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Goodbye weed

the key err... maybe not the key.. but to stopping i found it easy to get a really good friend to stop with you for alittle support
and then when you guys are hanging out after like 2 weeks of not smoking it doesnt really even cross your mind that you could be smoking

and then after like a month or two
if you want to smoke alittle

its very easy just to get high one day
and not to crave it the next day (but dont buy too huge of a sac) ;)

%)
 
i quit por for 2 years coz it made me paranoid/anxious/stressed/ lethargic/unmotivated, and found it suprisingly eeasy to stop, i could still hang with my friends who smoke, but i knew the effect it would have on me, since i started taking valium i can smoke again without any negative thoughts/feelings
 
LOL Thank you all for your replies.. In fact the very first reply from Jibult was absolutely spot on.

Well I guess it's been 6 months.. But I thought it worthwhile mentioning I DID IT!
I kicked the habit in december. It's now been almost 3 months since I had my last joint, with little to no chance of return. (well maybe after a roll or two in future but thats it)

Everyone here was right, even the slightly insensitive post above 'you'll be fine its just weed' It was right, spot on, it was just weed :P
 
Well done.

Now, the vigilance.

MANY people have quit things only to start them again. And by saying this I do not mean to suggest this will happen to you. It's just a fact, and it probably happens because folks get casual and perhaps forget why they quit to begin with.

With cigarettes, I quit many times because it wasn't that hard to give it up. And I started back in many times, often six months or a year later. When i stopped the last time - nine years ago - I told myself there was no going back this time, and I haven't had one.

Good luck with whatever works for you.
 
A few tips, put yourself in situations where your stash isn't on you, ok now I get anxious if I have no stash, and if i don't have one I tend to go out of my way to get one, which is fine, but leave it at home, and go out for the day! cravings will come and go, but remember, it's really a delight to be stoned and to enjoy this beautiful smelling plant, so seperate your day to day life from it.

just leave your bag at home and go out and use your body. if you breathe hard enough and sweat, kind of change the state of your body on your own it can end up enjoying that, it's really a matter of shaking and breaking your habits!

I can have a day that goes two way, either I get stoned in the morning and keep getting baked. or I go to the gym and really tire myself out and maybe pass out early that day.

just make the day about something else thats really active or involving.
 
i pretty much decided to quit smoking for a while also now...I felt that while doing it everyday did not leave me very productive and i need to focus on more important things in life atm, so yeah congrats to you for stopping for these 6 plus months now and hope you continue.
 
I'm kind of worried / shocked by this thread. Do people really see cannabis as an addictive substance that's a hard habit to kick? I've blazed pretty regularly for the past 5 years, having taken breaks ranging anywhere from 1 to 6 months interspersed and the thought of "dealing with quitting" or "quitting" in general never really crossed my mind.

I wasn't aware so many people were that psychologically dependent on weed... I mean if your life revolves THAT heavily around smoking weed... I mean that's kind of inane. I smoke weed with the purpose of enhancing my experiences of something I'm doing... I have a goal in mind. Never do I just blaze all day every day just because I can... if you do that you're not really fully appreciating the substance.

Get a life guys, seriously, try and get off some benzos and then come back here and bitch about "quitting weed".
 
Get a life guys, seriously, try and get off some benzos and then come back here and bitch about "quitting weed".

You have a point, byu psychological dependence can be about as powerful as physical dependence to a drug. Admittedly I have not had to deal with getting off benzo's, but a drug is a drug.. and we all have our demons.
An addiction can be formed to just about anything that makes you feel good, and that's just it mate, an addiction is an addiction and a drug is a drug.
 
i pretty much decided to quit smoking for a while also now...I felt that while doing it everyday did not leave me very productive and i need to focus on more important things in life atm, so yeah congrats to you for stopping for these 6 plus months now and hope you continue.

Thanks :) I actually started this thread back in july 2009, but I decided to update it. Been off the weed now for 3 months almost. Yeah I'll probably have a cone or two after my next roll but its gonna knock me around! I used to go through 15-20 joints after a roll.. just because I smoked weed all the time in daily life so a cone or two did nothing ;)

I cant imagine returning to smoking daily. you are right, it does stop you from doing the things you really want to do.
 
drug rehab program for weed. come on, be real. you lazy or something? get a job,girlfriend, friends, and a life. i dont get how weed inhibits any part of your life.
 
I shouldnt be dignifying this insensitivity with a response. However I think its funny that you assume I'm a guy. I'm not.

Also, if you dont get how weed inhibits one's life, then wtf are you doing posting in this thread.
Read the first line of the original post. I was looking for support, not to be belittled.

If you dont have something nice to say, then refrain from saying it and take your insensitivity to The Lounge.


