I was so glad when smoking was finally banned on the campus of my college. It meant I no longer had to take the back stairs to get to the hallway where some of my classes were. It meant that in one of the main hallways, I no longer had to hold my breath and push people aside as I maneuvered down that very long hallway, because half the people around me were smoking and I just could not breathe without coughing my insides out, eyes watering, and getting an instant headache. That's how bad second-hand smoke is for me. Depending on the brand being smoked, sometimes the reaction would be that I'd also lose whatever I'd eaten recently.
I dropped a night class because the instructor said he wanted to smoke. Apparently he didn't give a damn that the class was in the same wing as the biology and chemistry labs and that wing was a no-smoking zone.
I remember one time during finals, when I was taking one of my geography courses. That instructor allowed us a break halfway through the test, to go get a drink or use the washroom (we were on the honor system not to run to our lockers and look up any answers; our instructor trusted us on this and I don't think many people betrayed that trust). So I headed for the pop machine to get a coke. I drank some of it and then headed back to the classroom... and had no choice but to go through a cloud of cigarette smoke.
My doctor had prescribed ventolin pills to help me breathe, and the way the conditions were then, I took one... and found out something that nobody had bothered to warn me about.
Caffeine and ventolin Do. Not. Mix. The reaction hit me almost immediately, and I got the worst case of jitters I've had in my life. I was shaky, uncoordinated, had trouble holding my pen properly, and my thoughts became scattered. To this day I have no idea how I finished that exam and pulled off a B. If I'd been thinking straight at all, I should have gone to the instructor and told him I was sick.
So when you complain about your social contacts becoming atrophied, I have
zero sympathy. Absolutely
none. Your social contacts and networking are not worth more than the health of the students attending that institution.