What would you do - would you tell the surgeon she is still smoking? Any advice would be appreciated.

Moderator: Andrew
JasonD wrote:I would tell the surgeon. He needs to know.
Other than that, your mom's not diabetic is she? If not, try stocking up on candy. I'm not about talking Snickers or Milky Ways. I'm talking about stuff like Werther's Originals (or however it's spelled.) My ex used to smoke & she quit cold turkey by sucking on hard candies. A lot of the craving is just an oral fixation thing. (Please, no jokes here, people. I'm being serious.) If your mom's not diabetic & she likes hard candies maybe she can replace her cigarette craving with the candy. Not the ideal solution, I know, but whatever gets you there. They say it takes approximately 3 months for the nicotine to get completely out of your system & so 3 or so months of sucking on hard candies isn't gonna make her gain a bunch of weight, but it will keep her senses occupied so that she'll eventually kick the need.
Also, b/c cigarette smoking involves a lot of hand to mouth motion, you might want to try getting her into the habit of doing something else with her hands. Knitting, perhaps? For my ex it was jigsaw puzzles. She wasn't much of a puzzle person before she tried to quit smoking but she found that replacing that oral need with candy & by replacing that hand-to-mouth need by doing jigsaw puzzles she was able to kick her addition. She was a royal "B" for those first 3 months but it was worth it in the end. It's been about 5 years now & as far as I know she never went back to cigarettes.
I hope this helps a little. Good luck, V.
JasonD wrote:Other than that, your mom's not diabetic is she? If not, try stocking up on candy.
Voyager wrote:Thanks everyone for the advice and concern. I've tried to learn to just love what is, because as humans we tend to waste a lot of negative energy and cause undue stress for ourselves by arguing against things we cannot change. But when you see someone you love killing themself, you want to help them. However, I've learned the hard way that you cannot make anyone change - it's hard enough to change ourselves!JasonD wrote:Other than that, your mom's not diabetic is she? If not, try stocking up on candy.
Actually, she did find out she is diabetic. We had her over for Christmas dinner and she said she couldn't eat any pumpkin pie because of her blood sugar. I felt like saying, eat the whole fucking pie and ditch the cigs and you'll be better off for it - but I held my tongue. She's straining out a gnat and swallowing a camel.
Saint John wrote:JasonD wrote:I would tell the surgeon. He needs to know.
Other than that, your mom's not diabetic is she? If not, try stocking up on candy. I'm not about talking Snickers or Milky Ways. I'm talking about stuff like Werther's Originals (or however it's spelled.) My ex used to smoke & she quit cold turkey by sucking on hard candies. A lot of the craving is just an oral fixation thing. (Please, no jokes here, people. I'm being serious.) If your mom's not diabetic & she likes hard candies maybe she can replace her cigarette craving with the candy. Not the ideal solution, I know, but whatever gets you there. They say it takes approximately 3 months for the nicotine to get completely out of your system & so 3 or so months of sucking on hard candies isn't gonna make her gain a bunch of weight, but it will keep her senses occupied so that she'll eventually kick the need.
Also, b/c cigarette smoking involves a lot of hand to mouth motion, you might want to try getting her into the habit of doing something else with her hands. Knitting, perhaps? For my ex it was jigsaw puzzles. She wasn't much of a puzzle person before she tried to quit smoking but she found that replacing that oral need with candy & by replacing that hand-to-mouth need by doing jigsaw puzzles she was able to kick her addition. She was a royal "B" for those first 3 months but it was worth it in the end. It's been about 5 years now & as far as I know she never went back to cigarettes.
I hope this helps a little. Good luck, V.
This is a great post full of excellent information. My step-father needed Planters Peanuts and a candy dish next to his favorite recliner to satiate that "hand to mouth motion." Great point.
Ehwmatt wrote:The doctor absolutely NEEDS to know. I'm no expert on the medical implications/risks that continuing to smoke (perhaps a decreased chance of success is the only risk, but I digress), but they don't just tell you to do or not do something before surgery just to test your willpower. He needs to know and she needs to stop.
My grandfather died at 62 from lung cancer. He quit smoking for a while in his mid-50s, he used to just sit there with an unlit cigarette in his mouth, then he started having a cigar or two here and there and next thing you know he was back on the cancer sticks full-time. Lung cancer followed shortly thereafter. Don't know if his starting back up caused the cancer or made it worse or what not, but the point is, they are fuckin stubborn.
I know in our parents/grandparents generations that smoking was very much the social norm and the health implications weren't fully known. But, it absolutely BLOWS my mind that there are younger people today who start or continue to smoke today with all the information that's available. I've never had one drag from a cig, they are fuckin nasty as fuck.
Jana wrote:There are so many smokers now, 16 to 45, the age that knows better, that it boggles my mind. I'm stunned by all the smokers. It's huge in college now.
Jana wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:The doctor absolutely NEEDS to know. I'm no expert on the medical implications/risks that continuing to smoke (perhaps a decreased chance of success is the only risk, but I digress), but they don't just tell you to do or not do something before surgery just to test your willpower. He needs to know and she needs to stop.
My grandfather died at 62 from lung cancer. He quit smoking for a while in his mid-50s, he used to just sit there with an unlit cigarette in his mouth, then he started having a cigar or two here and there and next thing you know he was back on the cancer sticks full-time. Lung cancer followed shortly thereafter. Don't know if his starting back up caused the cancer or made it worse or what not, but the point is, they are fuckin stubborn.
