|
A FREE EXTRA DECADE OF LIFE #9
SMOKE ON THE SILVER SCREEN
We've had a fairly cheerful time in this new radio series,
exploring ways we can all grab hold of what's promised in our featured
book: Live 10 Healthy Years Longer. But today all of us in the studio
are just a little bit cranky, seeing red, so to speak. And it's because
of a recent L.A. Times newspaper story that happened to float into our
offices.
Actually, it blew in on a cloud of smoke. Benedict Carey, who writes for
the Times' weekly Health section, had a story with this title: "Cigarettes
Are Doing Big Box Office." The general gist is that, even with all
the restrictions on smoking and tobacco ads, cigarettes still occupy a
primo spot . . .
" . . . in California's most glamorous venue -
the movies, where actors are posing with brand-name cigarettes more frequently
now than they have in decades, according to a new study."
Tobacco companies swear that for the past 12 years they
have voluntarily pledged to NOT participate in so-called "product
placement," where money changes hands in return for a movie featuring
their certain brand. But for some mysterious reason - according to this
study done by Dartmouth Medical School - there's just as much smoking
on the screen as there was before the ban went into effect. And here's
the part that really frustrates us: scenes where a popular actor visibly
lights up an identifiable brand have had a tenfold jump. That's right
- they went from 1% of films before the ban to 11% today. And Carey points
out that when a popular actor like Bruce Willis or Julia Roberts lights
up their favorite brand name right there in the movie and blows smoke
out over the audience, that's an almost irresistible advertisement for
young people watching the movie. It's the most deadly kind of come-on
there is.
Of course, studio executives protest that sometimes the realism of a film
demands that they show a person smoking. But it's hard to find that logic
compelling, isn't it? When Jack Dawson, played by Leonardo DiCaprio, was
lounging on that deckside bench, looking up at the moonlit sky, moments
before the dramatic scene where he rescues Rose from jumping off the Titanic,
what's he doing? Smoking a cigarette and blowing the smoke into the cold
night air. What does the smoking have to do with the scene? Nothing. What
does it add to the scene? Nothing. What does it accomplish besides getting
3,000 teenagers a day, every single day of the year, to start smoking
cigarettes for the first time? Not a whole lot that we can think of.
The authors of this book, Jan Kuzma and Cecil Murphey, express their outrage
with a bit different metaphor. Maybe you've heard this one before:
"Five days ago, three jumbo jets crashed in California," they
ask us to imagine. "More than a thousand people died in the separate
crashes. Four days ago, three more planes crashed outside Miami. Everyone
on board each plane died. Three days ago, a plane crashed in Denver, another
in Boston, and one in Atlanta. In each crash, everyone on board died.
Yesterday another thousand people died in airline crashes. So far today,
two planes have crashed. In the five days alone, the average daily death
count has been one thousand people."
And now they pose the question: What would be happening
in our world if three jumbo jets did indeed plunge to earth every single
day? It would be panic time at CNN. It would be wall-to-wall news coverage.
It would be the lead headline of every newspaper, magazine, TV talk show,
and network broadcast. Congress would be in a screaming session this very
minute, with the FAA and the heads of every airline, and they'd be hammering
out legislation - gridlock or no gridlock, 50-50 tie in the Senate or
not - TO GET THIS THING FIXED!!
By the way, would anybody be flying on planes? Not if you could help it.
You'd be riding on the bus or e-mailing your business across the country
instead of flying it there.
Well, the fact is this: Every single day, just in the U.S. alone, three
planeloads of smokers go down to premature deaths. A thousand people every
single day die of tobacco-related illnesses.
"Cigarettes kill more Americans annually,"
write Jan and Cecil, "than AIDS, cocaine, heroin, alcohol, automobiles,
homicide, suicide, and fire . . . combined! COMBINED!"
Friend, that is unbelievable. And if you think 747 jumbo
jets are expensive to replace, we find out that cigarettes, along with
alcohol and drugs, are going to cost Medicare - which we all help pay
for - one trillion dollars in the next two decades.
