you're wanking to this thread?
No, I just have balls so massive that they need to be carried around lest they drag on the ground.
you're wanking to this thread?
Umm, many people with mental illness do rely on nicotine--which is theorized to suppress the symptoms of mental illness rather than catalyze it. In addition comparisons with weed to alcohol regarding anxiety are moot--alcohol has a GABAergic action, killing anxiety swiftly [right along with a hefty amount of brain cells--where on the other hand marijuana has been shown to do the opposite].
Marijuana [along with other drug use and abuse] is highly prevalent among those with mental illness--but are we looking at a cause, effect, or some sort of complex feedback loop of behavior and consequence?
Using a "most people who smoke marijuana are fine" line of reasoning is an abuse of the availability heuristic to assess the health affects of marijuana. In addition, mental health and cannabis use is a topic regarding much longer term effects than the short term effects profile which we can all agree to be pretty innocuous.
The reality is that this argument/topic is pretty biased from many standpoints--from users who turn a blind eye to some of the aspects of use [addiction, respiratory health, etc.] to the people doing research on it with money from certain interests, and even the narrow minded people who refuse to even consider the issue.
My view from experience is that marijuana reinforces complacency and sometimes anti-social behavior with heavy use--both of which can be arguably detrimental to one's personality and health--and, while safe for most people, marijuana use can catalyze the development of mental illness (which arises in young adulthood, the largest proportion of marijuana users].
i feel sorry for you
Umm, many people with mental illness do rely on nicotine--which is theorized to suppress the symptoms of mental illness rather than catalyze it. In addition comparisons with weed to alcohol regarding anxiety are moot--alcohol has a GABAergic action, killing anxiety swiftly [right along with a hefty amount of brain cells--where on the other hand marijuana has been shown to do the opposite].
Marijuana [along with other drug use and abuse] is highly prevalent among those with mental illness--but are we looking at a cause, effect, or some sort of complex feedback loop of behavior and consequence?
Using a "most people who smoke marijuana are fine" line of reasoning is an abuse of the availability heuristic to assess the health affects of marijuana. In addition, mental health and cannabis use is a topic regarding much longer term effects than the short term effects profile which we can all agree to be pretty innocuous.
The reality is that this argument/topic is pretty biased from many standpoints--from users who turn a blind eye to some of the aspects of use [addiction, respiratory health, etc.] to the people doing research on it with money from certain interests, and even the narrow minded people who refuse to even consider the issue.
My view from experience and observation is that marijuana reinforces complacency and sometimes anti-social behavior with heavy use--both of which can be arguably detrimental to one's personality and health--and, while safe for most people, marijuana use can catalyze the development of mental illness (which arises in young adulthood, the largest proportion of marijuana users].
Umm, many people with mental illness do rely on nicotine--which is theorized to suppress the symptoms of mental illness rather than catalyze it. In addition comparisons with weed to alcohol regarding anxiety are moot--alcohol has a GABAergic action, killing anxiety swiftly [right along with a hefty amount of brain cells--where on the other hand marijuana has been shown to do the opposite].
the post is a bit rambling and out of it, .
Feel free to drop some input.
The first thing that I'm curious about is psychosis...has anyone after heavy consumption fell into some kind of psychosis for awhile and actually stepped out of it and been able to use without any further ill effects.
I think a lot of those symptoms of psychosis comes from it's illegality status, social stigma and an unstable mind.
It does create those kind of effects rather it caused by a predisposition or whatever....to me it doesn't matter , I don't care who wants to argue that it does, you can look at many threads on here on how people are plagued with these kind of effects when they smoke marijuana.
or has anyone ever watched the documentary on bbc where this woman reporting on marijuana gives it try in the coffee shop she kinda likes it.Then when injected with thc has a psychotic-like reaction when she tries thc....maybe it'd help some people to get a better look at one of these experiences I'm trying to get at...I think it was called "Should I Smoke Weed" the documentary.
Well, it is a matter of mental health and experiencing these kind of symptoms when smoking is a problem for many.As well, if someone just gets anxious or depressed when they smoke then it is not indicative of a mental health problem.
I'm sure thc/cbd is a much more enjoyable experience, it just showed that THC is quite capable of generating those kind of negative effects
If you look into the DSM for Substance-induced psychosis....along with a wide range of other drugs, marijuana also is mentioned in the description and I think its for a good reason.
^ i always try and pronounce marijuana like a Mexican lol. The thing that strikes me about what you say is that it makes you apathetic. That makes me wonder if you've ever tried a pure sativa? Not a sativa dominant hybrid but a full on, pure sativa. Some strains like malawi, such as that offered by Ace seeds and other breeders that specialize in niche equatorial landrace sativas, counter-intuitively have a calming effect that I can see would be helpful for your anxiety, but also have the clarity of other pure sativas. I would seriously give that a try, or failing that, something like oldtimers haze which has been preserved by Ace as well (I think they're still keeping the line going for posterity).
CBD has been bred out of modern hybrids in most cases so that's another avenue to go down, since it has a calming, anxiolytic effect but isn't sedating despite commonly believed. That might add clarity to the high whilst killing anxiety. CBD crew have just brought a range of CBD:THC 1:1 strains. Landrace indicas such as Mazar-I-Sharif, Lebanese and landrace 'charas' sativas would be worth looking at since all have the elusive CBD allele missing from modern drug cultivars.
Playing devil's advocate, if cannabis can cause psychosis the whole issue isn't going to be black and white and I'm sure some strains might cause it, some might exacerbate it but others might be neutral and some might even help. It's all down to the individual and the unique strain involved. I just am against all cannabis being characterized as being the ticking mental health time bomb by tabloids as I'm sure you can understand.