arthunter888
Bluelighter
- Joined
- May 23, 2009
- Messages
- 623
I've got a puzzling situation on my hands. I have been smoking weed daily for over 5 years now, without any problems. I had also been a chipper of opiates (Opana, Oxycodone) once/twice a week for about 2-3 years. From March to October 2012 (6 months), I was taking anywhere from 90-120mg oxycodone everyday, so I became dependent on it.
In October 2012, I quit the oxycodone, and switched to Xanax (.5-1mg) or Klonopin (.5mg) every night for sleep. I was on the benzos from October 2012 to February 2013 (4 months). I stopped taking the benzos in the first week of February and have not taken any since.
I have however been chipping on opiates again (about 15-20mg oxycodone, once a week). I experience withdrawal symptoms for up to a week afterwards.
The problem is: every time I smoke weed, the withdrawal symptoms are much more severe the next day (especially the first part of the day). I get cold/sweaty feet, irritable/itchy bowel, depression. I find this odd, because in the past when I was in opiate withdrawal, weed would actually help rather than make it worse. Why would now be any different?
So I've been thinking about the possibility of it not being the opiate withdrawal that's aggravated by weed. I haven't taken benzos since the first week of February, so it doesn't make sense to me that weed would be "bringing back" benzo withdrawal after this much time. However, the withdrawal symptoms I experience after smoking weed are more reminiscent of benzo withdrawal than opiate withdrawal. I feel exactly the way I did when I tried to smoke weed in the early stages of benzo withdrawal.
I still don't know for sure whether I am experiencing opiate WD or benzo WD after smoking weed. Is it possible that weed is "bringing back" benzo WD even after abstaining for this long? It would seem logical that it is opiate WD I'm experiencing since I've been using opiates recently, but it still doesn't explain how weed helped with opiate WD in the past but suddenly makes it worse now.
What do you think is the explanation for this? I've never heard of opiates doing this, but I wouldn't be surprised if benzos are to blame. Is it possible that becoming dependent on benzos rewires the brain to react negatively to weed?
In October 2012, I quit the oxycodone, and switched to Xanax (.5-1mg) or Klonopin (.5mg) every night for sleep. I was on the benzos from October 2012 to February 2013 (4 months). I stopped taking the benzos in the first week of February and have not taken any since.
I have however been chipping on opiates again (about 15-20mg oxycodone, once a week). I experience withdrawal symptoms for up to a week afterwards.
The problem is: every time I smoke weed, the withdrawal symptoms are much more severe the next day (especially the first part of the day). I get cold/sweaty feet, irritable/itchy bowel, depression. I find this odd, because in the past when I was in opiate withdrawal, weed would actually help rather than make it worse. Why would now be any different?
So I've been thinking about the possibility of it not being the opiate withdrawal that's aggravated by weed. I haven't taken benzos since the first week of February, so it doesn't make sense to me that weed would be "bringing back" benzo withdrawal after this much time. However, the withdrawal symptoms I experience after smoking weed are more reminiscent of benzo withdrawal than opiate withdrawal. I feel exactly the way I did when I tried to smoke weed in the early stages of benzo withdrawal.
I still don't know for sure whether I am experiencing opiate WD or benzo WD after smoking weed. Is it possible that weed is "bringing back" benzo WD even after abstaining for this long? It would seem logical that it is opiate WD I'm experiencing since I've been using opiates recently, but it still doesn't explain how weed helped with opiate WD in the past but suddenly makes it worse now.
What do you think is the explanation for this? I've never heard of opiates doing this, but I wouldn't be surprised if benzos are to blame. Is it possible that becoming dependent on benzos rewires the brain to react negatively to weed?
