This all makes so much sense. I’ve never had the decrease in joy from weed, but I have noticed it’s stagnated my life. It makes it easier to tolerate a mediocre life rather than pushing through and making it great
@@Blue-fo1tx well having a mediocre life should be the motivator to break out of that cycle rather than smoking weed untill your happy with being mediocre.
@@jaakkovirtanen5413 what mediocre is we define for ourselves. If you think your life is mediocre then ... Why do you feel that? You bored? Not achieved what you wish you had? Whish you had wealth or something?? Why not find satisfaction with life to the point where you don't feel that you are living a mediocre life? Weed helps people come to terms with being mediocre rather than striving for satisfaction.
I sold weed for about 4 years in Colorado at a dispensary. It might not be "addictive" in the traditional sense, but I saw plenty of people blow thousands of dollars a month on it and everyone who used it all the time (including myself) just stopped going anywhere in life. It's like we were just fine making minimum wage, having no furniture and having no ambitions. Woke up one day realizing that and just never smoked again
seriously man, that’s how i feel. i get way too comfortable smoking n i been doing it daily for a long time now, just killed all of what i had tn so gonna see how it goes, i plan on not smoking for a very very long time
@nicholastime1513 facts. To quote Hank Hill "Why would anyone do drugs when they could mow a lawn?". Clearly he has never mowed a lawn while high. On a serious note, I also have been able to manage my ADHD incredibly well with weed. 4 Years in I definitely feel my tolerance almost tapped out, Should probably take a tolerance break soon. I'm a joint a day kinda guy
@nicholastime1513It’s a dumbass assumption and it’s a deflection. The average cigarette smoker, coffee drinker, fast food eater is unsuccessful, and none of those things is the cause.
I just wanted to leave an experience in case someone needs to hear it. I also used to smoke everyday and it was holding me back from pursuing my goals, eating healthily, and living life to the fullest. I have since significantly reduced my use, joined a gym, go for regular runs, and I’m eating significantly better. I also started college after avoiding it for 4 years after highschool. You can do it. You can build resiliency. You might feel like you aren’t ready or you can’t do something, all it takes is to keep doing the next right thing one step at a time. Start a routine that doesn’t leave time for smoking. Tell someone you are trying to reduce your use so they can help keep you accountable. Add in regular exercise and self care, and identify a long term goal. You aren’t defined by your emotions. You are defined by what you do about them!
What does reduced use entail for you? The only time I really miss/want weed, is if I'm alone and lonely/bored one weekend, because weed really has really helped me through those nights. This is how I always "relapse" after being off weed for months, even years, I plan to just smoke one saturday evening to relax and stave off loneliness/boredom, and then it just continues on Sunday, and immediately becomes a daily thing. I've managed to moderate daily usage to the extent where I only smoke before bedtime and make sure I get my exercise and daily chores done, but it still feels like an addiction, because I can't sleep without it, so I really feel like I depend on it. I'd love to just be able to smoke in moderation, like for instance only on weekends or saturdays, but I've failed so many times now I wonder if it's even possible.
@@sh0werp0wer a friend of mine had the same thought that smoking in moderation could work out, for him at the end quitting fully was the way to go, after 3 months he rarely thought about smoking again and everytime before when he started smoking after not smoking for months, he was smoking daily again after a week
@@sh0werp0werIt's totally possible. You're already halfway there because you are aware of the situations and feelings that motivate you to smoke. You always use for a REASON. You use because it does something for you, some effect that you find desirable, otherwise you'd not be doing it. I learnt to moderate my heroin use after several years of addiction. The difference is I no longer lean on it for anything. I don't use it to escape from my problems, I no longer feel I can't get through the day without it, I just enjoy it now and again as a treat. And I don't want it constantly now in exactly the same way I'd get sick of my favourite meal if I had it for breakfast, lunch and dinner every day. PS I can greatly recommend a book to you, written by 3 authors both from individual experience and decades of research, called 'The Freedom Model for Addictions'. It's available as a free download and it is fantastically helpful for sorting out the relationship you have to your drug of choice. All the best, you can get there! I have and people used to tell me I'd die in the gutter.
@@sh0werp0wer I can connect with these statements alot. Ive tried to stop smoking handful of times. But it only takes that one night of indulgence to send me back down the rabbit hole. For me personally, ive accepted that I have an addict mindset, Many addicts in my fam, and I have to treat weed the same way some one in AA treats drinking. Might just be my will power, might be how i get when im stoned. Thanks for sharing
I’m really proud of this guest, and his ability to articulate exactly what weed does over time. He’s very smart and self aware. I’m 30 now, been what I’d consider a pretty heavy smoker for 10 years, and have been working on rewiring my brain and opinion about cannabis. This conversation really helped me to understand what I’m going through and how to proceed.
Same boat. Daily user but woudnt necessarily classify is as an addiction but looking back it absolutey stunted my potential in my 20s. I've been weed free for a year and made more progress in my career during that time than the previous 10 combined. I think mostly becuse my "boredom tolerance" is so much higher and Im able to focus for longer periods of time. This is probably the most nuanced and realistic video on the subject I've ever seen. Just becuase you´re not a complete fiend doesnt mean that usage of any drug can have negative effects on your life. Im not giving it up for life, I still love it and it has enriched my life. But there is a time and place for everything, and right now is not it.
@@williambjork2777 couldn’t agree with you more. I never felt addicted, but it became part of my routine in certain ways that I can see now was detrimental. I think it’s easy for smoking to become part of your routine when doing certain things or winding down at night. I’m only 12 days without smoking right now, but in that time I can already see that my productivity is up, I sleep better, and I’m more likely work out and explore cutting out other vices. Can’t say I’ll never smoke again, but moderation is key, and there is a time and place for it 100%. I do how ever think a daily smoker lifestyle is no longer for me.
@guitarszen Here. Work out pretty much every day + my work is very physical as well. This is extremely accurate, was both for me and the people around me. Being a social stoner, a weekend stoner and a daily stoner are completely different things, and only one of those is healthy. Plus the people who just say ''You're doing it wrong" or "You haven't found the right strain" are usually the ones whose lives revolve around weed.
My experience with weed is pretty different from this, but there are definitely some similarities. I always try to be aware of when I am avoiding something. Weed often helps me see when I’m avoiding things. The issue can be how often I smoke. If I smoke all the time, I’ll never really grow. I have to have breaks for: a) tolerance, b) boredom (really important!), and c) to absorb knowledge gained. Weed really helps me to see how things actually are, but if I never let myself be sober and bored, then I’ll never really learn those lessons.
@@belivuk2526But it's a sensation that is beautiful beyond words surely once or twice a week vaped or ingested rather than combusted is worth it for the introspective souls and dedicated tokers everywhere. Moderation is key and if you fail at it you can always try again. But I will acknowledge that weed is of little importance compared to trusting your gut and doing what works for you.
Maybe it’s because I am neurodivergent, but honestly Cannabis has been far more beneficial than any professional mental health provider has ever been. It’s actually helped me process emotions and better my life in ways no medication or therapy has ever come close to helping.
Same, in a way. Im on the spectrum and weed is (when used sparingly) a good way to actually introspect a bit and be less stressed out about myself. The unfortunate thing is, it's still psychologically addictive, and at the point in my life I'm currently at I can't afford to bear all the negative effects. I'm a lightweight and am quite sensitive to thc, so using it frequently is always a bit of a coin toss. Working on quitting rn
Be careful. I started my use to mitigate anxiety. At the height of my addiction, I began to develop BPD1, GAD, and could feel the psychosis not far behind. That was the day I quit. I was a HEAVY use case, one milliliter of distillate daily. Moderation is sorta important!
I started because I realized it helped me eat and sleep at a time I struggled with both. Then it helped me manage anxiety. Then stress. Then sadness. Then boredom... just be careful. Maybe keep a record of every time you use, kind of like tracking calories but for weed.
@Alex-js5lg another problem I have with adhd is completing people's sentences and hyperaware of people's slow thinking. When I smoke weed, I end up socializing the behavior and let my thoughts slow down and I'm able to socialize better. What I'm trying to learn sober is learning how to slow down naturally but also accept the fact my brain will just be quicker
@@VioletEmerald Everything he says about noticing more in music is totally true. Even more so on psychedelics. Being stuck in the present moment is definitely true too - easier to block out your problems in life, for better or worse.
@@codeman3639 psychedelics are a whole different kettle of fish. I've done LSD once and I'd say that other drugs are basically still sober, just a different flavour of sober. Psychedelics are too different to compare like that.
As a 62 yr old that has smoked weed over 40 years on and off I can say that it's held me back from a lot of the things I really wish I had in my life. I'm 2 months clean still fighting for happiness
@@peepoosthank you for the question. i could write a lengthy diatribe as an answer for you, but i will just say this: many of the things i wanted to do - i just flat out didn't do. many of the things i did do - were done half-heartedly, or never fully completed.
Marijuana has been a godsend for me personally . It made me more and more aware of myself and others . My worst inner conflicts I've solved being stoned at night . It brought every negativity in me that was in my subconscious to the conscious which made it possible for me to work through things and get better . It does however harm me when I begin indulging in it. Side effects are worsened sleep quality , low hunger , clouded mind and lazy . Mind you I never smoke during the day it's always before bed time.
Dude 100 percent. I feel like when I smoke, I can get out of my mind and see things from an outside perspective. Mind you, I never had the ability to do this beforehand. Ironically, alcohol is looked at as an illusive solution while actually making things a whole lot worse. Unfortunately it took all of my 20s to figure this out while simultaneously being totally against weed. Also, the forgetfulness from weed I think is my brain disregarding because when I am reminded of something I forgot, it's always irrelevant and I noticed there was no need to store that type of info in the first place 😅😂. Key is to get shit done then smoke
The worsened sleep is a good indicator of stress for me. When I'm more relaxed the effect is way less profound. So yeah I can smoke a spliff to do science on my mental health :p
Checks out that your other comments are for videos about anxiety Now your here saying weed is a godsend Maybe take a T break there Chuck irony is on the milk carton 😂
Totally tangential to the conversation but how tf do you check comments, like I can't find how to see even my own comments and I would like to@@jacknapier6668
@@vroomzoom4206 AoE healing concept. When you interview influencers and talk about their problems, you get both of HGs and their community to watch it = the information get spread around more.
@@vroomzoom4206 maybe because it humanizes them? Just because they are influencers doesn't mean everything they say is irrelevant. Try watching them sometimes. Especially ones like sweet Anita and such.
I'm a smoker of almost 21 years, started around 16; I'm 37. I was an alcoholic most of my adult life; 4 years sober this December. Also, late in life diagnosis of PTSD probably complex tbh, ADHD, and a few other disorders. Through the use of therapists, we were able to understand that my early on use was basically self medicating to regulate the ADHD and other disorders. My parents never believed my mental anguish therefore never wanted to take me to any psychologist or therapist. Weed really also slowed things down for me. My brain doesn't like to shut off, never has, which has always impacted my sleep then daily energy levels, motivation etc. I intended to quit smoking after getting sober from alcohol, however, I was never able to fully make the transition over to 100% sobriety from pot. I enjoy this sense of focus it gives me and it has always seemed to help transition that focus to other tasks. Recently though, it has been having the opposite effect. And again, has me considering quitting for good. That's when the back of my mind fear of having life with that focus, without the pot sets in. Which in turn creates anxiety which in turn makes me want to smoke. Am i addicted? Before sobriety from alcohol I would have said no. After being in recovery for so many years and seeing therapists, if you asked me if i was addicted to pot, I'd say, definitely yes.
spent 10 years stoned 24/7.. wake up, bongs for breakfast, go to work, head home and rip a couple for lunch, back to work, go home at the end of the and smoke myself green. weighed about 2 bucks and had terrible anxiety. did that for about 30% of my life lol. 2 years off the shit now, and although quitting weed in itself didn't magically make me the most productive, confident and ambitious person in the world, i'm a lot happier in ways i used to think i never could be sober
@@BearFruit90 pretty easy to do. I’m trying to quit right now but for years nobody even knew I smoked. I smoked so often that being high was my baseline. When I’m sober people think I’m high because I’m not acting like I normally do
"Its helping you internally do the work, but its not helping you do the work" is such an insightful and great point, that's exactly what it is -- For me i need it when i hate my job but it makes me bad at my job
Sometimes I miss weed. I’ve been sober for 3 years and it used to be the most relaxing thing ever and helped me where no other medication, therapist, nor doctor could. I slowly realized it was just hiding my problems out of view as they were stacking up and it wasn’t a really true solution. Eventually I started getting intense panic attacks from it and borderline psychosis and that’s when I finally stopped. I do miss the days of playing video games, watching movies and TV, listening to music, and eating while high. It really does make sensory perception richer that’s an accurate description. I used to feel like I was cradled by God or something and colors were brighter and I was so so so calm and relaxed. Nothing would ever beat eating an amazing meal and zoning out into a good movie or show. I would get so immersed and it was massive escapism. I also noticed that weed made me more social and was a great excuse to connect to people here in Southern California where pretty much that’s all we would do lol. Smoking in the mountains and meditating in nature is a whole vibe. I would have deep meditation sessions in my bed too and I opened my eyes to so much. I also made my best music in the days when I was stoned because I would think more outside the box. I think reliance on weed is the worst aspect of it for most people and it should be something you only do a few times a year at most to enhance and experience. Never use it as a crutch for mental health. This is all just my input and experience.
"Its like you're too busy fighting a losing battle to just run away"... I love how Dr. K helps people come to these conclusions on their own. The answers are inside yourself, Dr. K just puts a spot light on it for you.
I started smoking cigarettes since my teenage. Spent my whole life fighting Cigarettes addiction. Also suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Not until a friend recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms.
Can you help me with the reliable source 🙏. I'm 56 and have suffered for years with addiction, anxiety and severe ptsd, I got my panic attacks under control myself years ago and they have come back with a vengeance, I'm constantly trying to take full breaths but can't get the full satisfying breath out, it's absolutely crippling me, i live in Germany. I don't know much about these mushrooms. Really need a reliable source!! Can't wait to get them.
YES very sure of Dr.alishrooms. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.
If you dont use it to try to erase all feelings and regulate dosage, it greatly increases lots of physical abilities, and it can stimulate reflective meditation. It helps you realize all kinds of things you didnt perceive before. Its always an awareness scale
I finally after 12 years of smoking weed finally finally quit, I used to spend about 150 a week on weed... just to laugh and do nothing.. looking back at it now I've realized I've spent so so much money, I could have had a house by now 😢 I'm just glad I finally found the strength to stop. I'm finally getting up and cleaning my apartment first thing in the morning, getting into positive routines, taking my dogs for walks multiple times a day. Just living. It's been so long.. I've also noticed my focus is so much stronger, and another noted side affects I'm dreaming the craziest dreams every night. When I was smoking it got to the point we're I wouldn't dream but maybe once a year.