I know in our parents/grandparents generations that smoking was very much the social norm and the health implications weren't fully known. But, it absolutely BLOWS my mind that there are younger people today who start or continue to smoke today with all the information that's available. I've never had one drag from a cig, they are fuckin nasty as fuck.
There are so many smokers now, 16 to 45, the age that knows better, that it boggles my mind. I'm stunned by all the smokers. It's huge in college now.
Voyager wrote:Thanks everyone for the advice and concern. I've tried to learn to just love what is, because as humans we tend to waste a lot of negative energy and cause undue stress for ourselves by arguing against things we cannot change. But when you see someone you love killing themself, you want to help them. However, I've learned the hard way that you cannot make anyone change - it's hard enough to change ourselves!JasonD wrote:Other than that, your mom's not diabetic is she? If not, try stocking up on candy.
Actually, she did find out she is diabetic. We had her over for Christmas dinner and she said she couldn't eat any pumpkin pie because of her blood sugar. I felt like saying, eat the whole fucking pie and ditch the cigs and you'll be better off for it - but I held my tongue. She's straining out a gnat and swallowing a camel.
Deb wrote:Voyager wrote:Thanks everyone for the advice and concern. I've tried to learn to just love what is, because as humans we tend to waste a lot of negative energy and cause undue stress for ourselves by arguing against things we cannot change. But when you see someone you love killing themself, you want to help them. However, I've learned the hard way that you cannot make anyone change - it's hard enough to change ourselves!JasonD wrote:Other than that, your mom's not diabetic is she? If not, try stocking up on candy.
Actually, she did find out she is diabetic. We had her over for Christmas dinner and she said she couldn't eat any pumpkin pie because of her blood sugar. I felt like saying, eat the whole fucking pie and ditch the cigs and you'll be better off for it - but I held my tongue. She's straining out a gnat and swallowing a camel.
I quit cold turkey about 7 or so years ago. LOL, I used to chew on those plastic coffee stir sticks a lot, until it was a mangled mess then chucked it.I would grab a few everytime I went to get a starbucks coffee and just threw them in my purse. Sounds silly, but I think it helped.....needed something to do with my hands/mouth. I remember somebody telling me the first 3 days are the addiction and the rest after is the habit. It's true, the first 3 days were the toughest, especially first couple........just warn family/friends not to piss you off or stress you or you could end up ripping them a new one.
![]()
I quit 3 times before that and gained a little weight each time...........that, and the price
of them now are what's keeping me from ever starting again.
I think if I was still smoking I wouldn't have been able to travel like I have the last few years. And going to some great shows, and not to mention my sig pic would never have been a reality......$$s much better spent on seeing some GREAT shows and creating some GREAT memories then on $10/$12 pack of cigs.
Wishing your Mom all the best Voy, and hope she ends up quitting some time soon. But until she is ready it won't happen, best of luck to her.
Voyager wrote:She is 65 years old and has been smoking 2+ packs of cigarettes a day for 50 years. She was diagnosed with lung cancer a few months ago and they have her scheduled to get surgery on January 8th to remove a 2" cancerous tumor (it hasn't spread to her lymph nodes yet). The surgeon told her she needed to stop smoking for at least two weeks before the surgery so her lungs would be strong enough to recover from the surgery, and she is still puffing like a chimney. She asked me not to tell the surgeon, but I feel like telling her to just skip the surgery and go ahead and take herself out with the cigarettes because that is what she seems to be bent on doing. She is very stubborn and just won't quit no matter what I tell her.
What would you do - would you tell the surgeon she is still smoking? Any advice would be appreciated.
Voyager wrote:She is 65 years old and has been smoking 2+ packs of cigarettes a day for 50 years. She was diagnosed with lung cancer a few months ago and they have her scheduled to get surgery on January 8th to remove a 2" cancerous tumor (it hasn't spread to her lymph nodes yet). The surgeon told her she needed to stop smoking for at least two weeks before the surgery so her lungs would be strong enough to recover from the surgery, and she is still puffing like a chimney. She asked me not to tell the surgeon, but I feel like telling her to just skip the surgery and go ahead and take herself out with the cigarettes because that is what she seems to be bent on doing. She is very stubborn and just won't quit no matter what I tell her.
What would you do - would you tell the surgeon she is still smoking? Any advice would be appreciated.
MichaelRiesenbeck wrote:Yes, tell. Operating while still smoking poses a bigger risk of dying during the operation I think.
Voyager wrote:She is 65 years old and has been smoking 2+ packs of cigarettes a day for 50 years. She was diagnosed with lung cancer a few months ago and they have her scheduled to get surgery on January 8th to remove a 2" cancerous tumor (it hasn't spread to her lymph nodes yet). The surgeon told her she needed to stop smoking for at least two weeks before the surgery so her lungs would be strong enough to recover from the surgery, and she is still puffing like a chimney. She asked me not to tell the surgeon, but I feel like telling her to just skip the surgery and go ahead and take herself out with the cigarettes because that is what she seems to be bent on doing. She is very stubborn and just won't quit no matter what I tell her.
What would you do - would you tell the surgeon she is still smoking? Any advice would be appreciated.
MBPL wrote:Voyager wrote:What would you do - would you tell the surgeon she is still smoking? Any advice would be appreciated.
YES please tell the surgeon.
Return to Snowmobiles For The Sahara
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 3 guests