I Quit Smoking
cigarettes, one after the other, and I miss stepping
alone into the sun or the dark, apart from others
who had better sense than I did.
I admit it: I miss the nicotine, even while telling
myself between puffs that this dependency
would not be bad for me. Look at my father:
He smoked 65 years in a row, from the time
he was 9 years old, and sure, OK, he had some
emphysema in the end, but that’s not what killed
him. My friend Ron used to say a little nicotine was good
for you, but I never got the hang of just a little nicotine.
The blast of that first cigarette after breakfast
with a second cup of black coffee is unparalleled. I miss
smoking in my car. I miss finding the secret smoking places
where smoking is banned. Hospitals are especially tricky.
Once I followed two nurses through the corridors
after I heard one of them say “let’s go smoke.”
We exited by a side door onto a sad alley
with benches and ashcans, a half dozen people in scrubs
studying their phones, cigarettes balanced
between their fingers; their patients languishing
inside. My own mother was dying upstairs
while I was smoking outside with hospital staff.
Still, I miss huddling with others in frigid cold
while the smoke scorches our lungs. I don’t wish to glamorize
it like some old black and white movie filled
with cigarette smoke. Even the stench
of it—I never thought of it as nasty. I miss
the planning: check my pack, where’s my lighter?
Always arranging to burn the next one.
7 thoughts on "I Quit Smoking"
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Wow, Marianne. This is so well done – you had me, a never-smoker- appreciate the smoker’s life. And the stories inside the poem kept me going – stories well-told.
Thanks, Nancy
I’m a former smoker and I love this. I like it that to you spend most your time telling us what you liked. I sometimes still crave them but I worked to quit. Both things can be true. Great details!
I just love everything about this poem. Each line! The whole thing! It’s as true as anything and I definitely heard your voice reading it.
Excellent, Marianne! I can relate to everything here and confess to walking nearby a smoker just to get a secondhand whiff. I’m glad you are writing more; we all are!
I love the honesty of this poem. And all the stories and scenes you reveal within this poem.
Love:
by a side door onto a sad alley/with benches and ashcans
cigarettes balanced/between their fingers; their patients languishing/inside. My own mother was dying upstairs
while I was smoking outside with hospital staff.
Great ending:
I miss/the planning: check my pack, where’s my lighter/Always arranging to burn the next one.
I am a never-smoker but sensed a shared comradery between my smoking friends when they slipped away to have a smoke or if someone need a light how strangers stepped in. Appreciate the inside look!