Honestly, I have experienced enormous depression in my life, and without marijuana I was pretty much frozen, not feeling like anything was worth it. When I started using marijuana I became much more likely to think that it was possible for me to accomplish things. I started cleaning my home, became motivated to do things I'd wanted to do for years, and I started doing them. I even went out and scheduled appointments to talk to mental health professionals(which I had always wanted to, but never had done). And I started doing things like home repairs that I had always been hesitant to tackle because they had seemed too big to handle. I am not sure that the effects on everyone's motivation are as uniform as they were described in this video. I don't use it every day(closer to once a week), and I probably COULDN'T use it every day, because I'd be uncomfortable doing so, but I've felt that it's had a majorly positive affect on my life.
@@codyhodges1590 It's interesting. I use it to self-medicate anxiety occasionally, but I do it very deliberately since I know I could then become psychologically dependent on it, even after I improve my social skills or, via exposure, my social anxiety. I am also aware that at least for me it has a trade-off, which is that it can temporarily make me less motivated or can temporarily tank my ability to concentrate. I think drug use, especially use that involves psychoactive drugs, is very complex and I could never agree with people who simplify it.
Same, it was actually the thing that inspired me to go back into treatment. It was the first time in a long time that I realized that life could feel so much better than I'd been feeling. I would get a long night's sleep, wake up, and then tackle chores that I'd been putting off for months. Just knowing that it was possible to feel better was enough to motivate me. And to be clear, this was after trying multiple different antidepressants which were ineffective.
Same here. I've been using it selectively for a few years now. Once or twice a week or sometimes never during any given week. It pulls me out of funks and gives me the same type of motivation to fix my house or journal or learn or deep meditations or whatever. And the effects last for a few days so I don't need to use it every day. I have caught myself using a little too much and luckily I'm able to pull myself back without spiraling. To me, I think there is a "strategic" way to use it. But there is also a part of me that is concerned that continuing on this path will lead to destruction, but I think that comes from cultural conditioning about old thoughts on weed. But maybe I'm naive. I just know that it helps me sometimes, and I don't see it as being a problem in my life since I'm still going after goals and getting stuff done. I do wish the research would hurry up and catch up so that we have more information on the substance to know everything we can know about its use in someone's life. I probably won't stay on it forever, but it's changed my life for the better in many ways.
As someone who use to be suicidal, Cannabis has really changed my view of life and has definitely helped me enjoy the present moments more. However I do think it can make people more complacent, hold you back from achieving goals and becoming the best version of yourself.
Thank you so much for having a conversation about the middle ground of addiction. Dr. K nailed it when he said that we mostly only pay attention to the addict level but so many of us, myself inlcuded, are in the middle and don't really understand the fully impacts.
I can really relate to this whole conversation, having smoked almost daily since i was 19 (I'm 31 now.) There have been many days where i've been stoned and can sense that i'm wasting/avoiding opportunities because of it, and the cumulation of those days really takes a toll on my sense of self sometimes. Its an addiction for sure, in that it takes some of the pain of stagnating away by giving me an excuse for it (im too high for xyz) instead of really confronting the root of the stagnation
I'm listening this as a 25+ years old who's been smoking since 18. It does spiral down fast, especially when you have predispositions to addiction. I have a weird problem where I want to hide my usage from people I know, but it realistically helps me digest tasks more easily. I have had more than one high level jobs that I did not have the education for, without lying on my resume, just because I see the world in a way that most people do not and being high helps me articulate my views. But that is not healthy at all, and if anyone is considering trying weed: don't. If you're trying to self-medicate like I did when I started (and probably still do as I read my first sentences), you're going to go down a hell hole. Use weed as a recreative thing if you want, but don't use it because you're hurting or feeling misunderstood. It will absolutely evolve into a habit/addiction. Take care, everyone. Especially young people only starting their adult life. Cultivate your life like a very frail garden that you wanna see become fruitful.
"Don't use it because you're hurting or feeling misunderstood". Amen! I would propose a minor change: "don't use it IF you're hurting or feel misunderstood". If you do you are playing a very risky game. You might be fine, sure, but you may find it can become a crutch much quicker than expected. Once it's become a crutch it can start to harm your ability to handle issues in a variety of ways that can snowball before you even notice it. Same goes for any potentially addictive activity. Marijuana, alcohol, videogames, TV... Hell, even exercise can become psychologically unhealthy, despite it's physical benefits.
@@seanocd You're right. Those are coping mechanism we develop to hide the pain we feel, so it can become unhealthy. That makes those coping mechanism an obstacle to our psychological growth rather than a way to help us get through a hard times. It makes it last longer.
@@podchicane571 Thanks man, you saved me today. It was like "I feel really down this evening, let me smoke a bit just to heal myself and then I'll be fine and I won't smoke tomorrow". And it feels very fucking real even though when I read it it looks so classic of addiction.
Chronic smoker for over 11 years. I've been clean for about 3 weeks. Very difficult. My lungs almost feel worse from detoxing. I'm staying strong tho. Thanks for posting this convo!
30++ female here. Been addicted to weed for about 10 years, daily smoking, several j's a day. I grew up in a home where any negative emotions (sometimes even the positive ones) were not allowed and us kids were shamed and punished for them. I have realized I have some level of alexithymia, but it is hard to say how bad it is as I cannot really feel what I "should" feel. I have ADD (diagnosed in my late twenties) and self-diagnosed autism. This video is very helpful. This guy has his whole life ahead of him. And I do have a lot of mine to live, too. This time I feel I really am going to kick the "all-day everyday" habit. I am mentally equipped to do so. Long-lived habits die very hard, though. Massive thanks for this conversation to both of you! (+ subbed to your channel - great content, sir!)
I come back to this sometimes. This guy is so self-aware. That's exactly how I thought and acted as I started to get into doing it everyday in high school, but I wouldn't have described it to people like this until more recently looking back
The lemon analogy was great. For me, I wanted to quit smoking weed, but couldn't find the will. It took years of my soul wanting to change... And I felt so torn over what I was continually doing,, but would not stop, it was what I did for 15 years. Such a habitual pattern of smoking as an escape.. it took me a whole year of panic attacks and borderline psychosis, I finally, FINALLY knew weed was not feeling good anymore. It was so scary sometimes, sometimes I would cry and pray that if I could just come down and have my mind back I would never do it again.. took so many times before I hit my breaking point. I am finally weed free and I feel so safe in my mind and my self. Learning to embrace and be okay with boredom and emptyness still, but that is life. It took smoking weed turning into such a terrible experience that I could finally decide to let it go. So when he said the lemon thing, I had to imagine my lemon was not only dried up... but covered in mold and literally toxic to my system. It was fucking up my brain every time I used it, like a poison. 😂 I can laugh now but good luck to anyone who desires to let that go out of their life, just know keep trying, every time you attempt to quit you are one step closer. Even if you break your vow, one day you will finally see it for what it is. 🍋 You will get there, every step, even each relapse adds up to show you the truth. Nothing is wasted.
I’m really glad and that you freed yourself. I am in the midst of this situation for sure and it really helped to read that you knew you wanted to quit but couldn’t find the will… i’m sorry u went through that but I also am experiencing this so you give me hope. I actually was able to quit two years ago for 10 months straight only because I landed in the hospital for two weeks and was unable to smoke at all and when I got out I just wanted to stay sober. But I relapsed one day after playing with the idea for awhile and now almost two years have gone by in a flash and i’m so fucking ashamed of myself and i’m going nowhere in life I’m sorry this comment is all over the place. I will do better but this is my truth. Thanks for sharing yours, bless ❤
I think I had just gone through the same thing you were talking about. A few months ago and I had quit because of it. I didn’t hallucinate or have delusions but I felt extreme delirium, anxiety, panic attacks, difficulty with sleeping. Was this psychosis or just extreme anxiety? I felt depersonalized too for a bit. This was still happening to me even when I was sober.
At 8:17 Dr K remarks that "it doesnt improve performance but it makes things easier to do internally". This is perhaps the best description of what marijuana does for me, an ADHD patient. It helped remarkably for focusing on school work and spiritual activities (yoga/meditation). BUT it does drop off after awhile, and now anhedonia is a real concern. Psychological safety net, is a good way to describe it. I get brutal boredom and my attention span is non-existant if I go too long without using it now. Also, "Too busy fighting a losing battle" comment... SO TRUE
I tried weed for the first time in Prague on a holiday, 2 months later I got into weed at home and kept going almost daily for 6-8 months. Then I tried shrooms once and decided to quit weed because I saw that it was making my life worse, not better like it did at the start. I've relapsed a couple times for short periods but that's acceptable to me. Shrooms finally brought some colour into my life and snapped me out of the deep depression and pessimism loop I was stuck in my entire life. I'm not mentally healthy, but it's an improvement.
Thanks for you comment it was very insightful. I believe moderation is key like with anything in life. I wouldn’t take more advil than I need at a time ya know? That being said it’s good to be aware of when it’s not serving you anymore. I was just curious how you went about using shrooms? Did you microcdose or take them traditionally?
@@-caleb-7201 Traditionally, I started doing shrooms semi-regularly 2-8 weeks apart and they're some of the best experiences I've ever had. Eating them gives me nausea and they taste like ass so I make tea from them. I seem to be very prone to addiction so shrooms work very well for me, I can't just be high constantly like with weed and the experiences are so draining I wouldn't even want to. I do need to take long breaks from them sometimes when they start taking their toll on me. Shrooms are self regulating, when I've had enough they lose their magic and they just fade out from my life until I feel the want to trip again.
Thank both of you so much for this conversation. I used weed in the exact same steps that this young man did. Fun with friends and my ex early on but after the seven year relationship ended found myself using everyday to push out the negative emotions I was feeling. I went to therapy but wasn’t as honest as Rogan was and maybe through a mix of not the right therapist and dishonesty didn’t get the help I needed. I noticed personal growth during a three week tolerance break I took during my year and a half of heavy usage but had a bachelor party at the end of the three week mark and went right back to using again. I’ve since lost a very good job opportunity due to failing a drug test (not career ending thankfully) but have since stepped away from weed all together in order to get clean. This conversation really helped me understand what was going on in my brain during that time in my life and why I didn’t grow like I could have in that period. I don’t think I will ever completely give marijuana up because I do really enjoy smoking in moderation and believe it to be considerably healthier than alcohol, but a lot of people paint it as a non-addictive health food while ignoring the potential damage it can cause. Thank you both again for the therapy session I needed as a young man but never really got.
Thank you both for this, Ive been using marijuana daily for 3+ years. You've described my experience and feelings almost exactly, its like you say theres no "magic" in it anymore and I can see its detriment on my life and the people in it. Ive more recently started staying sober when I game with my friends or when Im cooking or cleaning and Ive found a different kind of magic in that. Im more grounded and I actually have to grapple with reality rather than retreat into my mind. I wish anyone else whos having trouble slowing or stopping the best and know that it get easier, it gets better and others will notice, so will you.❤
@@-whackd when I'm not high I'm more present with the world around me rather than chasing thoughts in my head. I get stuff done faster and I do stuff the right way rather than being lazy or just giving up on the task.
@@carloscontreras3633when I get high w/ marijuana I tend to be more lazy, I don't want to socialize, and I eat tons of junk food. This ends up affecting my overall health and social status, a lot of people don't interact with me because of how I am when I'm high. Add to the fact I get high everyday when I'm bored or have nothing to do and it leads to family and friends just not talking to you. I wish I'd been more conscious of how it affected my habits and behaviors because I'm definitely paying for it now.
I hope so I been trying so hard and it’s like something in my mind is like go smoke you don’t have nothing to do no one to talk to just smoke and feel good while the other voice is yelling at me like no don’t smoke look at your life look at your past look at all the problems weed has cause….. and I still do it. How did you avoid that voice that’s telling you to smoke.
I have been a cannabis smoker for over 5+ years and adding a t-break (tolerance) is beneficial when long term usage. Everyone’s experience is going to be different, however, even tho weed IS the safer option compared to other vices, IT IS ADDICTING. I see influencers say it isn’t addicting but I can tell you it does. It’s not bad or good, just is. I don’t plan on fully quitting because it DOES HELP ME.
Its not addictive in the way that word is usually used with drugs, where you are chemically addicted to it. But it can definitely be addicting to the right person.
@@milkmahtitty No, we have people here without a clear understanding of what addiction even is, let alone the forms it takes, or what substances can trigger it. Hint: Go look up pica. Or pagophagia. Or Urophagia. Willfully stupid people really need to stop talking now.
I can honestly say I started smoking weed when I was 14 during the spring time . I felt like it was a fun thing to do but was negatively affecting me. So I stopped and didn’t start back till I was about 21 to 22 years old . Haven’t stopped since then and I’m almost 28 now . I can say as I grow older the more it benefits me from a mental health standpoint and even just my overall health. It really helped me become so much more socially and pushes me to actually go try and do things . That’s just my experience with it and I know it varies with different people.
Psychedelics are just an exceptional mental health breakthrough. It's quite fascinating how effective they are against depression and anxiety. Saved my life.
Does anyone know any good source to get them? I put so much on my plate and it definitely affects my stress and anxiety levels, would love to give shrooms a try.
Currently in a Homeless situation (I have a car and job, so my situation could be way worse). I smoked every day, it does lose its magic. My mom was an addict to much harsher stuff, and she explained it to me this way. Most people end up chasing that First High without realizing it. Ive controlled my usage, found purpose in my hobbies that I used to generally enjoy andfocus on that improved my life. I could work high, I could work out high, i could meet my girls parents high, almost anything. I realized while homeless and having limited access to the greens that it became who I was one day without realizing it. The main problem greens has brought me was the impairment i had in my budgeting.
same here its started to create a problem in my finances, granted im only 18 so i just spent my free cash on za lol but i could be doing way better and this is a wake up call
@@maximusandr you'll find that greens isn't "addicting" in the usual sense. You could pay all your bills, grocery, adlnd the things you know you need, and if you don't have enough for the mj you'll be fine waiting for next paycheck, it's not debilitating in that sense (yes you'll find yourself hella bored for no reason). The thing is, you'll spend money on it knowing you truly want other things to fulfill you instead. I want to upgrade my PC, but I need greens first. I want some nice new shoes, oh I'm low on greens though. A concerts coming around, but I won't have enough greens by then, so I might as well not go and buy more instead. It is it's own kind of curse.
Thanks to everyone who would come here to send support. "Pray not for an easy life, Pray for the strength to endure a difficult one" Bruce Lee/J.F.Kennedy My situation is one full of learning. I too Pray everyone chooses to find that strength they didn't know they had.
I’ve struggled with weed addiction for years and I’m finally about 3.5 months sober. It took years for me to figure out the exact same things Dr. K said in this video. Wow.
@@Shalin_Deniece yes. I’m way less anxious. I feel more energetic. My mood is more consistent. I’m coping with bad things much more level headed without needing the crutch of weed
I'm sad to say it took me several years to realize that weed was causing my anxiety and depressive feelings, not making them better. It's weird because weed makes you feel like it helps you, but it really just creates those feelings in the first place.
