unisonruss1285
Established member
I've been highly addicted to cannabis for a very long time. After just 2 DMT sessions, I have had 0 cravings for it. Has anybody experienced this after so few sessions?
As a former heavy cannabis smoker, aside from its analgesic effects which can be obtained with medicinal cannabinoids without the 'high' from smoking, cannabis is in my view generally a waste of time and a hindrance to the types of states DMT and Harmala+DMT induces.I've been highly addicted to cannabis for a very long time. After just 2 DMT sessions, I have had 0 cravings for it. Has anybody experienced this after so few sessions?
Cannabis is a tricky plant to work with and not as simple as many assume. It also helps to have a well-ordered life when you use it.I spent a decade or more with the same view of cannabis, Panpsychic. That was after quitting a long period of cannabis addiction.
Only in the last few years of moderated reacquaintance with this plant, mostly in edible format, have I realised the deep places it can take me.
I'm not necessarily a typical case, I acknowledge. However I would be more open now to saying cannabis may have the results you, and I previously, describe here. I dont believe they are mandatory side effects
Cannabis is a tricky plant to work with
Its not about good or bad. It's about how one uses, and for what purposes. Different plants can indeed however be useful, or a hindrance, depending on larger purposes. I also find with cannabis use, many often try to justly their use in various ways without addressing or necessarily being aware of the core reasons for their use. These blindspots or resistances are often the challenge.No plant is inherently good or bad; those are human terms.
I spent a decade or more with the same view of cannabis, Panpsychic. That was after quitting a long period of cannabis addiction.
Only in the last few years of moderated reacquaintance with this plant, mostly in edible format, have I realised the deep places it can take me.
I'm not necessarily a typical case, I acknowledge. However I would be more open now to saying cannabis may have the results you, and I previously, describe here. I dont believe they are mandatory side effects.
Indeed. That fine line however is one many find very hard to walk. Good luck to you with it though should you choose to walk it.I should also say, I am right now, tonight, aware of the fine line between a positive new relationship and falling back into a weed habit. Then those symptoms you report are more of a threat.
No. Psychedelics are drugs by any reasonable definition of "drug". There are drugs with higher and lower risks. But that doesn't make the lower risk ones to not be drugs.Psychedelics are opposite to drugs
Not necessarily. His distinction is a valid way of categorizing, although not the common way. Lumping all substances together as 'drugs' is not particularly helpful for some.Psychedelics are drugs by any reasonable definition of "drug".
Stigmatizing people who use drugs by calling them losers is misguided. They are people, some of whom will manage their lives well while using, others do not. It is better to see people with severe addiction as sick, because sickness calls for care and help, while the label “loser” strips away value and leaves little room for support. Recognizing addiction as illness here is important, also as a drug user I feel offended and hope you reflect on your statement.I quit cannabis after using shrooms. Shrooms have a similar molecular structure to DMT, and they work in a similar way. I have zero cravings to smoke cannabis anymore. Why did I ever smoke cannabis? I tried to escape my struggles, but it doesn't work like that. Drugs will make you a loser. Psychedelics are opposite to drugs and psychedelics (natural) will help you become a human being and a thinker. Cannabis makes you stupid. That's it. That's why you feel you don't need it, and this is true. Good for you; you are about to quit cannabis.
To the OP, I’m glad you managed to quit your cannabis addiction but don’t forget the real challenge is long-term. Passing the first few weeks is only the start. Addiction is not solved in a short period, or a couple of dmt sessions, but requires continuous effort and attention.I've been highly addicted to cannabis for a very long time. After just 2 DMT sessions, I have had 0 cravings for it. Has anybody experienced this after so few sessions?
We are talking here of a classification that excludes psychedelics and includes cannabis in "drugs". That's not defensible, as cannabis has been used to "allow for direct apprehension of the divine" for millennia. Other non-psycedelic drugs such as dissociatives and deliriants can be and have been used that way too. And you could also pick another use, say "enduring pain", and ask why should a medicine that allows to endure excruciating pain be classified together with all other drugs.Why should psychedelics, holy sacraments that can allow for direct apprehension of the divine, be classified together with all other drugs?
Common since the puritanical sectors in the US started promoting that idea worldwide in the late 19th century. It's a propaganda term, the intention of which is only to be able to condemn those substances the speaker finds unpleasant, scary, or disagreeable. Note that it's completely open: more and more tobacco is considered "a drug". I'm not questioning that it's a prevailing use of the word, I'm questioning the use of the word itself.common linguistic usage
Psychedelics are likewise enjoyed by millions who don't classifiy them as a drug although they obviously are.Alcohol is likewise enjoyed by millions who would be adamantly against all 'drug use' and don't classifiy it as a drug although it obviously is.
Yes, different drugs have different effects. We agree on that.Regards cannabis, although it has been used sacramentally historically it is very commonly abused and thus easily falls into the drugs of abuse category, and it also generally isnt regarded as a psychedelic. Alcohol likewise is used as a sacrement (in Church wine) but that doesn't make it one experientially in the way psychedelics are.
That potential exists in all drugs. It may be higher in some and lower in other drugs, likewise for the consequences. Ketamine has a high propensity to be abused and yet it's useful for the same purposes that psychedelics are, as you can read in this very forum. And by proportion, most of the times psychedelics are used recreationally. Sometimes in ways that lead to suffering and death.clearly drawing a distinction between psychedelics, and recreational drugs with a propensity to become drugs of abuse
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.Stigmatizing people who use drugs by calling them losers is misguided. They are people, some of whom will manage their lives well while using, others do not.
A drug is something you can be addicted to. You can't be addicted to psychedelics as the more you take them, the less you want to take them. Drugs work the opposite way. Calling psychedelics 'drugs' simplifies and generalizes them into a black-and-white view promoted by government propaganda. There’s no way they are drugs coz psychedelics help people quit drugs and resolve addiction problems. It's really weird that I have to explain these simple truths on a pertaining to psychedelics website.No. Psychedelics are drugs by any reasonable definition of "drug". There are drugs with higher and lower risks. But that doesn't make the lower risk ones to not be drugs.
This artificial division between "good" (the ones I use) and "bad" (the ones I don't) drugs is shallow. Drugs are what the ancient Greeks called pharmakon: both poison and medicine. What made them one or the other was not only the dose, but also the context, intention, frequency... This millennia-old way of looking at it is much more accurate than the puritanical "good vs bad". Don't forget that your "good" drugs also have in them the potential for immense harm.
Also, that simplistic way of looking at drugs is what has lead to prohibition. Psychedelics are considered by most to be of the "bad" kind of drug, unlike alcohol for example. Instead of trying to get our drugs into the "good" group, it's better to do away with that whole framework.