I understand the frustration from majority of members at this kind of thing, however I remind you all of two things:
Nearly every single one of you, at some point early in your drug career, thought you smoked laced weed. Don't even try to deny it. You wouldn't be having such a reaction to the OP if it wasn't something you already went through. You think it's absolutely ridiculous to think your weed is laced, because you remember the time when YOU thought you had laced weed, and everyone ridiculed YOU for it, so now you're just paying it forward. It's understandable, it's human nature to react as such.
Secondly, how are you going to say that it's impossible? Especially in today's RC-littered market, this economy where everyone's trying to get a one-up on the next guy, and availability of internet-purchased drugs, there is
always a chance that this kind of thing goes on. Is it likely, I'm going to have to give that a big fat
NO. Is it possible?
Absolutely. Has it happened? Of course!
I would think it would not be very hard to buy a salvia extract and sprinkle some of it into a bag of weed, or maybe even in liquid form and lightly spray it onto the buds. Normally, salvia comes in somewhat finely-ground leaf material, and could probably be added to a larger bag of weed as long as TOO much isn't added to the point where you'd actually see a build up of it. Just enough to get some little leaves mixed in with your buds/shake. If you simply have a couple particles of a salvia extract leaf material mixed in with some shake, it wouldn't be very detectable. Salvia is extremely strong so you wouldn't need there to be much at all, especially if it's a high ratio extract like a 50x or 100x, so I could see a couple leaves of it easily going undetected if you don't closely inspect your weed. When you take a hit, it would immediately taste strange, and then you would get the head rush of a lifetime, and quite possibly even a situation as described by the OP. To a lot of
uninformed users, that's an indicator for "some fire ass chronic yo". Dealers want you to come back, so if they can fool you into thinking their product is superior, it's worth their time. It's not like salvia is very expensive either. A couple grams of a strong extract isn't very expensive at all, and would go a very long way if people did what I described above. Again, just one experienced user would call your bitch ass out for doing it and never buy from you again, that's why you'd only give it to the inexperienced smokers, or the people who haven't smoked in a very long time, again, just like the OP. It all makes sense really...
Before you unleash the flame cannon on me,
I'm not saying that I agree with this practice, or that I don't inspect my weed before I buy it (I even use a microscope), or that I wouldn't be able to tell the difference between a hit of salvia and a hit of cannabis. I'm simply saying that many of you are jumping down his throat, immediately dismissing any possibilities that his weed is cut with a foreign product without even considering the scope of possibility. It's rather ignorant to just assume no one ever laces their weed ever. Like I said, I always inspect my weed with a microscope, so I can actually examine the trichomes, and there have definitely been times where I observe little particles of something on the weed that do not look like they belong there.
In addition to all this, it's not unlikely that the grower did some funky shit with pesticides or fertilizers or something, and some of it is still on the buds, and could produce adverse effects when smoked.
There are TONS of stories out there of people just getting way too baked and thinking their weed had crack on it. Yes, many of those stories deserve the facepalm reaction. However, I'd say the OP has one of the more plausible cases of a possible adulterated product. Again, is it likely? No, but it ain't impossible!