@@1dingerr Its because we dont have real and healthy coping mechanisms. Instead of dealing with trauma we get high and forget. Leaving the dirty dishes in the dishwasher and not even turning the rinse cycle on. It DOES help, in that moment. Its however many hours later when you remember your issues that the cycle of decline begins and you're still getting high just to ease the pain.
Thanks, Dr. K. I'm 54 and used weed heavily for 38 years. It was my main emotional coping mechanism for my CPTSD. This is my 35th day clean. I stopped on the day I started getting ketamine treatments, also at the suggestion of Dr. K's guide (which helped me realize that even though I'm less depressed than I used to be, I still totally qualify for an MDD diagnosis.). I've been wanting to make this change for a long time, and have been watching HG for a year now before doing so. It took a while to be ready. I'm grateful for this resource!
I’ve been going through the exact same thing and I honestly really needed this video. Marijuana used to be something that truly helped me with feeling joy during times I didn’t think I had any joy left, but now I can’t help but view it as a crutch that keeps me from being motivated to pursue goals that will be hard to achieve. I think I’m finally deciding to quit/take a long break so that I can start to “feel” again and hopefully I’ll be able to focus more on my passions instead of getting high so I don’t feel so bad about putting them off.
I think it's very brave the way he speaks openly and so freely about his cannabis usage and the effects it has, both positive and negative. I know it's legal many places now, but where I live there is a massive stigma surrounding it. I did get it legally some years back when I lived in a different country, and just mentioning that I used to have that prescription to anyone in an official capacity puts me under the microscope. I told my psychologist, who I thought couldn't tell anyone, and they put me on a bi-weekly piss test for almost a year because they didn't believe that I was sober. Seriously broke my trust to the healthcare system, and now I find it incredibly hard to be open and honest with any type of doctor.
Had the same. Had a therapist tell me that the only thing she could tell my parents about was violent crime, so I told her that I'd smoked weed with some friends. She then went on to tell my parents that, and I stopped therapy completely. Ten years later, maybe I'd have stopped smoking earlier if I had someone I could talk to about it.
I’m so glad this video was made. I struggle EXACTLY the way he struggles. It was fun to start, then it became an every other day thing, then it became daily. I am currently on my 2nd week, no weed, no juice, gym every day, & eating properly and healthy; and this just kinda confirms for me that I’ve finally stepped out of that losing battle, and onto my way to better things. I hope everyone is taking care of themselves, thank you for the amazing work as always Dr. K.
@@jessewright8930 Hey, I’m not sure if my answer will help much but this is how it went for me. I was spending minimum 250 a week on weed at my lowest, and I was high almost all day every day. I knew for a while it was not good but never had motivation to stop or do anything better for myself. But eventually after enough thought I visualized it in the sense that if I was willing to spend that much per week on weed, why not cut my costs, save money, and do something better for myself in the process? Hopefully this helps
First video that actually convinced me… showing a good reason to quit. I’m a successful tech professional, and a full time artist as well. I work on a lot of things, mildly high (always just one small hit). I never knew how to feel about if I should quit or if it’s detrimental to my growth But really it’s just to put away my emotions and get the work done. I think I need to start living life’s experience, without substance, even just minor use. Thanks dr K
Fortunately, it's not really chemically addictive in the way alcohol is. But it is easily behaviorally addictive. I am strict with myself about how and when I use it. For me it's strictly medicine but I'm in my 50s now. It's much easier to use it appropriately than it would have been if I had been using in my 20s. I can say for certain I would have had real trouble only using for health in my 20s.
I like your explanation of this. Behaviorally addictive because when life gets hard people turn to it. I don’t smoke and use a small amount of edible that is half cbd, but only after a long week at work and to help me sleep better and reset for the weekend or if I’m having a very bad period and emotional swings and sweats. I use it at most a few times a month. I have coaching and was in therapy. Sometimes it just helps to have that reset but yeah I use it as medication essentially to help me relax and sleep. I don’t want to be stoned all the time and for me I don’t get why people want to be in that’s state all the time. I just use it as a tool to help me get through bumps in the road. I also didn’t start using it until I was 25 or so. I never saw the appeal until my spouse had a traumatic brain injury and uses gummies to cope with stuff on and off. It’s like I got him back after that and he didn’t want to be addicted to the opiates they put him on. He had a bad depression spell for a while after but besides making changes and using that which he uses more than me has helped him. It also helps him sleep too and just gives him a better quality of life.
Wrong. There is loads of research. It is chemically addictive for potentially about 30% of the population. It changes the way your brain works and creates cravings and physical pain for many. If you suffer addiction, you have anxiety attacks in withdrawal. You also struggle with mood regulation on and off it when addicted. Off you may suffer rage. On you may struggle with paranoia. Addicted people will smoke to the point they don’t eat right, manage finances, manage relationships, etc. Statistically people who use regularly when the brain is growing (25 years or less) are statistically more likely to become addicted down the line.
I feel like this is a great plan to responsibly use it. I think I might have to use it when I hit your age as well, due to the back pain which I'm certain will get even worse (always had a bad back)
Newer studies coming out are starting to find that THC actually is chemically addicted. Folks are even experiencing withdrawals when stopping. A lot of what we've been told the last 20 years seems to have been misconceptions, or at least exaggerated benefit
@@ppnotsmol8538yeah I quit cold turkey and the first week I literally could barely stand, everything was drained from my body and sometimes I would just drop to the floor exhausted thinking only the weed could fix it. I was lied to for so long and told myself that I wasn't physically addicted it's awful
This was dope (excuse the pun). Cool intersection of spirituality and science/psychology in the analysis and very relatable. Good stuff boys, thanks for being vulnerable so we can all learn!
I love the honesty of this guy and his description of his experience. As a person who didn't know they had anxiety and ADHD until much later in my life. I have a unique relationship with cannabis that I'm always analyzing and trying to learn just how I feel about it.
Great podcast, 4 weeks sober from alcohol and weed here. I feel like you guys touched a lot of good bases as to the core issue with substance abuse while remaining in a very respectful and positive light A+ episode
@@KbIPbIL0 right on dude keep at, granted I’m only at 4 weeks but in my experience so far it only gets easier and more stable every single day Best of luck to you and me and anyone else working towards sobriety!
Thank you for your positivity and encouragement Dr. K! I'm no longer a stoner, and good lord can I now recognize how much it was hurting me -- it's awesome to see you helping someone else realize the same thing. You're doing amazing things for people out here man. Thanks!
Also, I’ve never met a pothead that was really going places in life. Most stoners I know are just mindlessly droning through life with no aspirations or goals, working in Amazon warehouses and delivering Uber eats. I know a few smokers who started weed in their mid 20s and are relatively accomplished in their careers, but they’ve just stalled in progress and are content with staying in middle management for all eternity.
This is so cool because it has one to one talk with the therapist. This becomes so much relatable for someone who’s suffering and has decided to quit weed. I hope more and more such videos are up there! Keep it up!
Having quit weed a while back, I can definitely say that most people who use it daily will turn a blind eye to the harms that daily usage of this drug may cause. Some might defend it that it's not even a drug, but just a plant, while at the same time, calling coffee (a roasted seed) and sugar (a food) drugs. If that's the case, then morphine isn't a drug either, since poppies are just flowers, right?
Totally agree. Potheads (I know because I used to be one and all my friends were as well) will even go so far as to say it’s good for you, while completely ignoring that they are fat, lazy, and have 0 ambition in life. Happy to just coast along.
thats not sound logic as weed is simply grown, if you throw it in the ground it grows. 90% of every other "drug" has to be synthesized somehow, Morphine isnt just grown, its processed INTO a chemical called morphine.
@@ambi3nttech I'm not sure how I feel about this line of thinking. Your generalizing very hard and I just cant help but point out the bitterness in your observations. Like do you resent these folks for just "coasting along"? I mean who gives a shit if someone is enjoying their life? Not hurting another human being or impeding their right to a happy life. Why does every single individual need to have this super star ambition? Are folks not allowed to be content with the life they are living? Im well aware fat lazy people exist but i just take umbrage with the notion that every single person that doesn't have some higher ambition in their life is somehow lesser or idk you certainly hold some animosity towards them.
Use it as the spice of life =) just don’t let it become better than doing the things we needs to thrive and not just survive ❤ Imagine you like something so much nothing else makes you happy in comparison. Then imagine it was a substance instead of being healthy, being social, and things your body wants to be able to regulate/motivate itself from within. It’s more of a chemical/dopamine thing for some people. If it isn’t the most important thing in your life it most likely isn’t a problem. There’s just some people that use it to avoid healing/growth. If you like it too much it releases more dopamine than it should and can cause your brain to “motivate/trigger” you to seek it. For some people it becomes the equivalent of masturbating for their brain. “Neurons that fire together, wire together” and the brain is ultimately seeking dopamine so you’re rewiring your brain and telling it how to get dopamine through how we deal with adversity. If you smoke every time you’re upset your brain can even go “this body gives me dopamine levels that dwarf sex dopamine levels whenever he is stressed/upset, so I’m gonna release bad feelings until I get the fastest path to dopamine” Same with stress eating, stress smoking, or even sex addiction. Dopamine is supposed to be from the pursuit of something. Purpose is what you pursue. Nothing wrong with using something it improve or enhance your life =) just don’t choose harmful things and don’t let it take away from all the other experiences/growth we could potentially have =) “PEACE AND LOVE” -Vash The Stampede
As a 36 year old guy who has been addicted to weed with daily smoking for 15+ years with very small breaks from it here and there, Dr K hit the nail on the head with moving negative emotions to the background. Doing this so much has caused me to be almost incapable of living with my own thoughts. I will smoke to avoid my own thoughts, and then hate myself when my mind is just spinning its wheels because its high. Ive tried quitting so many times and failed. Its got to the point where i just consider myself a weed smoker and just accept it...until the next day when i tell myself i need to quit again. Its been an ongoing, never ending battle and i have no idea how it will end. I dont even know what winning the battle even is. Is it quitting for ever? Or making actual peace with smoking. Feels like ill never know.
I bet a conversation with someone who has gone as deep into it as you have and pulled theirselves out would help. You have the strength. There are methods. There are ways. Your mind will do a good job convincing you you’re not capable and it’s not worth the effort of stopping. But those thoughts are temporary. And those thoughts aren’t you.
What helped me out was finding a physical hobby that I was so invested in that I would rather wake up at 6am to go do it before school/work, and want to wake up so badly to do it again in the morning that I stopped using any substances that would impair me feeling 100% fresh in the morning, in my case skateboarding but could work with tennis/golf/ any new hobby that takes time investment to learn. Basically gotta get that dopamine fix from something else
8 years for me, but I’m right there with you. It’s gotten to a point I don’t know what’s the weed and what’s me. Is there even a difference anymore? Probably not
Quit cold turkey. The withdrawal sucks (anxiety, insomnia, sweats) but once you get it over with, it's done. If you can just whiteknuckle it for a couple days, the urge to smoke should lessen considerably
5 minutes in and Dr.K has hit the nail on the head! It took my years to realize I was addicted to weed because it helped me ignore my trauma and "be more present." But I was really spending my time running from the past, not enjoying the now
Neurodivergent, cptsd, back injury, I am a successful independent contractor, artist, clean, organized, not depressed, never bored. Weed helped me do my taxes last week. I never tried any drug for anxiety other than weed. Never drink. I believe Im good
As a woman I feel like I can't express my emotions either. Every time I have I've been shut down or it hasn't worked. I feel I have deeper issues than the average and nobody I've talked to including therapists have not been helpful so I've learned to stop reaching out. It's hard for women too and this was a very helpful video!
Not a woman but i've felt similarly to you for some time. I started going to a psychoanalyst and it's been tough but I think it's helping. The main thing that kind of therapy does is make YOU understand your problems. If you've already tried that kind of therapy maybe try a different therapist. Just keep in mind that it takes time and work to be able to express yourself and learn your truths.
Im sorry you go through that. But you are the exception. Men on a societal/ global level are beaten down if they dont show anything other than stoicism past the age of 13. "would you still date a man if he cried in front of you" is still a debated topic. Im not trying to downplay your experience. But the reality that almost every man faces is just something you arent gonna understand, both because you arent one AND because we are awful at articulating it because all of us havent been taught how to discuss even the most basic of emotions. I got to 24 before I started being comfortable with the fact that I get sad sometimes, spent my whole life before it hating myself for it.
Yo…. I been smoking cannabis for decades upon decades, since I was a child. At 47 years old I’m having the strangest relationship with weed these days. The lemon, the metric of plus and negative net results, this whole video was so good. I’ll be quitting today for the next while just to see what happens. I’m ready and thank you so much for putting this out there I actually needed it.
Wow, I knew all this stuff intuitively, but I’ve never heard anyone explain it so pointedly. Thanks Dr K. I’ve been a functioning addict for about 20 years, and sober for a year. It’s been a really good year. I got really tired of squeezing one drop out of the same lemon, and I’m starting to clean the cobwebs out of my life, making way for the bigger lemons.
As someone who found weed after 30, its opened me up to so much more. I think had i found it in my aimless teens id have spiraled to nothing too. Its awesome to be able to understand this on a deeper level.
As someone who had to stop smoking as much due to CHS it really opened my eyes to how overpowering it was and how it was taking over my life. I'm now able to use it exclusively socially on weekends out of preference but I am so happy to see these candid and proper discussions on the subject. Weed addiction/dependency is something that needs to be more seriously talked about because it is a real dependency but not enough discussion and knowledge is being talked about around it. It's great, but needs to be used responsibly.
I’m in this dude’s boat as well. Trying to fight the boredom and push on without getting high, because it is effecting my ability to get meaningful life experiences and meet goals. Thank you for this conversation.
This video came at the perfect time. I'm almost the exact same case here and was going through a similar cycle of usage. I had an emotional outburst that was followed by this video and I have already removed all marijuana from my house. Very grateful to this guy and Dr. K!
I like how you’re being careful not to step on your patients ego your careful wording combined with a powerful punchline (if I may call it this way) makes him really think about the negative consequences of using and notice how many benefits he would gain if he stopped… by the way he seems to be talking about me when he talks about himself except I’m a bit further into addiction than him. But this talk really makes me think
I started trying weed just about a year and a half ago, maybe around 2 years. A few months ago, I got a vape, and was high every night for about like....3 or 4 weeks. It felt great...but...also...started feeling tired of it. I also began to notice quite a significant issue with memory. I wasn't really retaining conversations I'd had with people, even though I had those conversations when I wasn't high. So... I stopped. I didn't have any weed for two months. Got some edibles, was high for about a week. Now I'm not doing it again. So moving forward, I think I'll only do it on special occasions, like my tobacco use. Only on my birthdays, Christmas, etc. Fortunately, i've had no problem stopping it's use.
@@maxgoldstein7202 Yeah! Exactly! I'm just glad I never developed an addiction of any kind to it. Would have been a lot harder to put down if I couldn't just cold turkey or no problem.
so you've done everything except smoke the beautiful flower? its the best way to smoke . its not scary when you fully understand what it is you're smoking. Similar to drinking, I i just handed you a shot of an anonymous liquid you'd be scared. But if i told you exactly what liquor it was, when & where it was manufactured, you'd feel a lot safer. This is how weed is and should be handled.
