Kep buying Cannabis
Kep buying CannabisKep buying Cannabis
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Kep buying Cannabis
At my fifth grade graduation from the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program, I stepped to the podium sporting a blue button-up shirt, braces, and uneven bangs, and played the flute. Some weeks later, I caught my teenage sisters smoking weed behind our back porch during a dinner party. Weed is complicated for me. It has been an escape, a ritual, and a medicine. And it has been a trap, a habit, and a source of pain. I smoke when I am sad and when I am overjoyed. I smoke a lot. Quitting means giving it all up, including the times when weed is a conduit for connection and creativity, an extra eye for the subtly sweet things, like Riis beach at sunset, sitting on the boardwalk, dusty turquoise benches and lavender sky, with all my favorite people, passing a joint between us. Springtime on a stoop in Brooklyn, my friend and I burning one with some beats on, her freestyling like a fool and me laughing hard. But most of the times I smoke are not necessarily special. So once or twice a year I go stone-cold sober for two or three months. No more than two joints. No smoking before the gym. No buying weed twice in one week. No cereal in the house, ever. Before, if I had to do any exercise that involved balancing on one leg, I would fall out of it within seconds. But after taking months to build the muscles of my core, I can finally hold the position. I can hold myself up. I want my vices to be vacations, wonderful and wild, but then I want to come back to balance. I don't want to need weed. I also don't want to need complete sobriety. I want a stronger core. I am not a moderate person, and I have no desire to be. At best, being moderate feels like being average, not sure enough to go one way or another. At worst it feels like diluted truth. If smoking is my ritual, then I need other rituals. If smoking is my therapy, I need other therapy—maybe even actual therapy. If smoking is my mood-stabilizing, anti-anxiety medicine, then I need other ways to center, quiet the negative self-talk, worry less, and enjoy more. Only then can I trust that what I do, what I smoke, is not an attempt to escape but a way to keep exploring. If you have concerns about your marijuana consumption, you can get support from the National Drug Helpline at
My Husband Bought Our Teenager Weed for Her Birthday
Kep buying Cannabis
Making the decision to stop using can be a challenge. Maybe you have quit before and have slipped back. This program is designed to support your choice to quit. The following are some issues to consider as you make your decision. From here, the program will continue with support and suggestions to assist you through the next 30 days. As you begin you will click on the day to the Left. Make a list of the reasons you might want to continue use and why you want to quit. Hopefully your list has helped you to make your decision and stick to it. Keep in mind it does get easier. It is important to be aware of situations, including certain people that might trigger use. Take the time to consider those activities or situations and make a plan for yourself to stay on track should you find yourself in those situations. You may experience withdrawal and cravings. Take it one day at a time and it will pass. The symptoms will be gone when the THC is out of your system. Depending on number of years and frequency of use, this will be different for different people. Remember THC attaches to fatty tissues in your body and breaks off slowly. You may not feel all the benefits of quitting for at least 30 days. Social events can be very risky. Try to leave parties early or avoid them for the first few weeks while you are trying to quit. Avoid drinking alcohol and seek out other non users. Mentally prepare yourself for social situations and review your reasons for quitting and the benefits you will reap. Identify situations that will be difficult for you triggers and solutions for dealing with them. I hereby commit to, and accept responsibility for achieving the goals that I have initialed below. These goals are designed to prepare me to stop getting high. In addition, they show my motivation, confidence, and commitment to the quitting process. I understand that a slip can occur and I must not use it as an excuse to return to use.
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