Nothin quite like a dose of moral superiority.
Keep going, mate. You can do this bro. Don't listen to people who try to demoralize you or derail you from your path to a better self. You can be truly happy only if you're free of any addictions. When you're happy, you don't need drugs like cannabis, alcohol, or nicotine anymore because you're self-sufficient. The first year of being clean is the hardest; then you get used to it, and your body secretes endogenic happiness hormones. Don't forget to get good sleep before midnight, eat healthy food, avoid junk food, and take vitamins and minerals. Focus on fresh, unprocessed foods, fruits, vegetables, and ensure you have enough protein every day.Loving all of these responses, thank you guys! I'm a strong person...but never have been when it comes to cannabis. I am so excited that these cravings are gone now. I have a chance to get rid of it.
My first DMT experience was very profound, and I did not have the intention of quitting anything that day. But I came out of it, and for the rest of the day, I never reached for the glass. Then, came and went another day. And then another.
It is true what they say about psychedelics. They are incredible for your brain. I'm so happy. I discovered them through mushrooms... and now DMT has completely blown my world open!
Keep going, mate. You can do this bro. Don't listen to people who try to demoralize you or derail you from your path to a better self. You can be truly happy only if you're free of any addictions. When you're happy, you don't need drugs like cannabis, alcohol, or nicotine anymore because you're self-sufficient. The first year of being clean is the hardest; then you get used to it, and your body secretes endogenic happiness hormones. Don't forget to get good sleep before midnight, eat healthy food, avoid junk food, and take vitamins and minerals. Focus on fresh, unprocessed foods, fruits, vegetables, and ensure you have enough protein every day.
I haven't disagreed with that. I'm trying to contribute to shaping a normative linguistic usage that has been shaped by propaganda. The current use wasn't always the prevailing one, and needn't keep being one. At least not on the Nexus, where we are supposed to exert some critical thought.technical usage has often no correspondence to normative linguistic usage which can be shapd by a multitude of meanings and associations
If you believe that, psychedelics are "a drug" and make you "a loser". That is what most people think. But you seem to want to set them apart. Do you defend following current normative use or not? In current normative use, they're not "a sacrament" but a dangerous, illegal (same thing in normative use) drug.Like I said, its not to us to impose the line of distinction
That's a strawman, so I'm not going to address it.Your essential argument "Hey, coffeine is a drug, and tea contains cafeine. So you're a hypocritical drug user grandma, and you shouldn't be casting judgement on other drug users who use heroine or fentanyl" is not particularly strong.
I would appreciate if we could leave ad-hominem out of these discussions. Please don't psychoanalize me, presuppose my motives, or patronize me. You deserve your arguments to be considered and not some projections about how I believe you to be, and I think the same applies to me. If you don't want to do it to have a respectful and productive conversation, do it at least to avoid embarrassing yourself: Experiential Differences RE: DMT w/THC vs. WithoutSo why the sudden reaction to cannabis where someone draws that line for themselves? Most probably because you smoke cannabis yourself and it triggers this reactivity
Then let's do away with the propaganda instead of selectively applying it to what we personally don't like or understand.Calling psychedelics 'drugs' simplifies and generalizes them into a black-and-white view promoted by government propaganda
Are you serious about linking me to the propaganda machine called Wikipedia? Thanks, I have brains to think.![]()
Drug - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
LOL. How so? By supporting them and telling them the truth?YOU are the one demoralizing people
I'm trying to help the OP. I don't mind you talking your opinions.Yeah sorry. My bad. I think everyone was just trying to help you backtrack and see the hole your digging yourself into. I guess I should back off and let you do your thing.
What point are you trying to make if you only stick to your own definition of things, instead of engaging with how others understand it? Calling people or groups “losers” is stigmatizing and does not contribute to constructive discussion. At the same time, you appear unwilling to actually engage in the debate.I'm trying to help the OP. I don't mind you talking your opinions.
Hiding behind semantics is not a constructive approach.I mean, when you're addicted and you need a substance regularly to feel okay, you lose then. If you're addicted just admit you're a looser and go ahead to your real freedom. You win when you overcome the addiction as a man and can manage yourself without being addicted to anything.
Finally I want to draw your attention to the attitude page. The way you are speaking here does not align with the expected tone of this forum. Abbreviations like the one you used do not belong here.