That whole graphic was quite incredible and eye-opening. Really good break-down, especially since I'm a numbers guy - that "1" really hit hard. The guest was also great - I wouldn't have explained my weed experiences and thoughts nearly as well. He mentioned he was worried about the negative outcome of reaching out for help and whatnot - honestly I think much more highly of him now than at first glance. Mental health is practically the core of one's life. We shouldn't feel ashamed for trying to save ourselves.
I've been working on the habit strobgly this year. I was a pretty regular "stoner" for over 10 years. By that I mean daily. I wasn't "ready" to quit until I saw it ruin a beautiful relationship while I headed into burnout with my business. I'm a little over a week with smoking again and I really love this conversation. When you said "I believe it is stunting your growth"........ just YES. That is what I needed to hear and what I've known for years as I've continued and struggled with the idea of quitting. Thank you, Dr. K. I think I'm finally ready to move forward with my life. Wish me luck! ❤
Two things have helped me enjoy my pot while also not putting myself in a bad spot: when it stops doing what you want, abstain for a while. Also, mindfulness meditation has helped me. I realized that when you have thoughts like that, your response is the stressful part, not the thoughts themselves. Meditation kind of helps you come to that realization, or at least, it did for me.
I want to thank you Dr K for taking so much time to go over so many subjects. Helps me a lot through my mental states to understand them and disregard the waves of influencers online that give misleading insight.
Been sober for almost 3 years, been going to gym to get back in shape and try to live healthier. The negative emotions are still there but it's true like you said Dr. K, I've made some positive changes in life now.
This kid is literally how I was when I was 19. Its like looking at my past self. Im no longer that stoner guy, but I can clearly understand what he's going through. I wish somone like Dr K would have been there in my life years ago to help me process these feelings.
And at 13:45 thats exactly how I felt. It wasnt addiction because I went months without it. But the idea of lighting a joint as if it would give me the answers for what to do next, because I was bored; made me continue to smoke it despite the paranoia and negative thoughts which weed gave me.
I am currently 19, watching this as I smoke nightly and the whole stunting progress is really hitting me, ive felt basically dead for the past few months because I havent been trying to find a place to live, drive, hang out etc but instead falling back on something which was a cure for the past. Ive hit a point where I just feel stuck, just doing the same thing every day, every week.
Been a background viewer of the channel for a bit, but recently I had been coming to some of the same conclusions that Dr K talks about on my own, and this kind of gave me a hope for next steps to end my dependency on it. Really appreciate the video 🙏🏻
This was very insightful. I have a huge empathy for Rogan. I’m 32 and still feel on one hand like I’m the same troubled kid, but he’s pushed to the back of the class and ostracized for his emotions leaving the adult misguided and hopping from one panic to the other. I’m a daily cannabis user and it’s borderline addiction, but I still function in my daily life pretty well: I have pets, a wife, a mortgage, paid off car etc. -I have a full time day job that I consider off-limits for weed. I smoke before I play music at my gigs (dream side hustle) and that enhances the performances both internally and externally, but I think sometimes “Can I even do this without weed? Why should I have to?” I have since resolved to smoking with a purpose, but smoking in the idle times is what kills me because it actually will take away my ability to communicate rationally with my thoughts and with my wife if it doesn’t take away my motivation altogether (say like mowing the lawn). It’s a daily art of balancing sober and rested vs high and dopamine-depleted. Life really is like a lemon.
Thank you both of you. You are both incredibly amazing people, thank you for the content. I am currently going through the same thing at the age of 27. Its never too late to get help. I hope everyone struggling with any kind of substance abuse can find the help and support they need.
Cannabis really is great at “forcing” you into the present moment. And that time can be so valuable for introspection and reflection. But he’s right about losing the magic with a certain frequency of use. Experimentation has led me to a cadence of once every week or two for optimal experience and benefit.
@@buntu8827 Have you ever even done weed or are you basing that off only research? You’re being so defensive and dismissive on someone’s own experiences. For the record I totally get what he means by weed making you feel in the moment. I don’t care what “the research” says and you shouldn’t take research as complete fact because research just find trends in data. It doesn’t directly say what an individual person experiences.
When you realize that the final segment of the video (Where Dr. K and Zack talk about weed dependency and how it stagnates life) has an INSANE amount of replays compared to the rest. That's where you realize, this shit is a common problem. "You're too busy fighting a losing battle to run away" Incredibly insightful, and a GREAT sentence for a metalcore song before the breakdown 😂.. Good luck fellow weed smokers. Let's climb this pit together. 🤘🏽✌🏽💜🖤
started smoking after a family loss, it was good at first, then i started smoking every day and weed started enhancing my negative thoughts and insecurities and i became a recluse. i also started smoking carts which would get me way higher which worsened the effects way more. i wasn’t remembering anything and started showing up stoned everywhere, stopped taking care of myself and it got so bad i temporarily got psychosis from smoking. i took a long tolerance break and switched back to indica bud, i also cut back my usage to once a week and switched to 1/4 papers. i also started smoking only after i’ve completed all my tasks, and made the intention of smoking to relax after a long day rather than just for boredom. i also got healthier munchies food (fruits) and started self improvement. i also started going out more and fighting against that negative self talk spiral that weed can put you in. now when i smoke it’s a lot better. weed is cool but you have to be healthy about how you use it
Wow. This hits home. I've been in the middle ground my whole life and everything you guys talked about resonates. I am very pleased to see the discourse about the problems facing us men has become more public as its a crying shame and an obvious problem when you look at the rates of male suicide. I've been going through an extremely tough year trying to sift through 30 years of suppressed emotion and trauma that I buried with cannabis. I still have the occasional smoke like once or twice a month and it's gone back to being fun but I keep a very close eye on how I am feeling before I do it and set intentions before doing it. Good luck to everyone just trying to survive. You've got this 👊
I enjoy it when you do viewer interviews. I'm a former addict(meth), I'm sober but I'm using weed to help me get over it. Honestly I think it would be fun to be interviewed by you Dr.K. If you are interested, I'd love to see what you have in mind.
I've heard that long term use of cannabis can increase depressive symptoms according to a number of studies presented by other UA-camrs. I forget who it was who compiled these results, but I've noticed it in my own life. After stopping for awhile, I seem to be coming back out of a depressive slump I had been in for a couple of months during which I'd use cannabis every few days or so. Then I'd use it more often (sometimes daily) to compensate for the depression, making the spiral worse. Mileage may vary of course. I've got a friend who used cannabis daily and he's fine: it actually helps with his anxiety and he's perfectly functional while using it.
That's what is so interesting about weed is how it seems to effect people so differently. I don't know if it has to do with the strain or the frequency of use or just a person's genetics but it would be great if research would solidify these things for us.
I think it has to do with the user because liek Dr K was saying if you have a lot of negative emotions towards something or someone you use weed and it pushes it back and makes you forget about it but eventually it has a breaking point and I can 100% agree last year i was at a breaking point super depressed last year of college no job just smoking everyday to get through the day. Now that i smoke less i been feeling much better got a job and finding time to do things I need to like read hit the gym etc.. Even though i still smoke and still feel depressed i am able to manage it better and working towards not smoking at all but it’s not easy lol
Same, I found moderate weed could help me with my adhd . The problems comes when my brain now realizes I have this hack to feel good and th3 over consumption happens
@@manueldeltoro9944I really struggle with statements like these, because I hear so many people talk about how beneficu Ial marihuana is, but the benefits they get are odten not related to the benefits we do find in studies, and marihuana has a way of being the solution fir every mental health issue while it clearly doesn't actually benefit the majority of people that use it excessively. I hear people with depression say that marihuana helps them feel better and get stuff done. I hear people with adhd say that it calms them down and helps them focus. Anxiety gets better, apetite is better, sleep is better, generally speaking people can fit marihuana into every corner of their lives if they want, but truly I have not deen many people actually benefitting from marihuana, but moreboften I saw how it kept people from seeing a doctor and actually treating a condition. I rarely meet people that benefit from marihuana, but they exist, but all of them will tell me of the benefits.
I’ve given it up after 10+ years of misuse. The way I’ve given it up has been very important. The way I describe my biggest hangup with it is that when I was misusing, is it was in effect like a drag suit deploying too early in the proverbial race. Not that I’m in a hurry, I’m actually learning to slow the fuck down, but I was dragging behind. I was not keeping up with the promises I made to myself which really was holding me back from achieving the little and bigger goals I set for myself. Stagnation resulted and that is probably the worst feeling ever. I could go on but that’ll do. Thank you both for sharing, I hope people who have trouble making healthy adjustments in their lives without hearing other peoples’ testimonials and breakdown like this, find this video and the help that they’re ready to receive and put to action to improve their lives. Rock on 🤘
Thank you so much to both of you. This is the conversation that needs to be heard. I love HG for his ability to recognize and approach his biases as q clinician
you can stop, mate. the first week is hard (mainly because it's very difficult to sleep) but it rapidly gets easier after that. i smoked every day for over 20 years and was up to an oz/week. stopped almost a year ago. you can stop too.
The way they described getting all the juice out of lemons resonated with me. I feel like I need new lemons in my life, particularly a change of scenery, but I financially cannot afford the new lemons. I’ve definitely regressed in mindset as a means of surviving the negative feelings I was having about wanting that but not being able to do it. Trying to put myself in a position to afford new lemons but it’s feeling like it’s gonna be a few years before there’s any fruiting and I’m not really sure how to deal with that, especially feeling better, other than just accepting where I am, meaning having to accept I’m not happy in life. Thanks for reading if you did 🙏🏻
Be grateful for what you have for now that’s the number one key. There are rich people with thousands of lemons who commit suicide. The key to happiness is being grateful for what you have as you strive for more.
not all lemons have to equate to money, you can exercise for free and if you havent done it in a while then you have lots of dopamine to extract from that lemon. you got this!
There’s a lot of truth here. But what we are talking about is recreational enjoyment vs self-medicating. It requires tremendous self-awareness and discipline to recognize the differences. But why is self-medicating with a substance like marijuana deemed unhealthy while medicating with Prozac, Paxil, or Lexapro considered benign?
I’ve smoke everyday for 12 years and While I don’t experience almost any of the symptoms he speaks on, they do a great job of breaking down not dealing with issues regardless of how you decompress. Can’t run from your issues
This. If you use it as a treat as a way to wind down from a day of hard work, I don’t see the problem. I smoke before going to the gym or reading complex philosophy. Explain to me how that’s a bad thing. 😂
Amazing video. As someone his in sober from long term severe cannabis addiction this is exactly what cannabis does. Also I’m in recovery from CHS (cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome) I thought cannabis was saving me from my life of pain when it was the very thing causing it.
I found myself in the same situation as the interviewee. This video has been rather eye opening to me, about needing to face the negative emotions. I had been pushing them aside and piling up for a decade and im scared to face whats to come.
Im a relatively successful stoner. Got my sh*t together, for the most part. Im certainly not living a perfect life but Im definitely not a loser. Self employed. Married. We own multiple properties. Etc. Weed will definitely make your mind race and cause you to dredge up thoughts from the past. I actually think its this form of anxiety that people are addicted to because it sort of makes things interesting. Over the years the anxiety has gotten more intense yet I still enjoy it for some reason. However, dwelling on and overthinking things is also why stoners dont get stuff done. To be a successful stoner you really need to talk yourself out of these cycles and into productivity as effectively as possible. To some degree Ive learnes to use that weed generated anxiety as motivation.
I'm absolutely addicted to weed, and honestly have no plans of stopping. It makes me happy, hungry, and tired. Three things critical to my survival that I struggle to attain without it (hell, I spent a huge chunk of my life suicidal before discovering weed). But I'm still happy to watch these videos to be able to weigh up the pros and cons and I recently stopped smoking during the day, which cut down my hours spent high. I think that's a decent compromise.
I think people like you and me who are in very bad situations beforehand can get a lot of benefits from it, it helps you get up and live. But K makes a good point, while your smoking weed you aren't thinking about the things that a normal person would at your age, and you don't do the things that normal people do. Not that I (and I assume you) would do those normal things anyways. It impairs your growth. Lol if I wasn't poor I would get a therapist but for now weed is my only friend
Let me preface this by saying I am not telling you what you should do only sharing my experiences. I sincerely hope that weed continues to work for you, but as I and many others who are in similar situations come to realize at some point: weed is the perfect solution until it isn’t. I self-medicated with weed for years until it ended up making my anxiety and depression 10x worse. At that point, I realized I had completely neglected working on any other healthy coping mechanisms and lost so much time to complacency. The one thing that helped me turned on me. 1 year sober now. It hasn’t been easy, but I do enjoy having more mental clarity and motivation for self-improvement.
@@kvlt22 To be honest, I'm feeling the best I've felt in years, and am the most productive I've been my entire life. Maybe I could do even better if I cut out the weed but I'm currently doing nofap (day 26/90) and don't really want to push it just yet.
Well let me tell you this to save your time in case you decide to quit smoking weed. Never do it on a daily basis or else you will definitely 100% have increased anxiety in life(at least to a certain extent and sometimes even more), your cognitive thinking will be affected, loss of appetite, brain fog, laziness. I met a therapist and he made me realize this. Guys please go to a therapist coz that helps and probably you won’t need more and more money coz even 1 or 2 sessions with therapist work like a magic for many and you don’t have to go there again and again it’s not a tuition class lol🤣 You can then work on yourself after a few sessions so you don’t need to spend after that on a therapist. Trust me you’re gaining a lot in life by quitting weed not losing something in life.
@@mihirjoshi8934 I appreciate the input, I've put my all into therapy and got nothing out of it. All progress I made was from my own inner work and demon slaying. I do want more specialised therapy down the line but I'm a young adult who can't afford it. I'm not attempting to justify myself but I don't even smoke that much anymore and I'm not taking that splint off until I'm sure it won't end up hurting me more.
One of the best videos I've ever watched regarding cannabis consumption, I use it medicinally for neuropathy, and it does indeed have side effects - perhaps I don't see them quite as much because I'm running around after two ADHD kids - but they are definitely there! I'd like to thank you both. In particular for the interviewee, you're immediately employable. You're naturally analytic, and you'll be a sound investment for any employer. Good luck with your life!
I relate to this guy so much he puts it into words perfectly. Only difference is I smoke morning to night day by day for more than 10 years. I'm glad to be here and try to put myself back on track.
Great way of explaining what it does. I agree, THC is fun at first, then free will slowly goes bye bye, the magic goes away, you need it to function, constantly with drawling from it, and you ultimately end up using it to mask the side effects it produces rather than the benefits it once had. I've quit and restarted so many times I can see it clearly. Currently off of it. No way one can take a 4-5 day break if they're a chronic user. Getting off THC is also pure hell for me, can't sleep, can't regulate emotions or feel any sort of happiness/joy/pleasure. The first 3 days are the worse, and then after about a week things start feeling more normal again.
