Post by judyb on Apr 6, 2018 22:06:43 GMT -5
DAY 19
Another aesthetic consideration: wrinkles. Women especially wrinkle up from smoking, probably
because of a lack of blood flow to the skin. One study of smokers and wrinkling, based on
photographic portraits, concluded that smokers ages 40 to 49 had as many wrinkes as non smokers
20 years older. The coloring of a smoker isn't pretty either. Likewise due to lack of blood circulation,
the skin tends to be sallow, lacking that slight blush that adds to sex appeal. No amount of makeup
substitutes for moist, dewy skin. Yo probably already look far better than you id twelve days ago.
Men have tougher skin, but men who smoke are still far more likely to be excessively wrinkled than
nonsmokers. Smoking certainly undermines the virile look, and a smoking man looks more beaten
than bold. And in time, the health problems associated with smoking do their sad work. Nobody who
is carrying an oxygen bottle looks sexy.
----
DAY 20
Besides the smell and the wrinkles, another giveaway that someone is a smoker is stained, yellow
teeth. Young people may escape tobacco-colored teeth for awhile, but eventually the effect catch up
with them.
Smokers get four to five times more gum disease than non smokers and are more likely to lose their
teeth at an early age. A study of 17,000 people in Buffalo, new York, revealed that the condition of
the gums and underlying bones of smokers was comparable to that of non-smokers fifteen years
older. Among women with osteoporosis, the smokers are three times more likely to lose their teeth
than the nonsmokers.
Now's the time to make an appointment for a teeth cleaning to get the old cigarette stains off. Your
teeth should look a lot better afterward and will stay that way if you don't smoke. If there's
irreversible damage, you may want to look into the new staining and bonding process.
From: www.amazon.com/Meditations-Surviving-Without-Cigarettes-Wanning/dp/0380769166
Another aesthetic consideration: wrinkles. Women especially wrinkle up from smoking, probably
because of a lack of blood flow to the skin. One study of smokers and wrinkling, based on
photographic portraits, concluded that smokers ages 40 to 49 had as many wrinkes as non smokers
20 years older. The coloring of a smoker isn't pretty either. Likewise due to lack of blood circulation,
the skin tends to be sallow, lacking that slight blush that adds to sex appeal. No amount of makeup
substitutes for moist, dewy skin. Yo probably already look far better than you id twelve days ago.
Men have tougher skin, but men who smoke are still far more likely to be excessively wrinkled than
nonsmokers. Smoking certainly undermines the virile look, and a smoking man looks more beaten
than bold. And in time, the health problems associated with smoking do their sad work. Nobody who
is carrying an oxygen bottle looks sexy.
----
DAY 20
Besides the smell and the wrinkles, another giveaway that someone is a smoker is stained, yellow
teeth. Young people may escape tobacco-colored teeth for awhile, but eventually the effect catch up
with them.
Smokers get four to five times more gum disease than non smokers and are more likely to lose their
teeth at an early age. A study of 17,000 people in Buffalo, new York, revealed that the condition of
the gums and underlying bones of smokers was comparable to that of non-smokers fifteen years
older. Among women with osteoporosis, the smokers are three times more likely to lose their teeth
than the nonsmokers.
Now's the time to make an appointment for a teeth cleaning to get the old cigarette stains off. Your
teeth should look a lot better afterward and will stay that way if you don't smoke. If there's
irreversible damage, you may want to look into the new staining and bonding process.
From: www.amazon.com/Meditations-Surviving-Without-Cigarettes-Wanning/dp/0380769166