There are several strands of normative linguistic useage which you ignore, but apparently are jumping at this point about cannabis.I haven't disagreed with that. I'm trying to contribute to shaping a normative linguistic usage that has been shaped by propaganda. The current use wasn't always the prevailing one, and needn't keep being one.
No, such black or white thinking is not necessary. I can adhere to the standard definitions without losing communicative clarity.If you believe that, psychedelics are "a drug" and make you "a loser". That is what most people think. But you seem to want to set them apart. Do you defend following current normative use or not? In current normative use, they're not "a sacrament" but a dangerous, illegal (same thing in normative use) drug.
You're applying a double standard here. Either throw away the prevailing framework of "a drug is a bad substance" or adhere to it and accept that your "sacraments" are "drugs" and make you "a loser".
I would generally agree, but as I mention you are being selective in your criticism of this.My point is exactly that when the word "drug" is used to cast moral judgement, it's always used at the convenience of the speaker.
This isn't an invalid ad hominum at all, since its pertaining to the thread topic which relates to a personal relinquishing of cannabis use, therefore the current usage of people in the discussion is valid as to seeing where they are coming from. If it had no relation to the topic at hand then your criticism may be valid. A willingness to be open about how your individual use may be shaping your views on it is helpful. I have seen however that from your other post your views on cannabis use are broadly aligned with mine so we can agree we are disagreeing on the linguistic side.I would appreciate if we could leave ad-hominem out of these discussions. Please don't psychoanalize me, presuppose my motives, or patronize me. You deserve your arguments to be considered and not some projections about how I believe you to be, and I think the same applies to me. If you don't want to do it to have a respectful and productive conversation, do it at least to avoid embarrassing yourself: Experiential Differences RE: DMT w/THC vs. Without
I rarely smoke cannabis and don't particularly find it productive or enjoy it. But my arguments would be worth the same if I smoked weed twenty times daily.
Btw. Interesting semantic discussion, mainly because some members use the word "drug" very similarly as it is used in my native language, which quite differs from common English use/meaning, at least in my understanding.
Because I'm not "calling out" anyone as anything, my point is to stop using the term "drug" as a pejorative, so if it's not a pejorative there's no point in calling out anyone for anything related to it.As I said before, why have you never called out tea drinkers as 'drug users'? Your line of reasoning leads there, which is why it is flawed.
Tea is definitely a drug, and I do consider caffeine a drug. Mild in its effects, but with real physical addiction potential. I've been through it several times, in fact. Even if it had no addiction potential, it would still be a drug. My point is precisely and once again to not use "drug" as a kind of slur.If you are not calling for tea drinking to be commonly called a form of 'drug use' then you are also endorsing some distinction thats not pertaining to technical classification as per normative usage.
And yet:I can adhere to the standard definitions
That's not standard at all, socially speaking. That's convenient to you. Once again: this all can be avoided by removing the subjective element once we stop using it as a way to attack or reject that which we dislike.I have called psychedelics 'sacred drugs'
It is. Where I come from has no weight in how solid or weak my arguments are. You don't know if I'm actually addicted and just pretending here to be how I would like to be, or if I have personally beat up weed dealers. It doesn't and shouldn't matter. It would matter if I were making a moral argument about cannabis use, but I'm not.This isn't an invalid ad hominum at all, since its pertaining to the thread topic which relates to a personal relinquishing of cannabis use, therefore the current usage of people in the discussion is valid as to seeing where they are coming from.
I think there can still be room in my life for cannabis sometimes. But there has been a huge shift.I have similar experience, tryptamines helped me immensely with my cannabis addiction in the past and allowed me to use cannabis much more productively.
Btw. Interesting semantic discussion, mainly because some members use the word "drug" very similarly as it is used in my native language, which quite differs from common English use/meaning, at least in my understanding.

Or let's look at drugs as tools. There are some tools that almost nobody uses and few would know how to without hurting themselves. That doesn't make them not tools. I'm against pretending that one's preferences or personal judgements are part of the nature of any substance.Let's not look at these tools as drugs. There's no point
That's a fine use. There are also synthetic medicines, including many psychedelics. And medicines that few people would have any reason or ability to handle. But that doesn't make them not medicines.I would consider DMT and mushrooms natural medicine, since it's natural.

İn my personal vocabulary, a drug is anything that is done habitually unconsciously, and all such things bring more unconsciousness and various negative effects to one's life. A drug is by no means restricted to substances. TV, sex, food, anything can be a drug.
The same thing that can be a drug can be a medicine when used consciously, and vice versa. No guarantee though.