@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 Maybe you’ll be luckier and catch the “C” train instead. For all we know this might involve something from the environment like lead in the water. Things weren’t as sanitized back when I was young as they are today. I was 7-8 years old when they started talking about water and air pollution. I remember them declaring Lake Erie dead from pollution, it’s cleaned up quite a bit.
@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.
@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.
@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.