As Oral, Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Week just ended yesterday, I am a little late to the party. However, while I
was looking up information about smoking, I visited their website to discover an eye-opening section profiling historical and famous people throughout
history who suffered from cancer as a result of smoking. Sigmund Freud, considered by many to be the most important
historical figure in the areas of psychology and psychiatry for his theories on the subconscious, was so addicted to
nicotine, that he hid a cancerous growth in his mouth for years because he did not want to be admonished for his
smoking habit. In the few times Freud did manage to quit smoking, he wrote to a friend, "I have not smoked for seven weeks since the day of your injunction. At first I felt, as expected, outrageously bad ... with mild depression, as well as the horrible misery of abstinence. These wore off but left me completely incapable of working, a beaten man. After seven weeks I began smoking again ... Since the first few cigars, I was able to work and was the master of my mood; before that life was unbearable." Despite experiencing the last fifteen years of his life as a series of painfully dangerous surgeries, and the replacement of most of his jaw, Freud smoked until the day of his death.










