when my father smoked, i was a child. terrified by every inhale. the thought of his tar riddened lungs was unbearable. but he was a lost cause, long lost to the tar stained tobacco on a stick. I would clutch my teddy in the back seat of the car, fearful that my lungs may ingest such vile and villainous fumes.
when I smoked I was a teen, dragging on the stick I once feared so much. inhaling and exhaling as if my life depended on it. I recalled the fear of a child's eyes, myself. so afraid of death and toxicity but now, seventeen, I had long forgotten my childhood wish to stay alive, to grow up because I had. and while doing so had learned that life is bleak. my tar stained lungs don't horrify me like my father's did, they push me further, smoking faster and harder until I may become a small pile of grey and cremated ash kept carefully within a decorated vase upon a mantle piece, an ash tray of sorts.