102 points

i remember ashtrays on the arm of every airplane seat!

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78 points

I was born in the early 90s and remember making fun of the idea that a non-smoking section separated from active smokers in the IHOP by a thin barrier that didn’t even reach the ceiling could do anything.

Boy, leaded gasoline really fucked up whole generations, didn’t it? Oh… We are still dealing with the fallout from that, aren’t we?

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26 points

I was born in the early 90s and remember making fun of the idea that a non-smoking section separated from active smokers in the IHOP by a thin barrier that didn’t even reach the ceiling could do anything.

Barrier? Most restaurants barely divided the two with an aisle.

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13 points

Tim Hortons had the smoking box, I’d give a lot to find a photo of it. Basically it was one of the last holdouts.

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21 points

A smoking area in a restaurant was about as useful as setting up a pissing area in a pool…

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12 points

You got that backwards. Smoking section was the default state. The non-smoking section was the special.

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6 points

I’m still convinced that lead poisoning was the catalyst for the fall of the Roman empire. And they weren’t even breathing tainted air constantly.

We still use lead pipes for water infrastructure in many areas of the country for fucks sake.

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10 points

Fun fact: ancient and medieval societies had so much fucking lead around because lead is commonly found in silver ore (galena), usually around 100X more plentiful than the silver and it melts at a lower temperature. So the quest for silver produced huge amounts of lead as a byproduct and people found uses for it like roofs, water pipes and, uh, sweeteners? Jesus Christ, Rome.

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89 points

Until she left home, my wife didn’t realise that normal non-smoking households don’t have to mop their walls.

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33 points

Omigod.

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21 points

We had to do this with our first house. Former tenants were 2 pack a day each with kids in The house. The water cascaded down completely brown.

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17 points

My wife’s parents used to smoke heavily. She tells me how they had to clean the windows monthly just to be able to see out of them

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5 points

Gross, even in my chain-smoking days I never smoked indoors.

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80 points

When I was a kid the old people in my family all chain smoked when we went out to eat. I hated eating with them because of that. I seriously thought my aunt was 15 years older than my mom because of her chain smoking and alcoholism aged her. Found out after she died she was only 3 years older.

What I remember most is coming back from concerts reeking of cigarettes and having to immediately throw my clothes in the wash and take a shower. Going to shows got so much more enjoyable after they banned indoor smoking at clubs.

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19 points

Ashtrays everywhere. Companies marketing for kids who proudly make massive branded ashtrays, like McDonalds.

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14 points

I got told to turn my Joe Camel shirt inside out in the 8th grade. I didn’t understand. I was so rad and so was he.

Good lord the times have changed thank goodness.

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1 point

I don’t get it

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3 points

At least the ashtrays can still be used, one of my buddies uses them for coasters and I want to use one for screws when I work on stuff.

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6 points

Even just going to a restaurant or bar got so much more enjoyable.

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66 points

When I was maybe 3 (maybe 4 - it’s a little fuzzy), I remember safety pinning a towel around the collar of my shirt so I could be like Superman (we had recently seen it in the theater). The towel also had frayed ends, and ended up in the ashtray along side my mom’s cigarette. I remember my mom panicking trying to get those safety pins off when the towel caught fire. We never were allowed to safety pin towels to our clothes again after that. 😂

Also I love how my kids know the cigarette lighter in the car as a place to plug in a car charger and nothing else.

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40 points

Cigarette lighter? You mean the finger print eraser and “lesson enforcer”? It was always empty when I grew up, seems like every child needed to learn that it was still hot even after the glow had vanished :)

The bic type lighter where everywhere, including in the coin shelf in cars

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15 points

I still have a bic lighter, and I quit smoke 10 years ago. Never know when it’ll come in handy.

I also remember when there were cigarette vending machines in restaurants. $1.25/pack and no age verification. 😉

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2 points

I still have a bic lighter, and I quit smoke 10 years ago. Never know when it’ll come in handy.

We got one from a gas station for lighting birthday candles. I just got a firepit and went to use it to start a fire and realized I’ve never used one before and had to try a lot of times to actually get it to light.

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8 points

I thought the cigarette lighter in the car was a rubber stamp and I’d get the icon marked on my hand.

Yes, I burned myself.

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65 points

Yep. The 80’s were absolutely horrible if you were bothered by smoke. There’s a reason why a lot of us 80’s kids “had asthma”, which magically disappeared when everything went non-smoking in the 90’s.

Smoking was just so pervasive here in Europe in the 80’s, it’s impossible for people to understand if you didn’t experience it first hand.

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20 points

Like, even teachers smoked. Not in lessons, but if they were out in the playground supervising, or in the staff room, they’d light up.

My headteacher had a pipe. I think it was about the only thing that kept him going, right up until the cancer got him.

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13 points

Also in lessons. I had a teacher that would open the outside door of the classroom (leading to a garden) to stand there smoking. Not that it helped because we still got a good whiff of the smoke.

This was around 1995 probably.

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2 points

Mine thought that opening a small window in the class would suffice, and was smoking the whole time.

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14 points

Part of the reason kids have asthma from that era, myself included, is because our mothers smoked while pregnant.

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4 points

disappeared when everything went non-smoking in the 90’s.

Funny, in Russia that transition happened around late 00s.

A-and in 2014 entrance to my (then) uni territory still looked like one big stinking cloud of smoke and a barely visible group of students smoking just outside, some coming, some leaving.

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