What happens when you smoke marijuana every day for five years

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What happens when you smoke marijuana every day for five years

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FOR eight years, Stuart Angel would “smoke cones” for breakfast, lunch and dinner.
Smoking “around one or two grams” of marijuana each day from the age of 18, Mr Angel said the enjoyment of weed “for a laugh and to get high” soon became an uncontrollable obsession.
“Whenever I was home, I was smoking,” Mr Angel, 25, told news.com.au.

“When I first started, it went from twice a week, to three times and then fulltime. On a workday, I’d get up, have a shower and have a few cones. I’d have a coffee, then a few more cones before work.
“If I was leaving really early, I would even have a joint on the walk to work when the streets were quiet.

“If I was close to home at lunchtime, I’d even go back on my break and smoke. Then after work, I’d have more.”

This week, the University of Lausanne in Switzerland revealed in a 25-year study that if you smoke a lot of marijuana, over a long period of time, it may have an effect on your verbal and short-term memory. This means, you may forget more words than someone who doesn’t smoke as much, or even at all.

Lead researcher, Professor Reto Auer, examined data on marijuana habits of almost 3500 Americans over a 25-year-period.
Following thousands of young adults in to middle age, Prof Auer and his team of researchers discovered long-term marijuana use is linked to poorer performance on verbal memory tests, and Mr Angel couldn’t support the results more.
“Even when I smoked, I always had a great long term memory,” Mr Angel said.

“But my short term memory has really suffered. When I was smoking, I would say something, and then get distracted. I couldn’t focus when I smoked, not even for 10 minutes. Now I can focus for much longer periods of time.
“From when I started smoking until now I struggle to remember particular things. I don’t remember smaller details or the circumstances, I just remember the action. I need a photo to jog my memory about certain events, like things my son did, which is really sad,” he said.

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The research looked at repeated measures of marijuana exposure and a test of verbal memory, which examined how a candidate processed speed and executive function.
The participants, who started the study in the mid ‘80s, were all aged between 18 — 30 years old.

Of the 3499 participants, more than 80 per cent of the group admitted to smoking marijuana during the first year of the study. Fast forward 25 years later, just 12 per cent continued to smoke in to middle age.
The results, which were published in the JAMA Internal Magazine, found that for every additional five years of cannabis exposure, a user would remember one less word from a list of 15, compared to someone who didn’t smoke at all.
“Recreational marijuana users use it to get high, to benefit from the transient change it produces,” Prof Auer said.

“But this transient effect might have long term consequences on the way the brain processes information and could also have direct toxic effects on neurons.
Prof Auer said in order to avoid impairments, users should give up the drug sooner rather than later.

Mr Angel said the eight-year addiction turned his mind to mush, stripping him of his natural intelligence as a child.
Since quitting marijuana in 2015, Mr Angel hopes his vocabulary and short term memory will strengthen with time, and now he will be a better role model for his son, Lucas.

“I woke up and was feeding Lucas one day and thought to myself, ‘I don’t want to be affected by drugs.’ I looked at him and never wanted Lucas to be 25 and his main focus was being high, like mine was, instead of fulfilling his full potential.
“I wanted to be a role model for my son, and I want him to be proud of me — a dad who taught him right instead of wrong.”

“As a kid, I was really smart growing up,” Mr Angel said.

“Today, my vocabulary and using syntax is starting to come back as I read more, but at the time when I was smoking, I would sit there for a minute or two thinking of how to put a sentence together. My mind went to mush.
“I don’t have a typical stutter now, but I do still struggle with speaking. I think it will get a little better, but not by much.”

Currently working in installation, and studying sport science through correspondence at university, Mr Angel said the other big problem with his cannabis addiction was how it formed a gateway in to other drugs.
“If I wasn’t smoking, I couldn’t face the day. If I didn’t smoke when I first woke up, I was looking for a way to get high or find weed,” he said.

“Smoking was a gateway to other drugs, like pills and ecstasy, that went to cocaine, I tried ice a few times.
“It kept perpetuating the cycle, because I figured if I could handle weed, why couldn’t I handle something harder.
“The longer I quit for the easier it all becomes.”

CANNABIS USE RATES IN AUSTRALIA

In Australia, almost 35 per cent of people aged 14 years and over have used cannabis one or more times in their life.
Despite what would seem only a small effect to your vocabulary, senior research officer at National Cannabis Prevention and Information Centre, Dr Peter Gates said “any impact on a person’s cognition is concerning”.
“The impairment in these studies is alarming, and verbal learning is one of the more consistently found impacts,” Dr Gates told news.com.au.

“The two biggest things that relate to impairments is how young and how frequent you smoke. If you look at tests between those who use and those who don’t, it’s the verbal learning that takes the longest to get back when a user stops.
“It effects more than mental health. There’s respiratory and cardiovascular health, and in terms of dependence, it can take over your life and impairs your quality of life.”
Although the study didn’t look at long-term effects, Dr Gates said more research is required when looking at the impact cannabis use has on users.
“It was great the study looked at an area that doesn’t have a lot of research,” he said.

