19 answers

Dealing with My Chain Smoking Mom

I have a wonderful mother, who is very generous and caring. Her one major downfall is that she chain smokes. I've asked her not to do it around me (I'm 7 months pregnant), and told her that I will not want her to do it around the baby when she arrives. She thinks walking into the next room (no doors) is enough. I'm considering not staying with my parents when we visit from now on, but I know that would hurt my parents immensely. What can I do?

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Thank you to everyone who responded to my request for suggestions. I think I knew what I needed to do all along, just needed the courage, and you all gave it to me. My next visit home will not be until after the baby is home, and my mom has always respected the "no smoking" rule in my own house. Before our next visit, my husband and I will sit down with her and say that we appreciate that she respects our house rules, and that we will not ask her to change her habits when we're around unless she wants to. However, if she wants to smoke in her house we will be staying with other family. I think having my husband with me for the discussion will help her realize that we are making this decision together as parents, and I'm not the kid/teenager that constantly asked her to quit smoking.
Thank you all so much for your support. I hope I can help you in the future.
Thanks!

More Answers

Hi. You have to look out for yourself and not worry about "hurting" your parents. If it's important to you not to be around the smoke, then stay elsewhere. I don't think it's fair to ask someone to change their behaviors in their own home. Good luck.

1 mom found this helpful

First and foremost - you have to think about the health of your child and your own health and second-hand smoke is just as bad as you smoking yourself. Explain to your mother that when she is with you, you will appreciate it if she smokes outside the home that you are in. If she isn't willing to do that, explain that you have to be a mother first, and then a daughter, and you have to take care of your child by not being around the smoke at all. She will love her grandchild and hopefully that will be enough to make her understand. Honesty is always the best policy and I think as long as you're honest with her - she cannot fault you. Again - you have to do what is best for your child FIRST and then think about others. That is what life becomes once you have a child! Good luck.

1 mom found this helpful

It is hard and I consider this a growing pain as mother and daughter but your health comes first and then your child. We just needed to name our needs to my parents (son is highly allergic and asthma) who have dogs and smoke. We do not stay with them and find a suite/hotel so that we all can gather and enjoy our selves. We have to spend the money but that is the compromise we make. It is hard and I consider it all a growing pain as the daughters of mothers grow! Good luck.

"Without getting into [her] background" Maura F. must either be a pediatric pulmonologist or a Philip Morris researcher. Wonder which it is....

I think you should definitely be firm about it... and by the way, it's not just smoking outside of the house that effects newborns, it's having the residual tabacco smoke on their person. You'll see that the pediatrician will regularly ask you if there is anyone around your baby who smokes. Anyway, if I were you, I would insist that not only she smokes outside but also washes her hands and changes her clothes before handling your child.

Hi M.,
My children are now grown, but I had the same problem when I was pregnant with them. I always had a seat outside with a table next to it for my mom to go have a smoke when she needed to. I told her that I didn't allow smoking in my home or in my car. At her own place was nothing that I could do about, so I pretty much didn't visit her when I was pregnant. We did things together, and she was well aware of how I felt (since she smoked when she was pregnant with me and I was a preemie and almost died as an infant) about smoking and pregnancy, so she tried to be thoughtful about it. My mom just survived aortic and breast cancer, and still smokes - but much less :-( She is still not allowed to smoke in my house, and even smokes outside at her own house since my dad doesn't like it. She has to understand and honor your wishes, and you have to be vigilant since your's and your child's health are at stake. Be firm, tell her very clearly how you feel (you are going to be your child's advocate for the rest of your life, so now is a great time to start).
Good luck - if she loves you she will understand - so I'm sure she will!
J. Z.

My dad, my aunt and my uncle all chain smoke. It was really hard, but I asked my dad not to smoke in his own house when our son visited. He shocked me by agreeing and even expressing an interest in quitting altogether. Believe me when I tell you, going into another room-even to another floor-of the house doesn't cut it. The effects of second hand smoke are detrimental to a baby's health. Studies have shown the infants decreased lung capacity while someone is in the next room with the doors shut smoking.

You're just going to have to tell her you can't expose your helpless baby to possible harm and if that means you can't stay with her because she isn't willing to smoke outside, then that is ultimately her choice. I know how hard it is to say that. I was so nervous to talk to my dad I had knots in my stomach for a week! Good luck and be strong! Your baby deserves it and so do you.

Think of your child's health and safety and tell your mother what you told us. If she can't comply with a request that is not unreasonable then either stay someplace else or don't visit.

We had a rule, if you smoke you don't get to be near OR touch our baby. Some people thought it was ridiculas but it's my choice.

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