This all makes so much sense. I’ve never had the decrease in joy from weed, but I have noticed it’s stagnated my life. It makes it easier to tolerate a mediocre life rather than pushing through and making it great
And what if your life is just permanently mediocre. Lol
Becoming content with discontent.
@@Blue-fo1tx well having a mediocre life should be the motivator to break out of that cycle rather than smoking weed untill your happy with being mediocre.
99% of everyone lives a mediocre life. Mediocre is fine
@@jaakkovirtanen5413 what mediocre is we define for ourselves.
If you think your life is mediocre then ... Why do you feel that? You bored? Not achieved what you wish you had? Whish you had wealth or something??
Why not find satisfaction with life to the point where you don't feel that you are living a mediocre life?
Weed helps people come to terms with being mediocre rather than striving for satisfaction.
As someone who is literally going through the same thing, I want to thank this person for coming on and sharing his story
You got this! Rooting for you to find the balance you need in life to experience the joy you deserve 👏
Not figuratively going through the same thing?
Agreed. This helps a ton, the experience and conversations had.
Same here. Good luck with your journey 👍@@FishJackson
This guy made me feel less alone in the situation.
I sold weed for about 4 years in Colorado at a dispensary. It might not be "addictive" in the traditional sense, but I saw plenty of people blow thousands of dollars a month on it and everyone who used it all the time (including myself) just stopped going anywhere in life. It's like we were just fine making minimum wage, having no furniture and having no ambitions. Woke up one day realizing that and just never smoked again
@nicholastime1513 two different sides of a coin
seriously man, that’s how i feel. i get way too comfortable smoking n i been doing it daily for a long time now, just killed all of what i had tn so gonna see how it goes, i plan on not smoking for a very very long time
@nicholastime1513is the weed for your adhd or did you get a diagnosis and get on meds?
@nicholastime1513 facts. To quote Hank Hill "Why would anyone do drugs when they could mow a lawn?". Clearly he has never mowed a lawn while high. On a serious note, I also have been able to manage my ADHD incredibly well with weed. 4 Years in I definitely feel my tolerance almost tapped out, Should probably take a tolerance break soon. I'm a joint a day kinda guy
@nicholastime1513It’s a dumbass assumption and it’s a deflection. The average cigarette smoker, coffee drinker, fast food eater is unsuccessful, and none of those things is the cause.
I just wanted to leave an experience in case someone needs to hear it.
I also used to smoke everyday and it was holding me back from pursuing my goals, eating healthily, and living life to the fullest.
I have since significantly reduced my use, joined a gym, go for regular runs, and I’m eating significantly better. I also started college after avoiding it for 4 years after highschool.
You can do it. You can build resiliency. You might feel like you aren’t ready or you can’t do something, all it takes is to keep doing the next right thing one step at a time.
Start a routine that doesn’t leave time for smoking. Tell someone you are trying to reduce your use so they can help keep you accountable. Add in regular exercise and self care, and identify a long term goal.
You aren’t defined by your emotions. You are defined by what you do about them!
thanks bro im in almost the same boat as you, just only took a year off school.
What does reduced use entail for you? The only time I really miss/want weed, is if I'm alone and lonely/bored one weekend, because weed really has really helped me through those nights. This is how I always "relapse" after being off weed for months, even years, I plan to just smoke one saturday evening to relax and stave off loneliness/boredom, and then it just continues on Sunday, and immediately becomes a daily thing.
I've managed to moderate daily usage to the extent where I only smoke before bedtime and make sure I get my exercise and daily chores done, but it still feels like an addiction, because I can't sleep without it, so I really feel like I depend on it.
I'd love to just be able to smoke in moderation, like for instance only on weekends or saturdays, but I've failed so many times now I wonder if it's even possible.
@@sh0werp0wer a friend of mine had the same thought that smoking in moderation could work out, for him at the end quitting fully was the way to go, after 3 months he rarely thought about smoking again and everytime before when he started smoking after not smoking for months, he was smoking daily again after a week
@@sh0werp0werIt's totally possible. You're already halfway there because you are aware of the situations and feelings that motivate you to smoke. You always use for a REASON. You use because it does something for you, some effect that you find desirable, otherwise you'd not be doing it. I learnt to moderate my heroin use after several years of addiction. The difference is I no longer lean on it for anything. I don't use it to escape from my problems, I no longer feel I can't get through the day without it, I just enjoy it now and again as a treat. And I don't want it constantly now in exactly the same way I'd get sick of my favourite meal if I had it for breakfast, lunch and dinner every day.
PS I can greatly recommend a book to you, written by 3 authors both from individual experience and decades of research, called 'The Freedom Model for Addictions'. It's available as a free download and it is fantastically helpful for sorting out the relationship you have to your drug of choice. All the best, you can get there! I have and people used to tell me I'd die in the gutter.
@@sh0werp0wer I can connect with these statements alot. Ive tried to stop smoking handful of times. But it only takes that one night of indulgence to send me back down the rabbit hole. For me personally, ive accepted that I have an addict mindset, Many addicts in my fam, and I have to treat weed the same way some one in AA treats drinking. Might just be my will power, might be how i get when im stoned. Thanks for sharing
I’m really proud of this guest, and his ability to articulate exactly what weed does over time. He’s very smart and self aware. I’m 30 now, been what I’d consider a pretty heavy smoker for 10 years, and have been working on rewiring my brain and opinion about cannabis. This conversation really helped me to understand what I’m going through and how to proceed.
Same boat. Daily user but woudnt necessarily classify is as an addiction but looking back it absolutey stunted my potential in my 20s. I've been weed free for a year and made more progress in my career during that time than the previous 10 combined. I think mostly becuse my "boredom tolerance" is so much higher and Im able to focus for longer periods of time.
This is probably the most nuanced and realistic video on the subject I've ever seen. Just becuase you´re not a complete fiend doesnt mean that usage of any drug can have negative effects on your life.
Im not giving it up for life, I still love it and it has enriched my life. But there is a time and place for everything, and right now is not it.
@@williambjork2777 couldn’t agree with you more. I never felt addicted, but it became part of my routine in certain ways that I can see now was detrimental. I think it’s easy for smoking to become part of your routine when doing certain things or winding down at night. I’m only 12 days without smoking right now, but in that time I can already see that my productivity is up, I sleep better, and I’m more likely work out and explore cutting out other vices.
Can’t say I’ll never smoke again, but moderation is key, and there is a time and place for it 100%. I do how ever think a daily smoker lifestyle is no longer for me.
@guitarszen Here. Work out pretty much every day + my work is very physical as well. This is extremely accurate, was both for me and the people around me. Being a social stoner, a weekend stoner and a daily stoner are completely different things, and only one of those is healthy. Plus the people who just say ''You're doing it wrong" or "You haven't found the right strain" are usually the ones whose lives revolve around weed.
@guitarszen It's my anecdotal experience, not my opinion.
Yeah he’s more self aware than I was at that age
My experience with weed is pretty different from this, but there are definitely some similarities. I always try to be aware of when I am avoiding something. Weed often helps me see when I’m avoiding things. The issue can be how often I smoke. If I smoke all the time, I’ll never really grow. I have to have breaks for: a) tolerance, b) boredom (really important!), and c) to absorb knowledge gained. Weed really helps me to see how things actually are, but if I never let myself be sober and bored, then I’ll never really learn those lessons.
learning how to make substances work for you is the important thing!
You could achieve the same effect without it if you put your mind to it, just without risks
You don't actually need weed for that though
@@belivuk2526But it's a sensation that is beautiful beyond words surely once or twice a week vaped or ingested rather than combusted is worth it for the introspective souls and dedicated tokers everywhere. Moderation is key and if you fail at it you can always try again. But I will acknowledge that weed is of little importance compared to trusting your gut and doing what works for you.
I had many awesome insights on weed. It is a great therapeutic tool. Like shrooms, but lighter, more accessible and less frightening.
Maybe it’s because I am neurodivergent, but honestly Cannabis has been far more beneficial than any professional mental health provider has ever been. It’s actually helped me process emotions and better my life in ways no medication or therapy has ever come close to helping.
Same, in a way. Im on the spectrum and weed is (when used sparingly) a good way to actually introspect a bit and be less stressed out about myself. The unfortunate thing is, it's still psychologically addictive, and at the point in my life I'm currently at I can't afford to bear all the negative effects. I'm a lightweight and am quite sensitive to thc, so using it frequently is always a bit of a coin toss. Working on quitting rn
Be careful. I started my use to mitigate anxiety. At the height of my addiction, I began to develop BPD1, GAD, and could feel the psychosis not far behind. That was the day I quit. I was a HEAVY use case, one milliliter of distillate daily. Moderation is sorta important!
I started because I realized it helped me eat and sleep at a time I struggled with both. Then it helped me manage anxiety. Then stress. Then sadness. Then boredom... just be careful. Maybe keep a record of every time you use, kind of like tracking calories but for weed.
@Alex-js5lg another problem I have with adhd is completing people's sentences and hyperaware of people's slow thinking. When I smoke weed, I end up socializing the behavior and let my thoughts slow down and I'm able to socialize better. What I'm trying to learn sober is learning how to slow down naturally but also accept the fact my brain will just be quicker
this interview me! im a component of successful cannabis user, keeps me going
The dude is good at describing weed's effects
Yeah as someone who's never consumed marijuana it's really helpful to be able to watch content like this and more deeply understand it.
@@VioletEmerald Everything he says about noticing more in music is totally true. Even more so on psychedelics. Being stuck in the present moment is definitely true too - easier to block out your problems in life, for better or worse.
Yeah he sure is. He's very observant
@@codeman3639 psychedelics are a whole different kettle of fish. I've done LSD once and I'd say that other drugs are basically still sober, just a different flavour of sober. Psychedelics are too different to compare like that.
I was thinking the opposite lol, he’s a newb
As a 62 yr old that has smoked weed over 40 years on and off I can say that it's held me back from a lot of the things I really wish I had in my life. I'm 2 months clean still fighting for happiness
2 months is amazing!
what did it hold you back from?
@@peepoosthank you for the question. i could write a lengthy diatribe as an answer for you, but i will just say this: many of the things i wanted to do - i just flat out didn't do. many of the things i did do - were done half-heartedly, or never fully completed.
@@dlwseattleodd. Weed makes me do more things and be interested in more. It hasn’t held me back like when I was sober
We are rooting for you Sir! Never too late. Thanks for sharing!
Marijuana has been a godsend for me personally . It made me more and more aware of myself and others . My worst inner conflicts I've solved being stoned at night . It brought every negativity in me that was in my subconscious to the conscious which made it possible for me to work through things and get better . It does however harm me when I begin indulging in it. Side effects are worsened sleep quality , low hunger , clouded mind and lazy . Mind you I never smoke during the day it's always before bed time.
Dude 100 percent. I feel like when I smoke, I can get out of my mind and see things from an outside perspective. Mind you, I never had the ability to do this beforehand. Ironically, alcohol is looked at as an illusive solution while actually making things a whole lot worse. Unfortunately it took all of my 20s to figure this out while simultaneously being totally against weed. Also, the forgetfulness from weed I think is my brain disregarding because when I am reminded of something I forgot, it's always irrelevant and I noticed there was no need to store that type of info in the first place 😅😂. Key is to get shit done then smoke
The worsened sleep is a good indicator of stress for me. When I'm more relaxed the effect is way less profound. So yeah I can smoke a spliff to do science on my mental health :p
Checks out that your other comments are for videos about anxiety
Now your here saying weed is a godsend
Maybe take a T break there Chuck irony is on the milk carton 😂
Totally tangential to the conversation but how tf do you check comments, like I can't find how to see even my own comments and I would like to@@jacknapier6668
I "microdose" cannabis daily and i feel its been very helpful for me especially as a double athlete who works 40 hours a week.
Glad they're finally doing viewer interviews instead of just big influencers
Word. I find the viewer interviews more exiting than the influencer ones.
Tbh dr k started off doing mainly viewer interviews and stuff, the influencer interviews came as a surprise to me when they started happening
I hate the influencer interviews. Why do i care about their problems. Real people are much more relatable.
@@vroomzoom4206 AoE healing concept. When you interview influencers and talk about their problems, you get both of HGs and their community to watch it = the information get spread around more.
@@vroomzoom4206 maybe because it humanizes them? Just because they are influencers doesn't mean everything they say is irrelevant. Try watching them sometimes. Especially ones like sweet Anita and such.
I'm a smoker of almost 21 years, started around 16; I'm 37. I was an alcoholic most of my adult life; 4 years sober this December. Also, late in life diagnosis of PTSD probably complex tbh, ADHD, and a few other disorders. Through the use of therapists, we were able to understand that my early on use was basically self medicating to regulate the ADHD and other disorders. My parents never believed my mental anguish therefore never wanted to take me to any psychologist or therapist. Weed really also slowed things down for me. My brain doesn't like to shut off, never has, which has always impacted my sleep then daily energy levels, motivation etc. I intended to quit smoking after getting sober from alcohol, however, I was never able to fully make the transition over to 100% sobriety from pot. I enjoy this sense of focus it gives me and it has always seemed to help transition that focus to other tasks. Recently though, it has been having the opposite effect. And again, has me considering quitting for good. That's when the back of my mind fear of having life with that focus, without the pot sets in. Which in turn creates anxiety which in turn makes me want to smoke. Am i addicted? Before sobriety from alcohol I would have said no. After being in recovery for so many years and seeing therapists, if you asked me if i was addicted to pot, I'd say, definitely yes.
You got a diagnosis of CPTSD from a professional? How? I thought it’s not in the DSM
This is me
you know a drug has you when you can't sleep.
Add ten years to that and you'll be me.
@@crystalizeplays9103 however it's official diagnosis in newest ICD-11
spent 10 years stoned 24/7.. wake up, bongs for breakfast, go to work, head home and rip a couple for lunch, back to work, go home at the end of the and smoke myself green. weighed about 2 bucks and had terrible anxiety. did that for about 30% of my life lol.
2 years off the shit now, and although quitting weed in itself didn't magically make me the most productive, confident and ambitious person in the world, i'm a lot happier in ways i used to think i never could be sober
you worked high on weed? wowzers
@@BearFruit90 pretty easy to do. I’m trying to quit right now but for years nobody even knew I smoked. I smoked so often that being high was my baseline. When I’m sober people think I’m high because I’m not acting like I normally do
@@js5467 yes I’m so happy I quit it felt like weed was taking over my life every thing I did I had to be high now I’m in control
Props to this guy for doing this interview. This is a conversation that most people would only feel comfortable having confidentially
"Its helping you internally do the work, but its not helping you do the work" is such an insightful and great point, that's exactly what it is -- For me i need it when i hate my job but it makes me bad at my job
Sometimes I miss weed. I’ve been sober for 3 years and it used to be the most relaxing thing ever and helped me where no other medication, therapist, nor doctor could. I slowly realized it was just hiding my problems out of view as they were stacking up and it wasn’t a really true solution. Eventually I started getting intense panic attacks from it and borderline psychosis and that’s when I finally stopped. I do miss the days of playing video games, watching movies and TV, listening to music, and eating while high. It really does make sensory perception richer that’s an accurate description. I used to feel like I was cradled by God or something and colors were brighter and I was so so so calm and relaxed. Nothing would ever beat eating an amazing meal and zoning out into a good movie or show. I would get so immersed and it was massive escapism. I also noticed that weed made me more social and was a great excuse to connect to people here in Southern California where pretty much that’s all we would do lol. Smoking in the mountains and meditating in nature is a whole vibe. I would have deep meditation sessions in my bed too and I opened my eyes to so much. I also made my best music in the days when I was stoned because I would think more outside the box. I think reliance on weed is the worst aspect of it for most people and it should be something you only do a few times a year at most to enhance and experience. Never use it as a crutch for mental health. This is all just my input and experience.
