Blood. That was the first sign something was horribly wrong. One moment, James Johnson was grinding through another 17-hour shift; the next, he was vomiting red and gasping for air. Hours later, he lay in intensive care, his lungs failing, his memory slipping, his family watching in terror as doctors fought to keep him ali… Continues…
James had always told himself he was just “coping.” Two packs of disposable vapes a week felt like a small trade for staying awake, providing for his family, and pushing through brutal shifts. He believed what so many young people are quietly told: that vaping is the safer trap, the less dangerous poison.
His age, his fitness, his responsibilities as a father all seemed like protection. They weren’t. When his lungs finally failed, the illusion collapsed with them.
Waking from the medically induced coma, the real horror began. He saw his partner’s face and his daughter’s eyes as if they belonged to strangers.
His body shook under its own weight; words came out broken and slow. Yet shame never silenced him. Instead, he stepped into a boxing ring for charity, training within the limits of his damaged lungs, turning his near-death into a warning. He calls his survival borrowed time—and begs others not to gamble theirs on the same lie. READ MORE BELOW