The Smoking Champion of Central Ohio
I smoked for seventeen years, despite the fact that I knew that smoking was a totally stinky, gross habit that made your teeth brown and your lungs all black and furry. Why did I smoke? God knows. Probably because it was better than the alternative: eating potato chips all day. About six years ago, however, I quit, and life has been much better without cigarettes.
My mother disagrees, however, and she sees her habit of at
least sixty years as an accomplishment in longevity, rather than an exercise in
walking the razor’s edge of emphysema and lung cancer. And, to her credit, if smoking were an Olympic
sport, she would probably have more medals than Michael Phelps. He has 22 medals, by the way, so my mom would
have at least 23. I realize this would
be difficult, but that is what I am telling you: my mom knows all the tricks.
Trick #1: Start early.
My mother, on last check, got up around 6 am most mornings. To go to work? No. To
get a leg up on the competition, smoking-wise.
Every morning, she jumps out of bed (in my mind, she throws her arms up
in the air and shouts “Hello, world!” but that probably doesn’t really happen),
showers, gets dressed, and comes downstairs to the dining room table so she can
start rolling and smoking. Rolling? Yep.
She rolls her own cigarettes.
When smokes stopped being a buck fifty a pack, my mother, a champion
cheapo, invested in a cigarette rolling contraption, and made friends with the
guy at the loose tobacco store. So every
morning, you can hear the rhythmic cha-chunk, cha-chunk as she rolls her
own. One time, her little contraption
broke, and she paid my son, like, $25,000 to fix it. It was either that, or just start eating
loose tobacco. And the woman does have
standards.
Trick #2: Be Classy.
My mom started smoking in the days when a cigarette was elegant and
sophisticated. So to keep that element
of class up, my mother has found the perfect receptacle in which to carry
around her cigarettes: GladWare. What is
GladWare? It is like Tupperware’s imbecile
cousin. Well, what do you expect a
78-year-old woman with forty loose cigarettes to do? Carry them in her hands? That would be ridiculous. With the GladWare, her precious smokes are
protected from rogue water spills, hostile weather conditions, unexpected tumbles,
and more. Also, no thief would ever
steal GladWare containers. Even thieves have
standards. Now, you might wonder, “Does
she really take the GladWare everywhere?
Because I heard that your mother, despite the fact that she is 78 years
old, is also a tour guide.” If you are
saying that, you are correct. My mother
is a tour guide, because she does not let her age dictate her awesomeness, and
also because she figured out that being a tour guide is the cheapest way to
travel as much as she wants. As I
mentioned before, she is quite a cheapo.
On those occasions when the GladWare is simply too gauche for the
occasion, she has a special leather pouch that she purchased on the cheap in
Mexico that she wears on a lanyard around her neck. Yes, it’s a cigarette lanyard. And yes, it’s beaded. Let your imagination do the work for you,
folks.
Trick #3: Don’t let the occasion stop you from smoking. Here is a true story: many years ago, my
mother and I were in Paris. I saw all
the great sights: Notre Dame, the Champs-Élysées, the Louvre….you name it, I
toured that motherfucker up. My mother,
on the other hand, smoked all the
great sights. We got to Notre Dame, and
she was like, “That’s okay, I’ve already seen it. You go on in.” So I did, and she sat outside and
smoked. The Louvre? Same thing.
She was like, “Take all the time you want. I’ll be out here,” as she caressed her
cigarettes and lighter. And, sure
enough, when I came out, she was gabbing with all of the other Louvre
smokers. Ah, Paris. By my count, the woman has smoked her way
through most of Europe, a great deal of Central America, and almost every state
in the Union. Worthy of 23 gold
medals? I should say so.
Trick #4: Find your own personal nirvana. For my mother, it’s the casino. Think about it: where else can you smoke,
drink bottom-shelf liquor, and play the slots at the same time? The best trick is to find a casino on Native
American land, where you can also buy cheap cartons of cigarettes (it would not
surprise me to find out that my mother was the kingpin of a reservation
smuggling operation) and then smoke them all while staking your claim on a
one-armed bandit.
Trick #5: Break the mold.
Sure, most 78-year-old smokers are on ventilators by this point, but my
mother comes from a long line of old ladies (on both sides of her family!) who
smoke, drink, and recklessly drive giant automobiles until they’re 100 years
old. She doesn’t plan on going anywhere,
and her membership in no fewer than five book clubs, a couple of bowling
leagues, water aerobics, and, of course, her job as a tour guide, keep her
healthier and more active than many of the forty-year-old lazy bitches I know.
I mean, the woman’s lungs probably look like Chernobyl at this point, but you
have to kind of admire that she’s like, “Listen, everyone has a talent, and
this appears to be mine. Quite frankly,
it would be selfish of me not to explore my talent to its greatest potential.”
Well, you got me there, Mom.