Friday, May 25, 2007

Any way you light it, smoking is cool (too bad it's deadly)

Every morning on the way to work I watch an old man defy convention. I get off a couple of metro stops early so that I can walk a few extra blocks. In a city where working overtime is so blessed, I take whatever exercise I can get. The old man stands every morning in front of what I presume to be his office, though he must be in his 70s. He has a full head of proud, ivory-white hair. When it's cold, he wears a sort of wool fedora-looking hat with a plaid design of light colors. It's the kind of hat that could only look cool on an old man. The same could be said of his suit.



Every morning he smokes a pipe, and this is a sight to behold. In a city where new smoking-ordinances have outlawed the leaf that financed early-America (tobacco leaves are indeed carved in columns on the Capitol building) in bars, restaurants and offices, the old man stands out as a counter culture relic. His age is defies death already; his pipe dares it. If I weren't so chicken of dying an early death of some sort of cancerous suffocation, I would join him. I would break out my Meerschaum pipe, as white as that old man's hair and purchased (with the help of a more barter-savvy friend) in Turkey's Grand Bazaar. I'd watch the beautiful purples of morning turn to gold while breathing in the taste of Virginia's soil. I would warm my hands with the bowl of my pipe and watch the many flavored residents of Washington DC walk hurried and harried to work.



I saw an anti-smoking ad campaign a few weeks ago. It shows different, individual shots of beautiful teenagers with clean faces and cool, moderate clothes shrugging their shoulders, smiling and shaking their heads. They are a politically correct mix of races, yet they all look the same - good-looking, moderately dressed, clean face. They are "cool" kids, the popular group, the kind of kids who participated in the student government association. Their shrugs and head-shakes are in response to the provocative question asked in the kind of impatient voice that only a teenager (or Cloe O'Brien from 24) could use. "Can you give me give me one reason why smoking isn't stupid?"



I'm sure there's a host of market research that proves this ad to be statistically effective, but I know it would not have worked on me. These are the kind of kids that made rebelling against them cool, a sort of a high school bourgeoisie. Sure, smoking is stupid. It's sucking addictive, cancer inducing smoke into your lungs. But driving a sports car down a mountain trail and break-neck speed is also stupid. And incredibly cool.



Smoking is Sherlock Holmes smoking cigars and drinking brandy as he brilliantly explains his analysis to Watson. Smoking is Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin strolling down 5th Avenue, casually blowing smoke. Smoking is James Dean in a leather jacket. Smoking Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. Smoking is Gandalf, Aragorn and the rest of the fellowship. Smoking stares death in the face and smirks. Smoking is cool.

I am a social smoker. I smoke a pipe or a cigar with friends, but I have avoided cigarettes and addictive smoking. Interestingly enough, I love smoky rooms. I've probably done more damage to my lungs reading old novels in Freiburg's Cafe Michelangelo than anything I have inhaled through a tube. But I never wanted to be addicted to the stuff.

The cool, SGA bourgeoisie did nothing to keep me from being addicted to tobacco. I was never able to join the high school elite, and smoking would have been a good way to add coolness to my high school resume. I'm not addicted to tobacco right now because I realized love and health are more important that coolness. I realized the comradere I gained while running cross country was better than any perceived coolness. I do fear lung cancer, and I fear not being able to run long distances. Breathing tobacco smoke may be like drinking wine. Breathing oxygen is like drinking water, and there times water tastes so much better than wine.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Very nice writing, but I would recommend against blurring the line between responsible personal smoking and self-destructive cigarettte smoking like the rest of the non-smoking world seems to be determined to do.
Those of us that are truly social pipe and cigar smokers should know better than to continue to arm the enemy that is out to stamp out our personal freedoms.

Anonymous said...

smoking is cool.
no matter how we try to kill the situation by words like "cancer", and "death"...smoking will always be cool.
i think, since everyone has learnt about the dangers of smoking and it's become a risk, people like to appear...superior to those particular risks.
i myself am a young and fairly popular teenager. i started smoking socially when i was 15, and as soon i was smoking a trail of others started aswell.
i never promoted it, telling people that they should start, they merely followed my lead. i also see smoking as 'growing up'. a token of the changes you've made about yourself. childhood friends will see you smoking and will see that you have made a dramatic change in your lifestyle. everyone knows that the first time you smoke will be an experience..and strangers can see that you've had that exciting experience, and will asume that you've had more interesting things happen in your life.
this is what i think. alot of people will disagree with that, but im telling you about what i have found and what other people have told me.
as mjg has written, smoking is popular in the sense of responsible personal smoking, as opposed to self-destructive smoking.

x

Bookworm said...

Thank you so much for this post. It seems that the only two opinions to be found anywhere are either, "SMOKING IS BAD BAD BAD, YOU WILL GET CANCER AND DIE!!!!!", or "Smoking is freaking awesome. Don't listen to those anti-smoking people because they're just a bunch of prudes who don't want you to have any fun."

While the former has scared me away from smoking, I can't help but admit that the latter group is extremely alluring. Which is, I suppose, where the recreational smoking group comes in; it's cool, but not dirty; it's a bit daring, but not idiotically death-defying.

Smoking will always be glamorous, no buts (butts?) about it. Thank you for helping me crystallize my thoughts on this topic. I enjoyed your post.