Last night SS and I were reading one of the Diary of a Wimpy kid books.
There was a part where the kid enters a anti smoking poster contest. He couldn't read anti smoking and then asked me some questions about smoking in general. No biggie. I took it as an opportunity to tell him some of the bad health consequences and how it makes your hair/clothes etc smell bad.
I generically asked if he knew anyone that smoked and he said his mom, then had a horrified look on his face. (The look he gets when he remembers he accidentally just said something he wasn't supposed to) and his stepfather. I didn't make a big deal out of mom smoking, I kind of let it slide since he was all weird about it, but now I'm worried I did wrong about discussing all the health stuff because this morning he asked if his mom and step dad are going to die of cancer.
Is 9 years too young for me to have discussed that? I wouldn't think so. I was glad to have the opportunity to hopefully set a good precedent of making him aware how bad it is before he gets to middle school and maybe faces peer pressure to smoke.
My answer back to him about the mom and step dad might have been lame, I just said it is never too late to quit and that a lot of times when you quit your body is super cool and can fix itself.
Re: Uh Oh did I just screw up? Talking to kid about smoking/cancer
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You did fine. DD was taught how dangerous smoking is because of how it has affected my own mother. My mother was diagnosed with COPD and has problems walking across the room without having breathing issues. She quit when her doctor told her to but it was too late, she had been chain smoking since 16. Sometimes side effects reverse after quitting but for her they haven't. We were told she would eventually end up on oxygen, ect. She has 3 different inhalers she takes daily plus neb treatments. DD's BD and SM smoke. DD knows how bad it is. It does kill. In fact, the reality of my mom having COPD hit me like a truck when we got the letter from my brother's lung reciepent. The man had COPD as well. It made me think that someday if my mom gets to the point of needed a transplant, I hope she is lucky enough to recieve that gift as well. DD read the letter as well.
I could care less if BD thinks my DD shouldn't know the reality of his choices. I will educate her to make the best choices for herself. Anytime she mentions his decision to smoke, I refer her to him for explanations of why.
Even when DH smoked, we never shied away from telling her about the effects of smoking. And she has an uncle that suffering from COPD and emphysema and diabetes who refuses to even slow down smoking. People she loves serve as an example to her.
Schools will educate children about the health concerns of smoking whether or not their parents are smokers. So why not us?