For years, the Nicotine Industry has encouraged its customers to believe all sorts of health claims and reassurances about their products and about nicotine.
One thing often repeated by promoters, users and smokers of electronic cigarettes is that, with tobacco cigarettes: "it's the smoke that kills - not the nicotine".
But try telling that to Sean Marsee, an Oklahoma teenager born in 1965 who was 'too smart to smoke', and considered an outstanding athlete. Marsee won 28 track medals in the 400 meter relay while running the anchor leg. His classmates honored him with a walnut plaque.
Marsee started his nicotine habit at age 12 (by using chewing tobacco - because he believed the health reassurances of the Nicotine Industry and was 'too smart to smoke'), after getting a
can of free Copenhagen chewing tobacco at a rodeo.
He became a regular user and five years after starting his use, he contracted oral cancer. After a ten month battle with rapidly spreading cancer that started on his tongue, Sean Marsee died at age
19, in 1985.
As the headline of the Reader Digest article said "18-year-old Sean Marsee was too smart to smoke. But Sean's doctor believes that tobacco killed him".
For professional, caring and confidential help, adviice, therapy or treatment for, or about, any of the above issues or topics, or similar, just contact Peter, preferably by e-mail, to arrange an appointment for your free initial consultation.
Or maybe instead read Peter's Website Welcome Letter, or go to the home page and view The Surrey Hypnotherapy Clinic's Smoking Cessation Video Girls and their Website Welcome Video.
Acknowledgements
https://www.ok.gov/okswat/documents/Sean%20Marsee%20Story.pdf
https://collections.nlm.nih.gov/catalog/nlm:nlmuid-101437871-img