"Its like you're too busy fighting a losing battle to just run away"... I love how Dr. K helps people come to these conclusions on their own. The answers are inside yourself, Dr. K just puts a spot light on it for you.
This is the basis of Motivational Interviewing and person-centered therapy :). A lot of use this is in the field… well hopefully…
it doesnt stall me at all, it enhances my life in so many ways
I started smoking cigarettes since my teenage. Spent my whole life fighting Cigarettes addiction. Also suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Not until a friend recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms.
Can you help me with the reliable source 🙏. I'm 56 and have suffered for years with addiction, anxiety and severe ptsd, I got my panic attacks under control myself years ago and they have come back with a vengeance, I'm constantly trying to take full breaths but can't get the full satisfying breath out, it's absolutely crippling me, i live in Germany. I don't know much about these mushrooms. Really need a reliable source!! Can't wait to get them.
YES very sure of Dr.alishrooms. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.
My first experience with shrooms cleared my mind and I started seeing the world on a whole new level
Does he make delivery across the country? Am here in Belgium 🇧🇪
just reminding you all that shrooms are not for everyone.
It is a toxin, and we all respond differently to it.
If you dont use it to try to erase all feelings and regulate dosage, it greatly increases lots of physical abilities, and it can stimulate reflective meditation. It helps you realize all kinds of things you didnt perceive before. Its always an awareness scale
I finally after 12 years of smoking weed finally finally quit, I used to spend about 150 a week on weed... just to laugh and do nothing.. looking back at it now I've realized I've spent so so much money, I could have had a house by now 😢 I'm just glad I finally found the strength to stop. I'm finally getting up and cleaning my apartment first thing in the morning, getting into positive routines, taking my dogs for walks multiple times a day. Just living. It's been so long.. I've also noticed my focus is so much stronger, and another noted side affects I'm dreaming the craziest dreams every night. When I was smoking it got to the point we're I wouldn't dream but maybe once a year.
Honestly, I have experienced enormous depression in my life, and without marijuana I was pretty much frozen, not feeling like anything was worth it. When I started using marijuana I became much more likely to think that it was possible for me to accomplish things. I started cleaning my home, became motivated to do things I'd wanted to do for years, and I started doing them. I even went out and scheduled appointments to talk to mental health professionals(which I had always wanted to, but never had done). And I started doing things like home repairs that I had always been hesitant to tackle because they had seemed too big to handle. I am not sure that the effects on everyone's motivation are as uniform as they were described in this video. I don't use it every day(closer to once a week), and I probably COULDN'T use it every day, because I'd be uncomfortable doing so, but I've felt that it's had a majorly positive affect on my life.
For me it was the opposite. Weed is very bad for my mental health, anxiety and paranoia. Doing very good since not smoking anymore.
@@mandemkat6452same here man. I started spiraling hard into a deep depression. It really does seem like it effects people differently
@@codyhodges1590 It's interesting. I use it to self-medicate anxiety occasionally, but I do it very deliberately since I know I could then become psychologically dependent on it, even after I improve my social skills or, via exposure, my social anxiety. I am also aware that at least for me it has a trade-off, which is that it can temporarily make me less motivated or can temporarily tank my ability to concentrate. I think drug use, especially use that involves psychoactive drugs, is very complex and I could never agree with people who simplify it.
Same, it was actually the thing that inspired me to go back into treatment. It was the first time in a long time that I realized that life could feel so much better than I'd been feeling. I would get a long night's sleep, wake up, and then tackle chores that I'd been putting off for months. Just knowing that it was possible to feel better was enough to motivate me. And to be clear, this was after trying multiple different antidepressants which were ineffective.
Same here. I've been using it selectively for a few years now. Once or twice a week or sometimes never during any given week. It pulls me out of funks and gives me the same type of motivation to fix my house or journal or learn or deep meditations or whatever. And the effects last for a few days so I don't need to use it every day. I have caught myself using a little too much and luckily I'm able to pull myself back without spiraling. To me, I think there is a "strategic" way to use it. But there is also a part of me that is concerned that continuing on this path will lead to destruction, but I think that comes from cultural conditioning about old thoughts on weed. But maybe I'm naive. I just know that it helps me sometimes, and I don't see it as being a problem in my life since I'm still going after goals and getting stuff done. I do wish the research would hurry up and catch up so that we have more information on the substance to know everything we can know about its use in someone's life. I probably won't stay on it forever, but it's changed my life for the better in many ways.
As someone who use to be suicidal, Cannabis has really changed my view of life and has definitely helped me enjoy the present moments more. However I do think it can make people more complacent, hold you back from achieving goals and becoming the best version of yourself.
One of the best videos I've watched this year.
Thank you so much for having a conversation about the middle ground of addiction. Dr. K nailed it when he said that we mostly only pay attention to the addict level but so many of us, myself inlcuded, are in the middle and don't really understand the fully impacts.
I can really relate to this whole conversation, having smoked almost daily since i was 19 (I'm 31 now.) There have been many days where i've been stoned and can sense that i'm wasting/avoiding opportunities because of it, and the cumulation of those days really takes a toll on my sense of self sometimes. Its an addiction for sure, in that it takes some of the pain of stagnating away by giving me an excuse for it (im too high for xyz) instead of really confronting the root of the stagnation
I'm listening this as a 25+ years old who's been smoking since 18. It does spiral down fast, especially when you have predispositions to addiction. I have a weird problem where I want to hide my usage from people I know, but it realistically helps me digest tasks more easily. I have had more than one high level jobs that I did not have the education for, without lying on my resume, just because I see the world in a way that most people do not and being high helps me articulate my views. But that is not healthy at all, and if anyone is considering trying weed: don't. If you're trying to self-medicate like I did when I started (and probably still do as I read my first sentences), you're going to go down a hell hole. Use weed as a recreative thing if you want, but don't use it because you're hurting or feeling misunderstood. It will absolutely evolve into a habit/addiction. Take care, everyone. Especially young people only starting their adult life. Cultivate your life like a very frail garden that you wanna see become fruitful.
eloquent af my good man
only thing harder than building good habits is breaking bad ones, and when you’re getting sober you’re doing both at the same time.
"Don't use it because you're hurting or feeling misunderstood". Amen!
I would propose a minor change: "don't use it IF you're hurting or feel misunderstood".
If you do you are playing a very risky game. You might be fine, sure, but you may find it can become a crutch much quicker than expected. Once it's become a crutch it can start to harm your ability to handle issues in a variety of ways that can snowball before you even notice it.
Same goes for any potentially addictive activity. Marijuana, alcohol, videogames, TV... Hell, even exercise can become psychologically unhealthy, despite it's physical benefits.
@@seanocd You're right. Those are coping mechanism we develop to hide the pain we feel, so it can become unhealthy. That makes those coping mechanism an obstacle to our psychological growth rather than a way to help us get through a hard times. It makes it last longer.
@@podchicane571 Thanks man, you saved me today. It was like "I feel really down this evening, let me smoke a bit just to heal myself and then I'll be fine and I won't smoke tomorrow". And it feels very fucking real even though when I read it it looks so classic of addiction.
Chronic smoker for over 11 years. I've been clean for about 3 weeks. Very difficult. My lungs almost feel worse from detoxing. I'm staying strong tho. Thanks for posting this convo!
Stay strong, i believe in you!
4 years for me and we got this bro
Your lungs feel worse because its cleaning out. You'll feel much better after a few weeks.
we are fighting the same battle my friend, do it for yourself!!
Kudos to all the champions!
30++ female here. Been addicted to weed for about 10 years, daily smoking, several j's a day. I grew up in a home where any negative emotions (sometimes even the positive ones) were not allowed and us kids were shamed and punished for them. I have realized I have some level of alexithymia, but it is hard to say how bad it is as I cannot really feel what I "should" feel. I have ADD (diagnosed in my late twenties) and self-diagnosed autism.
This video is very helpful. This guy has his whole life ahead of him. And I do have a lot of mine to live, too. This time I feel I really am going to kick the "all-day everyday" habit. I am mentally equipped to do so. Long-lived habits die very hard, though. Massive thanks for this conversation to both of you! (+ subbed to your channel - great content, sir!)
I come back to this sometimes. This guy is so self-aware. That's exactly how I thought and acted as I started to get into doing it everyday in high school, but I wouldn't have described it to people like this until more recently looking back
The lemon analogy was great. For me, I wanted to quit smoking weed, but couldn't find the will. It took years of my soul wanting to change... And I felt so torn over what I was continually doing,, but would not stop, it was what I did for 15 years. Such a habitual pattern of smoking as an escape.. it took me a whole year of panic attacks and borderline psychosis, I finally, FINALLY knew weed was not feeling good anymore. It was so scary sometimes, sometimes I would cry and pray that if I could just come down and have my mind back I would never do it again.. took so many times before I hit my breaking point. I am finally weed free and I feel so safe in my mind and my self. Learning to embrace and be okay with boredom and emptyness still, but that is life. It took smoking weed turning into such a terrible experience that I could finally decide to let it go. So when he said the lemon thing, I had to imagine my lemon was not only dried up... but covered in mold and literally toxic to my system. It was fucking up my brain every time I used it, like a poison. 😂 I can laugh now but good luck to anyone who desires to let that go out of their life, just know keep trying, every time you attempt to quit you are one step closer. Even if you break your vow, one day you will finally see it for what it is. 🍋 You will get there, every step, even each relapse adds up to show you the truth. Nothing is wasted.
I’m really glad and that you freed yourself. I am in the midst of this situation for sure and it really helped to read that you knew you wanted to quit but couldn’t find the will… i’m sorry u went through that but I also am experiencing this so you give me hope. I actually was able to quit two years ago for 10 months straight only because I landed in the hospital for two weeks and was unable to smoke at all and when I got out I just wanted to stay sober. But I relapsed one day after playing with the idea for awhile and now almost two years have gone by in a flash and i’m so fucking ashamed of myself and i’m going nowhere in life
I’m sorry this comment is all over the place. I will do better but this is my truth. Thanks for sharing yours, bless ❤
sigh.... not looking forward to the nightly flash sweats....
I think I had just gone through the same thing you were talking about. A few months ago and I had quit because of it. I didn’t hallucinate or have delusions but I felt extreme delirium, anxiety, panic attacks, difficulty with sleeping. Was this psychosis or just extreme anxiety? I felt depersonalized too for a bit. This was still happening to me even when I was sober.
thank you for this message ❤
At 8:17 Dr K remarks that "it doesnt improve performance but it makes things easier to do internally". This is perhaps the best description of what marijuana does for me, an ADHD patient. It helped remarkably for focusing on school work and spiritual activities (yoga/meditation). BUT it does drop off after awhile, and now anhedonia is a real concern. Psychological safety net, is a good way to describe it. I get brutal boredom and my attention span is non-existant if I go too long without using it now. Also, "Too busy fighting a losing battle" comment... SO TRUE
I don't comment much but I feel Dr. K is ACTUALLY talking to me & this dude is describing all of my problems.
Me too. Same
exactly me. this video made me address a lot of problems I was ignoring.
at 19, this is making me start to realize alot of things ive pushed to the back of my mind, maybe its a sign but I really don't know what I could do
100% same
Doc really thought this trough before hand, you can tell he knows what he is talking about.
I tried weed for the first time in Prague on a holiday, 2 months later I got into weed at home and kept going almost daily for 6-8 months.
Then I tried shrooms once and decided to quit weed because I saw that it was making my life worse, not better like it did at the start.
I've relapsed a couple times for short periods but that's acceptable to me. Shrooms finally brought some colour into my life and snapped me out of the deep depression and pessimism loop I was stuck in my entire life.
I'm not mentally healthy, but it's an improvement.
Thanks for you comment it was very insightful. I believe moderation is key like with anything in life. I wouldn’t take more advil than I need at a time ya know? That being said it’s good to be aware of when it’s not serving you anymore.
I was just curious how you went about using shrooms? Did you microcdose or take them traditionally?
@@-caleb-7201 Traditionally, I started doing shrooms semi-regularly 2-8 weeks apart and they're some of the best experiences I've ever had. Eating them gives me nausea and they taste like ass so I make tea from them.
I seem to be very prone to addiction so shrooms work very well for me, I can't just be high constantly like with weed and the experiences are so draining I wouldn't even want to. I do need to take long breaks from them sometimes when they start taking their toll on me. Shrooms are self regulating, when I've had enough they lose their magic and they just fade out from my life until I feel the want to trip again.
Can't moderate when you're an addict! It's just not that simple. @@-caleb-7201
Thank both of you so much for this conversation. I used weed in the exact same steps that this young man did. Fun with friends and my ex early on but after the seven year relationship ended found myself using everyday to push out the negative emotions I was feeling. I went to therapy but wasn’t as honest as Rogan was and maybe through a mix of not the right therapist and dishonesty didn’t get the help I needed. I noticed personal growth during a three week tolerance break I took during my year and a half of heavy usage but had a bachelor party at the end of the three week mark and went right back to using again. I’ve since lost a very good job opportunity due to failing a drug test (not career ending thankfully) but have since stepped away from weed all together in order to get clean. This conversation really helped me understand what was going on in my brain during that time in my life and why I didn’t grow like I could have in that period. I don’t think I will ever completely give marijuana up because I do really enjoy smoking in moderation and believe it to be considerably healthier than alcohol, but a lot of people paint it as a non-addictive health food while ignoring the potential damage it can cause. Thank you both again for the therapy session I needed as a young man but never really got.
Thank you both for this, Ive been using marijuana daily for 3+ years. You've described my experience and feelings almost exactly, its like you say theres no "magic" in it anymore and I can see its detriment on my life and the people in it. Ive more recently started staying sober when I game with my friends or when Im cooking or cleaning and Ive found a different kind of magic in that. Im more grounded and I actually have to grapple with reality rather than retreat into my mind. I wish anyone else whos having trouble slowing or stopping the best and know that it get easier, it gets better and others will notice, so will you.❤
When youre cooking and cleaning you grapple better with reality? Whats that mean dude
@@-whackd when I'm not high I'm more present with the world around me rather than chasing thoughts in my head. I get stuff done faster and I do stuff the right way rather than being lazy or just giving up on the task.
How is it a detriment to your life?
