Chain smoking

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Chain smoking is the practice of lighting a new cigarette for personal consumption immediately after one that is finished, sometimes using the finished cigarette to light the next one. The term is most often used more loosely to describe people who smoke relatively constantly, though not actually "chaining". Chain smoking is a term primarily applied to cigarette smoking, although it can be extended to cover cigar and pipe smoking as well.

True chain smokers are relatively uncommon, especially today. Before the 1960s, when the dangers of smoking and exposure to secondhand smoke were not well known, smoking was permitted in nearly all public places, allowing true chain smokers to live fairly typical lives. Today, with increasing prohibitions against smoking in public places around the world, true chain smokers would have to seclude themselves from such places. Additionally, with the known health risks of smoking, and the increased costs of tobacco products, many smokers have reduced their daily cigarette consumption.

However, the use of the term chain smoking is not restricted to those who are regarded as permanent chain smokers. While true chain smokers may be less common today, the act of chain smoking (ie. lighting a fresh cigarette immediately after the last one) is still widespread. Most habitual smokers feel a "need" to smoke at regular intervals, but smoking prohibitions often mean that this need cannot be met. Many smokers will, therefore, smoke several cigarettes in a row when they are able to in an attempt to stave off the physical discomfort associated with nicotine withdrawal. In addition, many smokers will light up one cigarette after another as a way to combat stress or boredom, or because they are in a social situation where smoking is accepted, or even expected.

Famous chain smokers include Walt Disney, John Wayne, Richard Burton, Denis Leary, Humphrey Bogart, John Lennon, Al Pacino, Louis Armstrong, Edward R. Murrow, Herb Kelleher, and Yul Brynner, who all smoked five packs of cigarettes a day. A famous fictional chain smoker is Western comic character Lucky Luke, always seen with a cigarette in his mouth until the anti smoking lobby urged the author to make him quit. Kate Moss is a notable female chain smoker, as she smokes four packs (80 cigarettes) of Marlboro Lights a day, as she has since she was 12 years old. Also, Drew Barrymore is a known chain smoker[citation needed], as she smokes 2-3 packs of Marlboro Reds a day, as she has since she was 9 and a half years old.

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