“A study that looks at years of use are fairly infrequently done as you need to access certain data bases.
“We know that a user who stops smoking cannabis will see positive cognitive effects within the month, like working memory, attention span, ability to learn and blood flow in brain.

Cont -

http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/he...s/news-story/e395fc0b5976780fbeaac9f59cf18350
 
I smoked everyday for over 25 years. I gave up when i started nursing. My short term memory is not as good as it used to be but i just employ strategies like keeping a notepad handy to minimise any negative effects.

If i had used any other drug like that including coffee i would probably be dead. Cannabis is pretty benign.
 
I've smoked weed every day for a long time too, although definitely not 25 years (I'm barely even that old). But I have smoked for 10 years, with the last 5 years or so being composed of every day use, more-or-less. I don't really regret any of it. I love cannabis & never plan on quitting consuming it...although perhaps one day I will quit smoking, and switch to just vaping or edibles.

“Smoking was a gateway to other drugs, like pills and ecstasy, that went to cocaine, I tried ice a few times.

8)
 
One thing I have ceased marijuana-wise is "waking and baking", though...that pretty much kills me motivation to do things, although, if you have nothing to do that particular day, it is a highly enjoyable activity. :) I relegate my consumption to primarily the late afternoon and evening/night.
 
After 25+ years of cannabis use, I do feel that my memory has probably been adversely affected, though I also wonder if age alone might have done this.
However, I also feel that my abilities in analysis have been heightened, sometimes significantly.

Additionally, I have made connections due at least in part to the use of cannabis that have helped to shape me as a human being.
I am referring both to the ability to connect with other humans at an empathetic level and also my cognitive abilities to find new connections between events or entities, and thus consider them differently.

Cannabis has even helped me to see my own rationalizations and excuses and cut through any falsity to get to the heart of things and assist me in living life fully.

Overall, I am very glad to have had the many benefits of cannabis in my life, though I also am aware of its (relatively minor but unquestionably present) detrimental effects.

“Today, my vocabulary and using syntax is starting to come back as I read more, but at the time when I was smoking, I would sit there for a minute or two thinking of how to put a sentence together. My mind went to mush.
As a linguist, this had me snort. Every sentence uses syntax, which just means grammar. Is this guy saying that cannabis made his English agrammatical? Like e.g. someone with Broca's aphasia, who can string together words that generally make sense but without using syntax properly? If so, I think it definitely sounds like a bit of a leap to assume that it was the cannabis that was entirely responsible.
My evidence? I have written more than a handful of academic papers primarily while under the influence of cannabis, and they have later been published in international journals.

(Edit: I have not been high constantly for 25 years, and never wake and bake, but I have used cannabis at least once on 80-90 percent of the days)
 
One thing I have ceased marijuana-wise is "waking and baking", though...that pretty much kills me motivation to do things, although, if you have nothing to do that particular day, it is a highly enjoyable activity. :) I relegate my consumption to primarily the late afternoon and evening/night.

Same with me.
 
A better title might be:
WHAT HAPPENS WHEN ONE RANDOM GUY SMOKES WEED EVERY DAY FOR 5 YEARS.
8)

Girl in that first picture looks like she got some gnarly knots.
 
I think it's amazing that cannabis is so benign the brain can completely come back to normal or better after years of use. I wish I could tolerate the effects to get the neurogenesis effects. But yes being stoned out of your gourd 24/7 heavily for years is not good for you, no duh.

Try that with something like alcohol or meth and you are fucked for life.
 
I've been smoking Cannabis on and off on a roughly daily basis for about two years. I have a very mentally challenging job, but do not find that my Cannabis use impairs my ability to do good work. I've tried abstaining for months at a time, but abstaining from Cannabis seems to make me more prone to anxiety and depression, almost without fail.
 
no one has mentioned confounding variables

give us a link to the original study so we can critically analyse the methodology.

because people accept conclusions verbatim. and thats bad as research gives correlations but conclusions are to be drawn by all not just the douche who got funded to promote a belief structure
 
Yeah... I like to consider myself relatively smart when compared to the general population. I also enjoy the fact that I routinely smoke marijuana and have no intent of stopping. I only smoke once at night though never in the morning, unless its a day off from work after a night of tripping at a show but thats only because my body likes to wake up before 9 even if i go to sleep at 5am. I have experienced 0 effects on memory but like i said i will not smoke if i am doing literally anything else. So even if i am sitting there "watching paint dry" as a lot of my hobbies create massive amounts of down time, rather then smoking while i wait i do some other tiny activity.

But I find that smoking once at night after I do the work and academic thing all day is a great way to turn my over active brain into sleep mode. I have come to realize to that a lot of my drug use even alcohol use was in the idea that i need assistance making my mind stop talking to me or i stay up very late tossing and turning over thinking. Weed helps me stop that without the negative effects in the morning unlike most other sleep aids.
 
thank god, I couldnt stand the world any ways, why else smoke.....? for me? to forget all the idiots, drugs, past life, sins, ect
 
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