"I want that feeling," Mika said to her mother, who had just come home from work and, as she did every day, sat down, relaxed, and fired up one of the 30 full strength Newports she smoked every day. Mika was 18 and had just finished high school. Tall and lithe like her mother, she had long black hair and beautiful brown eyes. She had the physical composure of an athlete, and had played on her high school soccer team, but she was more interested in academics and was generally quiet - a bit of a strong, silent type, very comfortable and confident in her own skin. Her looks and figure drew longing glances wherever she went, but she was largely unaware of that, even as she headed towards her freshman year of college.
"What do you mean, hon," Mika's mom, Marin, asked?
"I feel so stressed about everything, and I know you feel it too, at the end of your long days - and I see that look on your face when you light and inhale a cigarette - it's this combination of relief and satisfaction that I wish I could capture and experience," Mika said. "It's not so much that I'm desperate to try smoking, but I just want that feeling, for a few minutes, that I'm not just struggling to keep up with the demands of being 18, or heading into my first semester of college, or my work, or my friends, but I'm satisfying something that's mine, that I'm doing because I want to do it, when I want to do it. That's what you look like when you smoke."
Mika teared up as she was talking to her mom, something she rarely did. The kid was tough and smart and hard working, and life had thrown a lot at her. Marin was a single mother who had for many years struggled to provide for the two of them, until three years ago when she worked to get her real estate license and discovered that she was pretty darned good at developing relationships with buyers and sellers and began building a solid practice that was growing significantly during the current boom. Mika's father had been a one-night stand, and Marin had neither asked or expected help from him, even if she could have tracked him down. It was Marin's choice, and she had this extraordinary young woman to show for all the years of hard work.
*******
Marin paused to reflect a bit on what her daughter was saying. Truth be told, Mika was right: my god, there were times when those Newports felt like her only friends and her only source of comfort. She had started smoking when she was 15. An only child, both her parents smoked, and quite literally every single adult relative smoked. Her mother was the eldest sister in her family, and the house was always full in aunts, uncles, cousins, and smoke. Marin in a weird way considered herself a smoker long before she mustered up the nerve to steal one of her mother's Salem Lights and run up to the bathroom to try it. Even while she endured a strong wave of nausea after just two inhales, she knew - those first two drags confirmed for her that she was not just someone who was trying smoking, but a smoker, probably for life. She grew increasingly bold in her pilfering, and soon realized that she was addicted - those days in school when the need gnawed at her, consumed her and kept her from concentrating on anything but that cigarette on the park bench as she walked home proved that. She was committed mentally and now physically to her cigarettes and they had already become her welcome friend and comfort.
Marin very quickly reached the point where stealing a few, then several, cigarettes a day just didn't cut it anymore. The need and the addiction were too strong, the joy of satisfying that craving just too sweet. She had to have her own cigarettes, her own lighter. She was a smoker. Nervous as hell, but steadfast in her understanding that the need had to be served, she stopped at the gas station mini mart on her way to school one morning. She couldn't make eye contact with the clerk behind the counter, and had a gigantic frog in her throat that stopped her from speaking, but right there by the register was a Newport display - a rack of green boxes similar to her mother's Salem Lights. She grabbed one, proud of herself for acting like she know what she was doing - sort of - and the clerk rang her up without batting an eye. She practically skipped to the park near school, removing the cellophane as she fast-walked, flipping open the box top, taking one of her mother's many Bic's out of her bag and lighting up as soon as she sat on the bench. How to describe it? She felt liberated, she felt she was experiencing some private triumph, and, well, as her daughter had put it so perfectly, she felt the sweetest combination of relief and satisfaction. This was her thing, her private need, satisfied. And man, these Newports were not Salem Lights! She felt a renewed buzz from the extra nicotine, and it was lifelong love at the first deep drag - they were pure delight, they weren't her mom's, they were hers - her pack, her own brand, her flavor, all hers.
*******
Marin gathered herself to respond to Mika's heartfelt revelation about the stresses she'd been feeling. "Gosh, honey, I know you've been under pressure for the last year - you've managed it all so beautifully that I'm embarrassed to say I didn't fully recognize how much of a toll it was taking. If I haven't said it frequently enough, I am so proud of you. And honestly, I had no idea that you looked at my smoking that way," Marin said as she took a long drag and inhaled a tight ball of the heavy menthol smoke. "I've smoked for almost 25 years, and I've never really pictured myself smoking through someone else's eyes, and I certainly never thought you felt that way about my smoking - the way you used to wave your hand in front of your face, or roll your eyes or sometimes even leave the room when I smoked, I'd just assumed that at some point you'd come to terms with it as something you just had to put up with because my cigarettes are a part of me being me. But I have to tell you - and I am not encouraging you to start smoking at all - that I've never heard my feelings about my habit described as simply and accurately as you just did. It is, in a way, a very personal, comforting and reliable solace, and it has been since the day I bought my first pack."
"Thank you for getting what I'm saying, Mom, and I know I did all that bratty stuff when I was in middle school, but as I went through high school, I honestly came to envy that look and that feeling you projected pretty much every time you light up a cigarette," Mika said.
As she was putting out her cigarette, Marin said again how proud she was of her daughter - not just for her achievements, but for the conversation they were having, "It just makes me feel like I've done something right all these years that you feel comfortable talking to me this way, Mika. Thank you. And let's figure out together how you can shed some of that pressure and emotional burden you feel."
With that, Marin and Mika went into the kitchen to prepare their dinner salad as they did most nights - both women were thin and quite beautiful, with matching jet black hair and brown eyes. And after dinner, Marin, of course, lit up a Newport and inhaled deeply - these cigarettes after dinner were among her favorites of the day.
Mika surprised her mother a bit when she said, "what would you think if I decided to have a cigarette every once in a while?"
"Wow," Marin said, "Before about an hour ago, I had never even contemplated that idea, honey, so I don't know. Obviously, I'm a committed smoker, and I love smoking - and I know it's not popular or politically correct or healthy to say that, but it's true, I do love it, and I don't ever intend to quit. But I have to be really objective and honest with you, Mika: I don't just smoke because I love it, I smoke because I am addicted to it. And that addiction can creep up on you and it doesn't let go easily. What you said about my smoking earlier - that I have a look of relief and satisfaction when I light up and take that first drag - that's because I am satisfying my deep craving and need for nicotine. When you're addicted and can't smoke, all those things you've heard about having a "nicotine fit" and needing a "nicotine fix" are true - it's uncomfortable and kind of maddening, and satisfying that craving is the only relief. It's a commitment and a burden, but also brings me, at least, great enjoyment.
"But as for you having a cigarette 'every once in awhile,' I guess I'd want to know that you really wanted to do it and that you were prepared for the consequences - there are the obvious health effects, your clothes can smell, people actively look down on you, etc., all because of this choice you made and the addiction you've developed. And that's not something to take lightly."
"I know all those things, Mom, but when I see you smoking, I want to join you, I want it too, I want that moment of calm and relief, and I really only am thinking about occasionally having a cigarette," Mika said.
Marin had an idea that a responsible mother probably shouldn't, but what the hell, "Tell you what, honey, think about it for a day, so that you're sure it's something you really want to try, and I'll support you. I really want to know it's not just something that was a spur of the moment desire that you can't turn back from. I do think, if you want to give it a go, you might want to start with a Light cigarette. These full flavor Newports I smoke are pretty powerful, and I don't want your introduction, if you decide to do it, to be really unpleasant."
"Well, ok, Mom, I guess that's ok. I mean, I am 18 and can make this decision on my own, and I have watched you smoke for all 18 of those years, but I will think about it," Mika said.