@@carloscontreras3633when I get high w/ marijuana I tend to be more lazy, I don't want to socialize, and I eat tons of junk food. This ends up affecting my overall health and social status, a lot of people don't interact with me because of how I am when I'm high. Add to the fact I get high everyday when I'm bored or have nothing to do and it leads to family and friends just not talking to you. I wish I'd been more conscious of how it affected my habits and behaviors because I'm definitely paying for it now.
I hope so I been trying so hard and it’s like something in my mind is like go smoke you don’t have nothing to do no one to talk to just smoke and feel good while the other voice is yelling at me like no don’t smoke look at your life look at your past look at all the problems weed has cause….. and I still do it. How did you avoid that voice that’s telling you to smoke.
I have been a cannabis smoker for over 5+ years and adding a t-break (tolerance) is beneficial when long term usage. Everyone’s experience is going to be different, however, even tho weed IS the safer option compared to other vices, IT IS ADDICTING. I see influencers say it isn’t addicting but I can tell you it does. It’s not bad or good, just is. I don’t plan on fully quitting because it DOES HELP ME.
Its not addictive in the way that word is usually used with drugs, where you are chemically addicted to it. But it can definitely be addicting to the right person.
It's psychologically addicting, but you know what else can be psychologically addicting? Literally everything else.
@@echoawoo7195 right, a common example of for (non-chemical)habit forming is lip balm usage.
we got some people coping here, let’s make it straight, it is addictive and nothing else, and everything that have “but…”’s is hard cope.
@@milkmahtitty No, we have people here without a clear understanding of what addiction even is, let alone the forms it takes, or what substances can trigger it. Hint: Go look up pica. Or pagophagia. Or Urophagia.
Willfully stupid people really need to stop talking now.
I can honestly say I started smoking weed when I was 14 during the spring time . I felt like it was a fun thing to do but was negatively affecting me. So I stopped and didn’t start back till I was about 21 to 22 years old . Haven’t stopped since then and I’m almost 28 now . I can say as I grow older the more it benefits me from a mental health standpoint and even just my overall health. It really helped me become so much more socially and pushes me to actually go try and do things . That’s just my experience with it and I know it varies with different people.
Can I ask how often you use?
Psychedelics are just an exceptional mental health breakthrough. It's quite fascinating how effective they are against depression and anxiety. Saved my life.
Does anyone know any good source to get them? I put so much on my plate and it definitely affects my stress and anxiety levels, would love to give shrooms a try.
Yes, dr.sporesss
Is he on instagram?
Dr.sporesss is the best, he's been my go to for anything psychedelics.
Yes he is. dr.sporesss
Currently in a Homeless situation (I have a car and job, so my situation could be way worse). I smoked every day, it does lose its magic. My mom was an addict to much harsher stuff, and she explained it to me this way. Most people end up chasing that First High without realizing it. Ive controlled my usage, found purpose in my hobbies that I used to generally enjoy andfocus on that improved my life. I could work high, I could work out high, i could meet my girls parents high, almost anything. I realized while homeless and having limited access to the greens that it became who I was one day without realizing it. The main problem greens has brought me was the impairment i had in my budgeting.
same here its started to create a problem in my finances, granted im only 18 so i just spent my free cash on za lol but i could be doing way better and this is a wake up call
@@maximusandr you'll find that greens isn't "addicting" in the usual sense. You could pay all your bills, grocery, adlnd the things you know you need, and if you don't have enough for the mj you'll be fine waiting for next paycheck, it's not debilitating in that sense (yes you'll find yourself hella bored for no reason). The thing is, you'll spend money on it knowing you truly want other things to fulfill you instead. I want to upgrade my PC, but I need greens first. I want some nice new shoes, oh I'm low on greens though. A concerts coming around, but I won't have enough greens by then, so I might as well not go and buy more instead. It is it's own kind of curse.
Sending Energy for your situation to get better bro ❤
Trust me bro, minor setback for an even greater comeback
Thanks to everyone who would come here to send support. "Pray not for an easy life, Pray for the strength to endure a difficult one" Bruce Lee/J.F.Kennedy
My situation is one full of learning. I too Pray everyone chooses to find that strength they didn't know they had.
I’ve struggled with weed addiction for years and I’m finally about 3.5 months sober. It took years for me to figure out the exact same things Dr. K said in this video. Wow.
I am curious if you have seen an improvement in your life and goals without marijuana?
@@Shalin_Deniece yes. I’m way less anxious. I feel more energetic. My mood is more consistent. I’m coping with bad things much more level headed without needing the crutch of weed
I'm sad to say it took me several years to realize that weed was causing my anxiety and depressive feelings, not making them better. It's weird because weed makes you feel like it helps you, but it really just creates those feelings in the first place.
@@1dingerr Its because we dont have real and healthy coping mechanisms.
Instead of dealing with trauma we get high and forget. Leaving the dirty dishes in the dishwasher and not even turning the rinse cycle on.
It DOES help, in that moment. Its however many hours later when you remember your issues that the cycle of decline begins and you're still getting high just to ease the pain.
Thanks, Dr. K. I'm 54 and used weed heavily for 38 years. It was my main emotional coping mechanism for my CPTSD. This is my 35th day clean. I stopped on the day I started getting ketamine treatments, also at the suggestion of Dr. K's guide (which helped me realize that even though I'm less depressed than I used to be, I still totally qualify for an MDD diagnosis.). I've been wanting to make this change for a long time, and have been watching HG for a year now before doing so. It took a while to be ready. I'm grateful for this resource!
mmm ketamine
Take a bump of K instead of a toke of weed there ya go
@@-whackd Definitely not trying to abuse this therapeutic substance. When used daily, it doesn't work.
Excited to hear about the positive changes you're making in your life! Keep it up. 🌿
@@katattack907 Thanks!! And I love your username :) Hope you are well.
I’ve been going through the exact same thing and I honestly really needed this video. Marijuana used to be something that truly helped me with feeling joy during times I didn’t think I had any joy left, but now I can’t help but view it as a crutch that keeps me from being motivated to pursue goals that will be hard to achieve. I think I’m finally deciding to quit/take a long break so that I can start to “feel” again and hopefully I’ll be able to focus more on my passions instead of getting high so I don’t feel so bad about putting them off.
I think it's very brave the way he speaks openly and so freely about his cannabis usage and the effects it has, both positive and negative.
I know it's legal many places now, but where I live there is a massive stigma surrounding it. I did get it legally some years back when I lived in a different country, and just mentioning that I used to have that prescription to anyone in an official capacity puts me under the microscope.
I told my psychologist, who I thought couldn't tell anyone, and they put me on a bi-weekly piss test for almost a year because they didn't believe that I was sober.
Seriously broke my trust to the healthcare system, and now I find it incredibly hard to be open and honest with any type of doctor.
Had the same. Had a therapist tell me that the only thing she could tell my parents about was violent crime, so I told her that I'd smoked weed with some friends. She then went on to tell my parents that, and I stopped therapy completely. Ten years later, maybe I'd have stopped smoking earlier if I had someone I could talk to about it.
I’m so glad this video was made. I struggle EXACTLY the way he struggles. It was fun to start, then it became an every other day thing, then it became daily. I am currently on my 2nd week, no weed, no juice, gym every day, & eating properly and healthy; and this just kinda confirms for me that I’ve finally stepped out of that losing battle, and onto my way to better things. I hope everyone is taking care of themselves, thank you for the amazing work as always Dr. K.
It’s easy to be stuck in that cycle. Even I admit to it, but what help me the most is staying busy.
How did you tell yourself don’t do it again
Good stuff man keep it up you got this man!!
@@jessewright8930 Hey, I’m not sure if my answer will help much but this is how it went for me. I was spending minimum 250 a week on weed at my lowest, and I was high almost all day every day. I knew for a while it was not good but never had motivation to stop or do anything better for myself. But eventually after enough thought I visualized it in the sense that if I was willing to spend that much per week on weed, why not cut my costs, save money, and do something better for myself in the process? Hopefully this helps
@@jessewright8930 Thank you very much
First video that actually convinced me… showing a good reason to quit. I’m a successful tech professional, and a full time artist as well. I work on a lot of things, mildly high (always just one small hit). I never knew how to feel about if I should quit or if it’s detrimental to my growth
But really it’s just to put away my emotions and get the work done. I think I need to start living life’s experience, without substance, even just minor use. Thanks dr K
Did u stop ?
@@Alex-Palermo I did bro . Life isn’t much different but it’s worth for sure 👍
Fortunately, it's not really chemically addictive in the way alcohol is. But it is easily behaviorally addictive. I am strict with myself about how and when I use it. For me it's strictly medicine but I'm in my 50s now. It's much easier to use it appropriately than it would have been if I had been using in my 20s. I can say for certain I would have had real trouble only using for health in my 20s.
I like your explanation of this. Behaviorally addictive because when life gets hard people turn to it. I don’t smoke and use a small amount of edible that is half cbd, but only after a long week at work and to help me sleep better and reset for the weekend or if I’m having a very bad period and emotional swings and sweats. I use it at most a few times a month. I have coaching and was in therapy. Sometimes it just helps to have that reset but yeah I use it as medication essentially to help me relax and sleep. I don’t want to be stoned all the time and for me I don’t get why people want to be in that’s state all the time. I just use it as a tool to help me get through bumps in the road.
I also didn’t start using it until I was 25 or so. I never saw the appeal until my spouse had a traumatic brain injury and uses gummies to cope with stuff on and off. It’s like I got him back after that and he didn’t want to be addicted to the opiates they put him on. He had a bad depression spell for a while after but besides making changes and using that which he uses more than me has helped him. It also helps him sleep too and just gives him a better quality of life.
Wrong. There is loads of research. It is chemically addictive for potentially about 30% of the population. It changes the way your brain works and creates cravings and physical pain for many. If you suffer addiction, you have anxiety attacks in withdrawal. You also struggle with mood regulation on and off it when addicted. Off you may suffer rage. On you may struggle with paranoia. Addicted people will smoke to the point they don’t eat right, manage finances, manage relationships, etc. Statistically people who use regularly when the brain is growing (25 years or less) are statistically more likely to become addicted down the line.
I feel like this is a great plan to responsibly use it. I think I might have to use it when I hit your age as well, due to the back pain which I'm certain will get even worse (always had a bad back)
Newer studies coming out are starting to find that THC actually is chemically addicted. Folks are even experiencing withdrawals when stopping. A lot of what we've been told the last 20 years seems to have been misconceptions, or at least exaggerated benefit
@@ppnotsmol8538yeah I quit cold turkey and the first week I literally could barely stand, everything was drained from my body and sometimes I would just drop to the floor exhausted thinking only the weed could fix it. I was lied to for so long and told myself that I wasn't physically addicted it's awful
This was dope (excuse the pun). Cool intersection of spirituality and science/psychology in the analysis and very relatable. Good stuff boys, thanks for being vulnerable so we can all learn!
I love the honesty of this guy and his description of his experience. As a person who didn't know they had anxiety and ADHD until much later in my life. I have a unique relationship with cannabis that I'm always analyzing and trying to learn just how I feel about it.
Great podcast, 4 weeks sober from alcohol and weed here. I feel like you guys touched a lot of good bases as to the core issue with substance abuse while remaining in a very respectful and positive light
A+ episode
bro same for 2 weeks
it feels great 👍
@@KbIPbIL0 right on dude keep at, granted I’m only at 4 weeks but in my experience so far it only gets easier and more stable every single day
Best of luck to you and me and anyone else working towards sobriety!
Congrats both of you, great work so far
proud of u both
Thank you for your positivity and encouragement Dr. K! I'm no longer a stoner, and good lord can I now recognize how much it was hurting me -- it's awesome to see you helping someone else realize the same thing. You're doing amazing things for people out here man. Thanks!
You deserve a like just for your username. I actually laughed out loud when I read it! 😂
Also, I’ve never met a pothead that was really going places in life. Most stoners I know are just mindlessly droning through life with no aspirations or goals, working in Amazon warehouses and delivering Uber eats. I know a few smokers who started weed in their mid 20s and are relatively accomplished in their careers, but they’ve just stalled in progress and are content with staying in middle management for all eternity.
This is so cool because it has one to one talk with the therapist. This becomes so much relatable for someone who’s suffering and has decided to quit weed. I hope more and more such videos are up there! Keep it up!
Facts bro this cool af
I love this guy, unbelievable how well he’s able to describe this situation
fast forwarding through a day is the best description of being high I've ever heard.
Having quit weed a while back, I can definitely say that most people who use it daily will turn a blind eye to the harms that daily usage of this drug may cause. Some might defend it that it's not even a drug, but just a plant, while at the same time, calling coffee (a roasted seed) and sugar (a food) drugs. If that's the case, then morphine isn't a drug either, since poppies are just flowers, right?
Weed is a gateway drug for copium
Totally agree. Potheads (I know because I used to be one and all my friends were as well) will even go so far as to say it’s good for you, while completely ignoring that they are fat, lazy, and have 0 ambition in life. Happy to just coast along.
thats not sound logic as weed is simply grown, if you throw it in the ground it grows. 90% of every other "drug" has to be synthesized somehow, Morphine isnt just grown, its processed INTO a chemical called morphine.
@@ambi3nttech I'm not sure how I feel about this line of thinking. Your generalizing very hard and I just cant help but point out the bitterness in your observations.
Like do you resent these folks for just "coasting along"? I mean who gives a shit if someone is enjoying their life? Not hurting another human being or impeding their right to a happy life.
Why does every single individual need to have this super star ambition? Are folks not allowed to be content with the life they are living?
Im well aware fat lazy people exist but i just take umbrage with the notion that every single person that doesn't have some higher ambition in their life is somehow lesser or idk you certainly hold some animosity towards them.
im not fat..@@ambi3nttech
One of my favorite descriptions of addiction is “something that narrows the things you draw happiness from”
Thats a good one mate, I like it
Which doesnt convert tbf weed enhances things you like. The lemon !
Anything good in life is worth narrowing your life for
Use it as the spice of life =) just don’t let it become better than doing the things we needs to thrive and not just survive ❤
Imagine you like something so much nothing else makes you happy in comparison. Then imagine it was a substance instead of being healthy, being social, and things your body wants to be able to regulate/motivate itself from within.
It’s more of a chemical/dopamine thing for some people. If it isn’t the most important thing in your life it most likely isn’t a problem. There’s just some people that use it to avoid healing/growth.
If you like it too much it releases more dopamine than it should and can cause your brain to “motivate/trigger” you to seek it. For some people it becomes the equivalent of masturbating for their brain.
“Neurons that fire together, wire together” and the brain is ultimately seeking dopamine so you’re rewiring your brain and telling it how to get dopamine through how we deal with adversity.
If you smoke every time you’re upset your brain can even go “this body gives me dopamine levels that dwarf sex dopamine levels whenever he is stressed/upset, so I’m gonna release bad feelings until I get the fastest path to dopamine”
Same with stress eating, stress smoking, or even sex addiction.
Dopamine is supposed to be from the pursuit of something.
Purpose is what you pursue.
