Anonymous wrote:I grew up in Vancouver, Canada where pot has always basically been no big deal and decriminalised. All the people I knew in high school who used regularly never really ended up with real jobs and are basically losers in adult life. People say it’s not addictive, but several of the people I knew in the stoner crowd went on to do many other drugs and ended up in rehab with mixed results. I can’t believe actual parents would set their kids up on the route in life.
Anonymous wrote:A good college friend of mine not in the DC area allowed her DS to smoke & he recently flipped from super-achieving academics (many APs/2 community college classes as a junior) to school resistance - wanting to drop out of school, running away. My friend believes he has marijuana-induced psychosis. Potency of pot now + documented risks to developing brains gives me great pause.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in Vancouver, Canada where pot has always basically been no big deal and decriminalised. All the people I knew in high school who used regularly never really ended up with real jobs and are basically losers in adult life. People say it’s not addictive, but several of the people I knew in the stoner crowd went on to do many other drugs and ended up in rehab with mixed results. I can’t believe actual parents would set their kids up on the route in life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now that it’s been legalized, far more kids will get their hands on it.
Not necessarily, a dealer doesn't card a dispensary will, I know as a teen weed was usually easier to get than alcohol
Anonymous wrote:My super strict Asian parents let my sister.
She was allowed to smoke up on the deck a few times a week as long as her grades and test scores were strong.
When she first got caught they were furious beyond belief but her response was “would you rather me have a joint in my mouth or a d**k”….my sister never drank or was wild with boys so our parents lived with the pot habit.
Their largest fears were bad grades and being a thot so while weed wasn’t celebrated and they weren’t the type of parents to smoke along with kids, they decided it was better.
I guess it just depends on your house. Some families are way more sex positive but would flip over weed. Ours was the opposite
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine has a teenager, who suffers from depression and anxiety. She allows him to smoke weed, in order to keep him calm. It is not medically prescribed. How common is it to let your teenager just smoke weed? Is it that big of a deal? I don’t know much about it, I just wanted to get others thoughts on it..
I know a guy like this who used weed for this exact purpose as a teen well into adulthood. By 33 he was stoned 24/7 and wound up diagnosed bipolar (based on symptoms I would guess schizophrenic as well but he won’t see a dr regularly). His wife divorced him and I believe he is homeless and couch surfing the last I heard.
I wish I were an anti-weed troll but this is the truth and why I won’t let my kids smoke weed to alleviate mental health problems. They need clinical diagnoses and care or you risk winding up with a spiraling addict.
A healthy, well adjusted teen that uses weed occasionally for recreation is not nearly as big of a deal as one using it to cope with mental health problems.
Anonymous wrote:Now that it’s been legalized, far more kids will get their hands on it.