Cheers.
 
drug rehab program for weed. come on, be real. you lazy or something? get a job,girlfriend, friends, and a life. i dont get how weed inhibits any part of your life.

You're a clown.

People get stuck in routine. Smoking weed is a routine for a lot of pot smokers. Routine requires 0 thought and mental alertness. It's easy to not realise how bad things have gotten until someone else steps in and points it out to you. Even then it's easy to deny the truth. This is why you shouldn't be getting high without some sort of a reason to get high, other than the fact you are sober.

Just the same as people who do the same shitty job they hate with the same shitty boss they hate for no fucking reason other than that's what they know and are comfortable with. Do they ever enjoy life? Nope. They're just alive. Unless someone goes and points it out to them or something tips them over the edge they won't ever change that. Unfortunately shitty jobs and inaction aren't considered drugs, so you can't tell people they're wasting their lives for it. They just are.
 
I shouldnt be dignifying this insensitivity with a response. However I think its funny that you assume I'm a guy. I'm not.

Also, if you dont get how weed inhibits one's life, then wtf are you doing posting in this thread.
Read the first line of the original post. I was looking for support, not to be belittled.

If you dont have something nice to say, then refrain from saying it and take your insensitivity to The Lounge.


Cheers.

Word. I have never experienced a difficult time quitting weed, but that's just me. I have other addictions now, but when I quit the only drug I was using was weed. I just focussed on the anxiety I had to battle when I was high, and that was my motivator.

It can be extraordinarily difficult for people who have been smoking every day and have developed a psychological addiction. It's ludicrous, small-minded and disrespectful to claim that quitting weed is easy.

Anyway, trancefreak, my main objective in posting this was to congratulate you on your achievement. That's excellent and you should definitely feel proud of yourself for accomplishing your goal.
 
Pride comes before the fall. Keep it in perspective, don't be proud of getting out of the hole you dug for yourself, simply learn from it. If you use your new evaluation skills to make better and more informed decisions in the future, then be proud of that.

Seen too many people quit weed, whether it be for a week, a month or a year, and then fall straight back into the same hole. Myself included.
 
After I finish my bag I'm going to be taking a break... this summer I want to have days which are totally substance free and keep all use to the weekend.
 
No matter what kind of arguments you come up with to "take one hit off that J being passed around you," always remember that you're staying sober. I've found that if your heart's really set on changing your life then that little mantra is the most helpful thing you've got going for you, and if your heart's not into it then it was just a matter of time before you used again and you might as well not have wasted your time lying to yourself in the first place.

The hardest times after you quit smoking pot daily are the first 1-2 weeks after you stop, and when you hang around the friends and people that you used to consider smoking buddies. The first one can be hell on earth for someone not used to a sober life, but it only lasts a week and a few days and you should balance yourself back out.

The second will happen to you time-and-time-again unless you completely change your group of friends. If you put yourself in situations with them where you're around pot, it's going to be a lot more difficult to change your habits but it's still manageable.

... that 3-month break felt like years to me.... It was a trip unto itself, and I amazed myself every day of it when I would have arguments with myself to try and rationalize smoking "just a little bit" and I actively chose not to.

Wow i can really relate to that. I've been smoking more and more frequently since 2007, and have only recently realised that i fit the definition of someone who has a dependence. For the last few months i've smoked up once every couple of days on average.

It may not seem that often, but i very rarely buy pot. If i have weed, i'll smoke it, and if i don't, i never seem to have a problem finding a way to get high - getting a freebie from mates, heading over to their place for sessions when i'm bored and sitting around at home, scraping out a pipe or bong, keeping a roach from a joint etc... It's fucked, and it's often at these times, when i'm going to such lengths to get high that i reflect on whether i might have a problem. It's pretty obvious that i do.
That leads to a negative state of mind, generally i become introspective and reflective, then disappointed with myself after smoking. Particularly when i'm on my own.

Having just gone back to uni (1st March) to start an MSc, i have decided to take a break for a month, just to prove to myself i can do it. It would be over a year, possibly longer since i've gone that long without smoking.
I am already anticipating how difficult it will be because i use it to fill the void of boredom (and other than shit tv and internet, there ain't a hell of a lot to do round my house).

But i really need to make it through. I think once i've made it though, i'll be more outgoing, happy and productive, with no more staying up late for no reason and 10am weekday wake ups haha. A lot of the social anxiety i've dealt with over the past few years (although so mild now compared to how it was even 3 months ago) will leave me, and i'll have self respect for sticking it out. I may choose to stop smoking altogether once the month is up.

I'll be more active too, i'm replacing boredom and smoking with bmxing, weights and running. And an assload of uni work too.

Anywho, just thought i'd post up my own take and experience on taking a break from the smoke :)

Cheers

And OP, congrats for quitting :D
 
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