Want this question answered?
Stop playing with your health by going back to smoking. You should avoid gaining weight if you observe a proper diet, and your health is seriously affected by smoking.
Smoking has been shown to cause premature aging and increase the risk of disease. Quitting smoking is not easy, but there are resources available to assist you. Speak with a doctor about quitting smoking. Quitting smoking is the single best thing you can do for your health and longevity. Smoking has been blamed for a slew of ailments ranging from heart disease to lung disorders, all of which can jeopardize your longevity plans.
not sure if this helps, but my moter quit smoking 3 yrs ago and after a while she eventually got her sense of taste back so im sure that you will to.
Quitting smoking will have a good effect on the lungs. Make sure not to relapse into smoking and increase exercise (particularly cardio) and to get plenty of fresh air to keep healthy.
Quitting cold turkey has proven to be very effective. Also, trying to focus on not smoking just one day at a time, instead of thinking ahead to how long you want to quit or thinking back to how long it's been since you had a smoke.
after quitting, it might take a year or so to get your energy back because your body needs to get used to the fact that there is no longer that specific thing running through your system. also your organs(heart and lungs) might not be in very good shape considering how long you smoked before quitting, so you might also find your not in as good in shape as you might have been before smoking.
hey, You have answered your own question! Quitting smoking will give you back your natural pink lips... You will usually see the difference in about 2-3 days of no smoking! I know this because I was a smoker, now non-smoker and my lips also had dark marks on them due to smoking, as soon as I quit I got my natural pink color back on my lips! So just keep smoke free and you will have your natural lip color back too!!! hope this helped.
No he is not quitting wrestling and he most likely will not be back at SummerSlam (2010) since he had surgery a couple of weeks ago.
no, most probably he will be back in four months
Smoking any tobacco products affects a baby from day one. As always, it's best to completely quit smoking when pregnant. But, if quitting is impossible then cutting back on smoking is better than nothing. Just remember that when the baby is born, he or she will already be addicted to nicotine, which will cause it to cry more than a non-nicotine addicted baby because they won't be able to have any tobacco products (they are babies!).
Depending on what damage you mean, it will vary. In certain organs the damage will take longer, for instance lung damage, depending on what the damage consists of, may take as long as 10 years. If you developed emphysema, it will never be healed and will actually get worse despite smoking cessation. The odds of having a heart attack reduce tremendously after smoking cessation, approaching the odds of nonsmokers within 2 years or so. Here's a more complete listing: * 20 Minutes after your last cigarette: ** Blood pressure decreases ** Temperature of hands and feet increases to normal (because of improved blood circulation) * 8 Hours after quitting: ** The carbon monoxide level (that's car exhaust and it's in cigarette smoke!) in your blood drops to normal * 24 Hours after quitting: ** Chance of a heart attack decreases * 2 Weeks to 3 Months after quitting: ** Blood circulation improves ** Lung function (how well the lungs are working) increases up to 30% * 1 to 9 Months after quitting: ** Coughing, congestion, fatigue, shortness of breath decrease ** The cilia (small hairs that line the airways) go back to working normally, meaning that your lungs get cleaner and function better overall * 1 Year after quitting: ** Excess risk of coronary heart disease is half that of a smoker's * 5 Years after quitting: ** Risk of stroke is reduced to the risk of a nonsmoker (between 5 and 15 years after quitting) * 10 Years after quitting: ** The lung cancer death rate is about half the rate of a smoker who has not quit ** The risk of oral and throat cancer, bladder, kidney, and pancreatic cancer decreases * 15 Years after quitting: ** The risk of coronary heart disease is equal to a nonsmoker's risk.
AS far as my internet search concerned. Yes smoking turns white part of eye into little yellowish, not exactly yellow but not exactly white too. Quitting smoking will give back white colour of eye.