For Better or For Worse by Lynn Johnston for September 25, 2021

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    Templo S.U.D.  about 3 years ago

    Good call, girls.

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    Susan00100  about 3 years ago

    So—who’s gonna believe you without proof?

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    wjones  about 3 years ago

    Your still young, Watch out. don’t let your smoking friends get to you.

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    Macushlalondra  about 3 years ago

    Right now they feel sick to their stomachs. I hope that’ll teach them to not smoke!

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    capricorn9th  about 3 years ago

    Well, I did try smoking cigarettes, cigar and cloves. None of them stuck. Out of them all, I liked the cloves the best and did smoke it a bit through the first year of college with a group of friends but after returning for my second year, I stopped smoking cloves. Never smoked anything else since. I tried many other stuff but none of them bit me. The only thing I am addicted to is sweets. I believe it is hereditary. I was adopted as a baby and when I met my bio dad, he informed me that my mother was an addict and smoked like a chimney. I never told my boys about her and viola. Both started smoking early in their high school years and are still smoking today. They told me they just picked up the butts from friends and started smoking as if they were supposed to. Nobody in my adoptive family nor my husband’s family smoked. Just them. Then I found out my bio mother smoked. Definitely hereditary. My bio-dad also tried during his college years but nothing ever stuck – just like me. He also has a sweet tooth – like me. Genetics is fascinating especially when you are adopted and unknowingly acquired habits of the biological family. Well, Liz here has parents who don’t smoke. Hopefully, that will work in her favor.

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    jmworacle  about 3 years ago

    Sometimes you have to learn the hard way.

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    C  about 3 years ago

    “Butt”?? Shouldn’t that be something like fizzz, sssss or even fizzle?

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    dcdete.  about 3 years ago
    Maybe that cigarette had some cannabis in it. The girl is tripping. Why else would Liz call her girlfriend a man?
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    Aladar30 Premium Member about 3 years ago

    I love the taste of a strong pipe tobacco. But I’ve never loved the taste of cigarettes.

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    djtenltd  about 3 years ago

    Don’t try being grown too quick, Candace and Liz!

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    Jeffin Premium Member about 3 years ago

    I wish I’d have thought of that.

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    Johnnyrico  about 3 years ago

    “We did it! We did it! We went ahead and did it!” ….. sounds like Dora the Explorer..

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    e.groves  about 3 years ago

    A few years after I quit, I smoked a cigarette that a co-worker had left on a work bench. I enjoyed it, but later I got a severe headache and diarrhea. Never again.

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    bluegirl285  about 3 years ago

    My grandmother used to smoke when I was a kid. She’d smoke like a fiend. One day she left her cigarette in the ashtray and I decided to try it to see why Grandma liked it. I stuck it in my mouth and I inhaled like I’d always seen her do it. How did it go? Let’s just say, that incident is the main reason I have sworn off smoking for life.

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    timbob2313 Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Back in the 50s, almost everyone smoked. I started at age 6. When I was 19 I quit smoking cigarettes but started smoking cigars and pipes. Which I quit in 1981 when I was told if I didn’t I would be carrying an oxygen bottle around for the rest of my life. I quit that day

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    Chris  about 3 years ago

    lets hope so, for your sakes.

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    mrwiskers  about 3 years ago

    My adoptive parents smoked Chesterfields throughout my childhood. Even in the car. On trips. With the windows rolled up. I started smoking at 15, with my parents permission. I finally kicked the addiction 35 years later. I now have COPD. Do I have regrets? Sure I do. All three of my adult children have tried smoking cigarettes. Now in their 40s only one still is at it. Hereditary? Not sure. Harmful, definitely. Even to those smokers who never die of emphysema or cancer, it is harmful to all who breathe the same air.

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    vaughnrl2003 Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Mission accomplished. Go wash your teeth and head over to the mall. A little bit older, a little bit wiser and a little bit dirtier.

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    kv450  about 3 years ago

    Wise decision. If she’d kept up that nasty habit, she would have actually had “lizard breath”

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    Train 1911  about 3 years ago

    Hopefully lessons well learn

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    kab2rb  about 3 years ago

    Girl’s you should never tried to start with, yet young kids think they know it all. For me I grew up with a dad who rolled his own cigarettes as second hand smoking, my mom never liked it. I never got started on smoking. My daughter cannot be around smoking.

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    cactusbob333  about 3 years ago

    I used to know a chain-smoker. He gave it up because they were so danged hard to light.

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    MuddyUSA  Premium Member about 3 years ago

    And there is the end result of their experiment!

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    FreyjaRN Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Good! Never do it again. Really. Trust the cardiac RN.

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    awcoffman  about 3 years ago

    Closest I ever got was candy cigarettes. Never tried to light one.

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    raybarb44  about 3 years ago

    One life experience that I never partook in, not even the funny cigarettes. Never interested me, Just lucky I guess…..

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    Sir Isaac  about 3 years ago

    Sometimes actors who don’t smoke have to do a smoking scene….now that’s acting!

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    Jan C  about 3 years ago

    A satisfactory conclusion to this story arc. A lesson well learned and a message to the children who read the funny papers.

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    Spiffy  about 3 years ago

    My mom and dad both smoked when I was a kid. My mom took years to quit. She would stop for a while, but then relapse, making up all kinds of rationalizations and making herself miserable. My dad decided to stop one day, and quit cold turkey.

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    EXCALABUR  about 3 years ago

    RIGHT ANSWER!

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    pamela welch Premium Member about 3 years ago

    That was my reaction too Elizabeth; the only one in my family who never went any further with it; nasty tasting things. All the money I saved went to some pretty great vacations; not to mention saving my lungs!

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    Cathy P.  about 3 years ago

    Both of my parents smoked unfiltered Camels, my dad also pipe (Half and Half tobacco) and cigars. Of the three children, only 1 smokes. Neither parent died of lung or other smoking-related cancer.

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    bobgreenwade  about 3 years ago

    I grew up as the adopted child of two smokers. I learned early on how bad tobacco is, and tried to get them to stop. They eventually did… about a year after I moved out. As a result of growing up in a smoke-filled environment, I now have asthma (yes, second-hand smoke can cause that in children), though thankfully it’s quite a mild case.

    In truth, with as much as is known about tobacco, I think it’s a wonder that anyone’s foolish enough to start using it. (Yeah, I know: kids tend to not understand long-term consequences of things, as that part of the brain doesn’t normally develop until the mid-20s, and dismissing them has become a family and cultural trait. But still….)

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    Carolyn Cherry  about 3 years ago

    They will smell like cigarettes when they go in the house.

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    Black76Manta  about 3 years ago

    Never do it again, I like what I hear!

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    Jaime Jean M  about 3 years ago

    This strip deserves a triple like.

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    SquidGamerGal  2 months ago

    Oh, how wrong you are…

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