atrollappears
Bluelighter
A one time drug experience is different than being dependent on that drug to treat the addiction.Experimental psychiatry has been known to try to treat IV coke and heroin addicts on the psychological basis with full blown DMT/ayahuasca sessions
The analogous situation here would be you replacing cannabis with amphetamine, rather than using both.for others replacing a more dangerous drug habit for instead a cannabis habit can be rewarding
Neither amphetamines nor cannabis are physically addictive, the concern here is only the psychological toll on you.As for physical cures, they are well known (replacement opioids, nicotine patches, valium for ethanol addiction .... )
Still, in general, I think that amphetamine can be useful long-term. The mistake a lot of people make is chasing the euphoria---and I don't mean that in the overt "oh I feel so good" sense, but rather the increased confidence that comes from amphetamine, which can fool you into thinking that it's improving everything about you. And if you think that, you will end up needing it for everything you do. However if you don't chase that feeling and up the dose, the focus can remain in a subtle sense, in the way that someone medicated with amphetamine for ADHD doesn't feel like they're 'on something' when they take their meds. On the other hand, the type of focus amphetamine provides (tunnel-vision) is not beneficial for everyone, so the potential usefulness varies sharply between individuals.

