The Fatal Consquences of Smoking
An ounce of puffing pleasure can actually cost you your life.
This is what is at stake for every cigarette you smoke.
There are thousands of harmful chemicals that make up the cigarette many people smoke and patronize in this time and age.
The fatal effects of smoking are already getting harder and harder to ignore.
Health reasons are the most obvious facet among the fatal effects of smoking.
Whether you are exposed to smoking directly or indirectly (i.
e.
Consistent exposure to smoke of chain smokers), there are a lot of fatal effects of smoking to watch out for.
Your heart will primarily be strained as smoking actually increases your blood pressure and heart rate, making your heart more overworked than the normal.
If this persists, you may be eligible to have heart attacks and strokes.
The tobacco in smoke cancer, specifically the tar, which congests your lungs and keeps it from functioning properly, causes.
Cancer is the most fatal of all fatal effects of smoking, since it not only causes death but it is also something with which you will suffer tremendously in almost every conceivable aspect.
Smoking also causes you to have less oxygen than what you actually need.
Your body will suddenly be deprived of its much-needed oxygen supply, making everything swollen within and unable to function normally.
Almost all organs of the body will be forced to work harder and will be more likely to burn out sooner.
The illnesses such as emphysema, bronchitis and heart disease, among many others, are part of the fatal effects of smoking which accumulate over time.
Most of these conditions are irreversible even long after you have decided to quit smoking.
Another thing that can be considered as part of the fatal effects of smoking is the damage it can do to other aspects of your life.
For one thing, smoking causes a debilitating dependency on the substance which will enslave you into patronizing the product at the expense of your own well-being.
Smoking as habit can consume you to the point where you will no longer have concern about other people's welfare and how your smoking will affect other people and the environment you are living in.
It is not just the smoker who receives the brunt of the fatal effects of smoking to the body.
Indirect recipients are also at a great risk.
Middle ear infections, bronchitis, infant death and pneumonia are just some of the fatal effects of smoking to passive smokers, or those who are not doing the smoking but are exposed to it on a regular basis.
The fatal effects of smoking does not just happen to humans, but also extends to animals and plants which are part of the environment of the smoking person.
Oxygen is usually polluted and snatched from the atmosphere where tobacco smoke is prevalent, making it harder for plants and animals to thrive in a healthy manner, especially in urban areas where they are already forced to make do with a polluted environment brought by other factors such as smoke coming from cars and industrial processes.
This is what is at stake for every cigarette you smoke.
There are thousands of harmful chemicals that make up the cigarette many people smoke and patronize in this time and age.
The fatal effects of smoking are already getting harder and harder to ignore.
Health reasons are the most obvious facet among the fatal effects of smoking.
Whether you are exposed to smoking directly or indirectly (i.
e.
Consistent exposure to smoke of chain smokers), there are a lot of fatal effects of smoking to watch out for.
Your heart will primarily be strained as smoking actually increases your blood pressure and heart rate, making your heart more overworked than the normal.
If this persists, you may be eligible to have heart attacks and strokes.
The tobacco in smoke cancer, specifically the tar, which congests your lungs and keeps it from functioning properly, causes.
Cancer is the most fatal of all fatal effects of smoking, since it not only causes death but it is also something with which you will suffer tremendously in almost every conceivable aspect.
Smoking also causes you to have less oxygen than what you actually need.
Your body will suddenly be deprived of its much-needed oxygen supply, making everything swollen within and unable to function normally.
Almost all organs of the body will be forced to work harder and will be more likely to burn out sooner.
The illnesses such as emphysema, bronchitis and heart disease, among many others, are part of the fatal effects of smoking which accumulate over time.
Most of these conditions are irreversible even long after you have decided to quit smoking.
Another thing that can be considered as part of the fatal effects of smoking is the damage it can do to other aspects of your life.
For one thing, smoking causes a debilitating dependency on the substance which will enslave you into patronizing the product at the expense of your own well-being.
Smoking as habit can consume you to the point where you will no longer have concern about other people's welfare and how your smoking will affect other people and the environment you are living in.
It is not just the smoker who receives the brunt of the fatal effects of smoking to the body.
Indirect recipients are also at a great risk.
Middle ear infections, bronchitis, infant death and pneumonia are just some of the fatal effects of smoking to passive smokers, or those who are not doing the smoking but are exposed to it on a regular basis.
The fatal effects of smoking does not just happen to humans, but also extends to animals and plants which are part of the environment of the smoking person.
Oxygen is usually polluted and snatched from the atmosphere where tobacco smoke is prevalent, making it harder for plants and animals to thrive in a healthy manner, especially in urban areas where they are already forced to make do with a polluted environment brought by other factors such as smoke coming from cars and industrial processes.