Well, let's not burn up our few minutes with disease statistics, friend,
because I think you already know them. The good news is this. Even if
you're a smoker this very minute, you can get OFF that jumbo jet and join
the Live-Longer Lifestyle. Believe me, the 27,000 people in that health
study who have been living eight, ten, 13 years longer than the general
population . . . NONE of them are smokers! Not a one of them. And if you
stop right now - throw those cigarettes away and never pick them up again
- your body immediately begins to heal itself. Surgeon General C. Everett
Koop, who created that jumbo jet metaphor, had this to say in his 1990
report to the nation:
"Smoking cessation represents the single most important step that
smokers can take to enhance the length and quality of their lives."
I heard an apocryphal story once about a discussion
between a smoker and a nonsmoker. "I don't smoke," the nonsmoker
proudly told his tobacco-saturated friend. And the guy with the cigarette
asked him: "What would you do if your doctor told you you were going
to die in six months if you didn't quit smoking?" "I just told
you," the other man said. "I don't smoke!" "See!"
his friend shouted. "You have nothing in reserve!"
Well, that's kind of cute, but the amazing news if you ARE a smoker is
that if you quit today, right now, the damage which has been done up till
now is incredibly reversible. In fact, Jan and Cecil tell us that after
15 years of nonsmoking, it's essentially as though you never had smoked.
Unless you already had cancer or heart disease when you quit, your risk
of death, your mortality statistics, will be those of a lifelong nonsmoker.
So you should never say: "It's too late. I've gone too far."
You can recover a very good share of the lost years, starting right now.
Besides the long, long list of health advantages - and we all know them
- our textbook for this series takes us through the other benefits we
can have as nonsmokers. We save buckets of money: not only on cigarettes,
of course, but also less money for cold remedies, health care, and life
insurance. You lose fewer days to sickness. And just in case you're interested,
you're 50% less likely to suffer from impotence if you're a nonsmoker.
So instead of buying blue pills for yourself, you can buy red roses for
your wife with the money you save.
Well, friend, if you're a smoker, let me say this to you. It's probably
not something you can fix over the radio. Certainly you should get counsel
from your family doctor. It might take the aid of something like a nicotine
patch. Jan and Cecil report on the phenomenal success many people are
having with something called Bupropion - the brand name is Zyban, by the
way - which is a breakthrough partly engineered by a Dr. Linda Hyde Ferry
of . . . guess where? Loma Linda University - the very site of most of
these Live-Longer Lifestyle health studies. Bupropion is the first FDA-approved,
nonaddicting medication to help a person with smoking cessation. And you
might well need something along these lines.
But two points as we close. Jan Kuzma and Cecil Murphey, right in this
book, share 12 marvelous, practical things a smoker can do starting right
now, Thursday, April 19, 2001, to get off that jumbo jet. Health tips,
strategy tips, spiritual tips, exercise tips. Many, many people have successfully
kicked the cigarette habit, and there's not a reason in the world why
you can't do it too. By all means, if you haven't yet called or written
in for your copy of this book, Live 10 Healthy Years Longer, contact us
today. This chapter alone, entitled "A Stop In Time," could
be an incredible course correction for you. We would love for that to
happen in your life.
And my second point is this. Friend, I can tell you without any hesitation
that it's the Lord's will for you to be free of your cigarette habit.
I know it! The Bible assures us in powerful, comforting, hope-filled words
that He wants us to be healthy! That's Third John, verse two. He'll provide
you with the resources to gain victory. That's in Philippians four. He
wants you to enjoy the abundant life - that's John 10:10 . . . and Jesus
Himself saying that. And there's no way in the world that smoking, with
all its attending horrors, is an abundant life. No way. I don't care how
good it looks when Bruce Willis lights up. That's a sad, sorry lie . .
. and you and I both know it.
So on the one hand we have tobacco companies. They'd like to keep you
smoking. They want you to smoke. They invite you to smoke, and their invitations
are pretty powerful. Across the way, on the other side of the cemetery
. . . is God. Offering abundant life, both now and in His eternal kingdom.
Who's more powerful? And whose friendship would you rather have?
|