Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is additive and to say other wise is not true.
Stop lying
It is not uncommon knowledge that some people get addicted to marijuana. You must have fried the few brain cells you had from getting high.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have never used marijuana in any form but think it should be legal and I don’t mind the “skunks” smell! When I catch a whiff in the street I find it interesting and not unpleasant.
Others should not have to endure it.
Others should not have to endure you.
Go smoke some pit to numb yourself.
Hahahaha! I enjoy irony!
When you aren’t high, if that is possible, you should look up the definition of irony.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m thinking with it being legalized in more and more places, more adults must be embracing weed like I am.
I’m 41, tried smoking pot in high school but had very bad experiences with it (way too harsh and made me paranoid and sick). Buying weed from a dealer was gross, unreliable, etc.
Over the last few months I’ve enjoyed shopping online for lower THC percentages, and have even discovered I enjoy having half a gummy and falling asleep at night. I sleep great and no hangover! There’s a whole new world of possibilities out there, lol.
Tell Congress. Maybe then they'll legalize it at the federal level and I can start using it without worrying about drug testing.
- Federal Employee
Federal Employees will lose their job and their federal career if they use marijuana. And it does not matter whatsoever, where you use; you’ll still lose your career.
If you are a user, we will catch you. We monitor everything.
As a federal employee with a security clearance, I am subject to random drug testing. While it is highly unlikely that will happen (I was last tested ~10 years ago), the possibility is there and I'm not willing to take the chance - YMMV.
Now, if I did say to Hell with it and smoke out one day only to get called in for testing right after, my understanding is that a positive result *may* result in dismissal, but is more likely to result in counseling, mandatory testing for a certain period, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Marijuana is addictive.
Anyone who argues otherwise is lying.
Anonymous wrote:We get weed from our neighbor. I started smoking about a year ago. At night in the garage. Two reasons. Anxiety that aggravates my invisible disease. When the hurt starts and anxiety kicks in and the pain in my chest becomes horrific. It starts in my back and radiates to the front.
The pain is unbearable especially at night. I didn't/don't want to be a pharmaceutical junkie. I am 15 years into this disease.
I'm in my 60s. I only smoke weed at night. Maybe once a week. Only when I am in severe pain. I use a half tobacco half weed mix and use a cigarette machine to put it in a filtered cigarette tube.
I quit driving 3 years ago so I am not out being stupid. I'm in my garage late at night so no one knows. I never actually get high just buzzed. I'm not interested in getting high. I just want relief. The effects last long because I'm not a regular user. It's the best most natural drug I can use without getting addicted.
I wonder what my family would think if they knew. Grandma's on the chronic for chronic pain.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is additive and to say other wise is not true.
Stop lying
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is additive and to say other wise is not true.
Stop lying
Anonymous wrote:
It is additive and to say other wise is not true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It might be legal OP but they still haven’t solved for the impacts on intelligence and mood, which linger even when you are not high. It’s also addictive.
I don’t have anything against the drug personally, just be careful because it is not this magic drug that people claim that it is.
Garbage. Well, not quite - it is addictive, at about the same level as caffeine. As a society we don't have a problem with caffeine addiction - it's more than a little hypocritical to wag our fingers at people who have a similar dependency on cannabis.
Only idiots and liars equate cannabis dependency to physical addictions to opioids and alcohol. Which one are you?
You are the one who made the correlation.
PP is the one who said cannabis is addictive, which implies physical addiction on par with opioid and alcohol. Which is nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It might be legal OP but they still haven’t solved for the impacts on intelligence and mood, which linger even when you are not high. It’s also addictive.
I don’t have anything against the drug personally, just be careful because it is not this magic drug that people claim that it is.
Garbage. Well, not quite - it is addictive, at about the same level as caffeine. As a society we don't have a problem with caffeine addiction - it's more than a little hypocritical to wag our fingers at people who have a similar dependency on cannabis.
Only idiots and liars equate cannabis dependency to physical addictions to opioids and alcohol. Which one are you?
You are the one who made the correlation.
PP is the one who said cannabis is addictive, which implies physical addiction on par with opioid and alcohol. Which is nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:I am only upset I have a charge of marijuana possession in VA from BEFORE it was legalized, and I am not sure how to get rid of it now
Anonymous wrote:We get weed from our neighbor. I started smoking about a year ago. At night in the garage. Two reasons. Anxiety that aggravates my invisible disease. When the hurt starts and anxiety kicks in and the pain in my chest becomes horrific. It starts in my back and radiates to the front.
The pain is unbearable especially at night. I didn't/don't want to be a pharmaceutical junkie. I am 15 years into this disease.
I'm in my 60s. I only smoke weed at night. Maybe once a week. Only when I am in severe pain. I use a half tobacco half weed mix and use a cigarette machine to put it in a filtered cigarette tube.
I quit driving 3 years ago so I am not out being stupid. I'm in my garage late at night so no one knows. I never actually get high just buzzed. I'm not interested in getting high. I just want relief. The effects last long because I'm not a regular user. It's the best most natural drug I can use without getting addicted.
I wonder what my family would think if they knew. Grandma's on the chronic for chronic pain.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It might be legal OP but they still haven’t solved for the impacts on intelligence and mood, which linger even when you are not high. It’s also addictive.
I don’t have anything against the drug personally, just be careful because it is not this magic drug that people claim that it is.
Garbage. Well, not quite - it is addictive, at about the same level as caffeine. As a society we don't have a problem with caffeine addiction - it's more than a little hypocritical to wag our fingers at people who have a similar dependency on cannabis.
Only idiots and liars equate cannabis dependency to physical addictions to opioids and alcohol. Which one are you?
You are the one who made the correlation.