I got back to my smoke free Michigan home I had to wash all my clothes and take a shower because I reeked from cigarette smoke. Even had to throw away cookies my mom gave me to take home because they tasted like cigarette smoke.
@Nick_Searles Also realized you could be talking about second hand smoke too. I think my asthma was caused by second hand smoke as a child. I’m sure I made it worse by smoking when I was a teen/into adulthood by the base was set in my childhood living in a house with two heavy smokers.
@Nick_Searles Genetics plays a part, if the healthier living person dies from the same thing as the more sedentary person it’s possible genetics got them in the end.