Nothing wrong with using something it improve or enhance your life =) just don’t choose harmful things and don’t let it take away from all the other experiences/growth we could potentially have =)
“PEACE AND LOVE” -Vash The Stampede
As a 36 year old guy who has been addicted to weed with daily smoking for 15+ years with very small breaks from it here and there, Dr K hit the nail on the head with moving negative emotions to the background. Doing this so much has caused me to be almost incapable of living with my own thoughts. I will smoke to avoid my own thoughts, and then hate myself when my mind is just spinning its wheels because its high. Ive tried quitting so many times and failed. Its got to the point where i just consider myself a weed smoker and just accept it...until the next day when i tell myself i need to quit again. Its been an ongoing, never ending battle and i have no idea how it will end. I dont even know what winning the battle even is. Is it quitting for ever? Or making actual peace with smoking. Feels like ill never know.
I bet a conversation with someone who has gone as deep into it as you have and pulled theirselves out would help. You have the strength. There are methods. There are ways. Your mind will do a good job convincing you you’re not capable and it’s not worth the effort of stopping. But those thoughts are temporary. And those thoughts aren’t you.
Practice moderation man and remember that variety is the spice of life but be careful
What helped me out was finding a physical hobby that I was so invested in that I would rather wake up at 6am to go do it before school/work, and want to wake up so badly to do it again in the morning that I stopped using any substances that would impair me feeling 100% fresh in the morning, in my case skateboarding but could work with tennis/golf/ any new hobby that takes time investment to learn. Basically gotta get that dopamine fix from something else
8 years for me, but I’m right there with you. It’s gotten to a point I don’t know what’s the weed and what’s me. Is there even a difference anymore? Probably not
Quit cold turkey. The withdrawal sucks (anxiety, insomnia, sweats) but once you get it over with, it's done.
If you can just whiteknuckle it for a couple days, the urge to smoke should lessen considerably
5 minutes in and Dr.K has hit the nail on the head!
It took my years to realize I was addicted to weed because it helped me ignore my trauma and "be more present." But I was really spending my time running from the past, not enjoying the now
Neurodivergent, cptsd, back injury, I am a successful independent contractor, artist, clean, organized, not depressed, never bored. Weed helped me do my taxes last week. I never tried any drug for anxiety other than weed. Never drink. I believe Im good
reading the first the first two things shows me that u arent good.
As a woman I feel like I can't express my emotions either. Every time I have I've been shut down or it hasn't worked. I feel I have deeper issues than the average and nobody I've talked to including therapists have not been helpful so I've learned to stop reaching out. It's hard for women too and this was a very helpful video!
Keep on doing your own research, nobody knows what you're feeling and going through other than you
Yeah, I'm a woman and I feel the same. My parents would roll their eyes or laugh if I had emotions, so I never learned how to express them.
Same here... no oft understands and basically tells me to stop. So I just don't be anymore.
Not a woman but i've felt similarly to you for some time. I started going to a psychoanalyst and it's been tough but I think it's helping. The main thing that kind of therapy does is make YOU understand your problems. If you've already tried that kind of therapy maybe try a different therapist. Just keep in mind that it takes time and work to be able to express yourself and learn your truths.
Im sorry you go through that. But you are the exception. Men on a societal/ global level are beaten down if they dont show anything other than stoicism past the age of 13. "would you still date a man if he cried in front of you" is still a debated topic.
Im not trying to downplay your experience. But the reality that almost every man faces is just something you arent gonna understand, both because you arent one AND because we are awful at articulating it because all of us havent been taught how to discuss even the most basic of emotions. I got to 24 before I started being comfortable with the fact that I get sad sometimes, spent my whole life before it hating myself for it.
Yo…. I been smoking cannabis for decades upon decades, since I was a child. At 47 years old I’m having the strangest relationship with weed these days. The lemon, the metric of plus and negative net results, this whole video was so good. I’ll be quitting today for the next while just to see what happens. I’m ready and thank you so much for putting this out there I actually needed it.
Hope it went well!
Wow, I knew all this stuff intuitively, but I’ve never heard anyone explain it so pointedly. Thanks Dr K.
I’ve been a functioning addict for about 20 years, and sober for a year. It’s been a really good year.
I got really tired of squeezing one drop out of the same lemon, and I’m starting to clean the cobwebs out of my life, making way for the bigger lemons.
As someone who found weed after 30, its opened me up to so much more. I think had i found it in my aimless teens id have spiraled to nothing too. Its awesome to be able to understand this on a deeper level.
this guy is saving this kid before he does something irreparable to his life. bless him
As someone who had to stop smoking as much due to CHS it really opened my eyes to how overpowering it was and how it was taking over my life.
I'm now able to use it exclusively socially on weekends out of preference but I am so happy to see these candid and proper discussions on the subject.
Weed addiction/dependency is something that needs to be more seriously talked about because it is a real dependency but not enough discussion and knowledge is being talked about around it.
It's great, but needs to be used responsibly.
I’m in this dude’s boat as well. Trying to fight the boredom and push on without getting high, because it is effecting my ability to get meaningful life experiences and meet goals. Thank you for this conversation.
just do some shrooms it will fix your problem
@@AlrDavid I have multiple times, and I can’t say that did the trick.
Understand that you are not weak but have weaknesses, and that’s okay. You are strong. Thank you for this interview, I needed to hear it
This video came at the perfect time. I'm almost the exact same case here and was going through a similar cycle of usage. I had an emotional outburst that was followed by this video and I have already removed all marijuana from my house. Very grateful to this guy and Dr. K!
I like how you’re being careful not to step on your patients ego your careful wording combined with a powerful punchline (if I may call it this way) makes him really think about the negative consequences of using and notice how many benefits he would gain if he stopped… by the way he seems to be talking about me when he talks about himself except I’m a bit further into addiction than him. But this talk really makes me think
I started trying weed just about a year and a half ago, maybe around 2 years.
A few months ago, I got a vape, and was high every night for about like....3 or 4 weeks. It felt great...but...also...started feeling tired of it. I also began to notice quite a significant issue with memory. I wasn't really retaining conversations I'd had with people, even though I had those conversations when I wasn't high.
So... I stopped. I didn't have any weed for two months.
Got some edibles, was high for about a week.
Now I'm not doing it again.
So moving forward, I think I'll only do it on special occasions, like my tobacco use. Only on my birthdays, Christmas, etc.
Fortunately, i've had no problem stopping it's use.
Yeah it's fun at parties and such but after a point I had to realize that it really wasn't doing me any favors in daily life
@@maxgoldstein7202 Yeah! Exactly! I'm just glad I never developed an addiction of any kind to it. Would have been a lot harder to put down if I couldn't just cold turkey or no problem.
so you've done everything except smoke the beautiful flower? its the best way to smoke . its not scary when you fully understand what it is you're smoking. Similar to drinking, I i just handed you a shot of an anonymous liquid you'd be scared. But if i told you exactly what liquor it was, when & where it was manufactured, you'd feel a lot safer. This is how weed is and should be handled.
@@justindaniels411 No, I've smoked it also.
Best way to do it dont go the daily route, im addicted and smoke everyday for 7+ years
That whole graphic was quite incredible and eye-opening. Really good break-down, especially since I'm a numbers guy - that "1" really hit hard.
The guest was also great - I wouldn't have explained my weed experiences and thoughts nearly as well. He mentioned he was worried about the negative outcome of reaching out for help and whatnot - honestly I think much more highly of him now than at first glance.
Mental health is practically the core of one's life. We shouldn't feel ashamed for trying to save ourselves.
I've been working on the habit strobgly this year. I was a pretty regular "stoner" for over 10 years. By that I mean daily. I wasn't "ready" to quit until I saw it ruin a beautiful relationship while I headed into burnout with my business. I'm a little over a week with smoking again and I really love this conversation. When you said "I believe it is stunting your growth"........ just YES. That is what I needed to hear and what I've known for years as I've continued and struggled with the idea of quitting. Thank you, Dr. K. I think I'm finally ready to move forward with my life. Wish me luck! ❤
How did it ruin a beautiful relationship?
Two things have helped me enjoy my pot while also not putting myself in a bad spot: when it stops doing what you want, abstain for a while. Also, mindfulness meditation has helped me. I realized that when you have thoughts like that, your response is the stressful part, not the thoughts themselves. Meditation kind of helps you come to that realization, or at least, it did for me.
I want to thank you Dr K for taking so much time to go over so many subjects. Helps me a lot through my mental states to understand them and disregard the waves of influencers online that give misleading insight.
Been sober for almost 3 years, been going to gym to get back in shape and try to live healthier. The negative emotions are still there but it's true like you said Dr. K, I've made some positive changes in life now.
This kid is literally how I was when I was 19. Its like looking at my past self. Im no longer that stoner guy, but I can clearly understand what he's going through. I wish somone like Dr K would have been there in my life years ago to help me process these feelings.
And at 13:45 thats exactly how I felt. It wasnt addiction because I went months without it. But the idea of lighting a joint as if it would give me the answers for what to do next, because I was bored; made me continue to smoke it despite the paranoia and negative thoughts which weed gave me.
Also 24:48, amazing perspective of negative emotions. I thoroughly enjoyed this talk.
I am currently 19, watching this as I smoke nightly and the whole stunting progress is really hitting me, ive felt basically dead for the past few months because I havent been trying to find a place to live, drive, hang out etc but instead falling back on something which was a cure for the past. Ive hit a point where I just feel stuck, just doing the same thing every day, every week.
Right same here I wish I talk to this guy at 19 as well
Been a background viewer of the channel for a bit, but recently I had been coming to some of the same conclusions that Dr K talks about on my own, and this kind of gave me a hope for next steps to end my dependency on it. Really appreciate the video 🙏🏻
This was very insightful. I have a huge empathy for Rogan. I’m 32 and still feel on one hand like I’m the same troubled kid, but he’s pushed to the back of the class and ostracized for his emotions leaving the adult misguided and hopping from one panic to the other.
I’m a daily cannabis user and it’s borderline addiction, but I still function in my daily life pretty well:
I have pets, a wife, a mortgage, paid off car etc.
-I have a full time day job that I consider off-limits for weed. I smoke before I play music at my gigs (dream side hustle) and that enhances the performances both internally and externally, but I think sometimes “Can I even do this without weed? Why should I have to?” I have since resolved to smoking with a purpose, but smoking in the idle times is what kills me because it actually will take away my ability to communicate rationally with my thoughts and with my wife if it doesn’t take away my motivation altogether (say like mowing the lawn). It’s a daily art of balancing sober and rested vs high and dopamine-depleted. Life really is like a lemon.
Thank you both of you. You are both incredibly amazing people, thank you for the content. I am currently going through the same thing at the age of 27. Its never too late to get help. I hope everyone struggling with any kind of substance abuse can find the help and support they need.
Cannabis really is great at “forcing” you into the present moment. And that time can be so valuable for introspection and reflection. But he’s right about losing the magic with a certain frequency of use. Experimentation has led me to a cadence of once every week or two for optimal experience and benefit.
It's dissociative, how is it helping staying in the moment. Do research
@@buntu8827 Have you ever even done weed or are you basing that off only research? You’re being so defensive and dismissive on someone’s own experiences. For the record I totally get what he means by weed making you feel in the moment. I don’t care what “the research” says and you shouldn’t take research as complete fact because research just find trends in data. It doesn’t directly say what an individual person experiences.
When you realize that the final segment of the video (Where Dr. K and Zack talk about weed dependency and how it stagnates life) has an INSANE amount of replays compared to the rest. That's where you realize, this shit is a common problem.
"You're too busy fighting a losing battle to run away"
Incredibly insightful, and a GREAT sentence for a metalcore song before the breakdown 😂..
Good luck fellow weed smokers. Let's climb this pit together. 🤘🏽✌🏽💜🖤
started smoking after a family loss, it was good at first, then i started smoking every day and weed started enhancing my negative thoughts and insecurities and i became a recluse. i also started smoking carts which would get me way higher which worsened the effects way more. i wasn’t remembering anything and started showing up stoned everywhere, stopped taking care of myself and it got so bad i temporarily got psychosis from smoking. i took a long tolerance break and switched back to indica bud, i also cut back my usage to once a week and switched to 1/4 papers. i also started smoking only after i’ve completed all my tasks, and made the intention of smoking to relax after a long day rather than just for boredom. i also got healthier munchies food (fruits) and started self improvement. i also started going out more and fighting against that negative self talk spiral that weed can put you in. now when i smoke it’s a lot better. weed is cool but you have to be healthy about how you use it
Yessir wonderfully said
23:29 is the BEST explanation of common weed usage. He turned it into SIMPLE MATH and just gave it to us as a simple equasion we can solve. Amazing
Wow. This hits home. I've been in the middle ground my whole life and everything you guys talked about resonates. I am very pleased to see the discourse about the problems facing us men has become more public as its a crying shame and an obvious problem when you look at the rates of male suicide. I've been going through an extremely tough year trying to sift through 30 years of suppressed emotion and trauma that I buried with cannabis. I still have the occasional smoke like once or twice a month and it's gone back to being fun but I keep a very close eye on how I am feeling before I do it and set intentions before doing it. Good luck to everyone just trying to survive. You've got this 👊
I enjoy it when you do viewer interviews. I'm a former addict(meth), I'm sober but I'm using weed to help me get over it. Honestly I think it would be fun to be interviewed by you Dr.K. If you are interested, I'd love to see what you have in mind.
I've heard that long term use of cannabis can increase depressive symptoms according to a number of studies presented by other UA-camrs. I forget who it was who compiled these results, but I've noticed it in my own life.
After stopping for awhile, I seem to be coming back out of a depressive slump I had been in for a couple of months during which I'd use cannabis every few days or so. Then I'd use it more often (sometimes daily) to compensate for the depression, making the spiral worse.
Mileage may vary of course. I've got a friend who used cannabis daily and he's fine: it actually helps with his anxiety and he's perfectly functional while using it.
That's what is so interesting about weed is how it seems to effect people so differently. I don't know if it has to do with the strain or the frequency of use or just a person's genetics but it would be great if research would solidify these things for us.
I think it has to do with the user because liek Dr K was saying if you have a lot of negative emotions towards something or someone you use weed and it pushes it back and makes you forget about it but eventually it has a breaking point and I can 100% agree last year i was at a breaking point super depressed last year of college no job just smoking everyday to get through the day. Now that i smoke less i been feeling much better got a job and finding time to do things I need to like read hit the gym etc.. Even though i still smoke and still feel depressed i am able to manage it better and working towards not smoking at all but it’s not easy lol
Same, I found moderate weed could help me with my adhd . The problems comes when my brain now realizes I have this hack to feel good and th3 over consumption happens
@@manueldeltoro9944I really struggle with statements like these, because I hear so many people talk about how beneficu
Ial marihuana is, but the benefits they get are odten not related to the benefits we do find in studies, and marihuana has a way of being the solution fir every mental health issue while it clearly doesn't actually benefit the majority of people that use it excessively.
I hear people with depression say that marihuana helps them feel better and get stuff done. I hear people with adhd say that it calms them down and helps them focus. Anxiety gets better, apetite is better, sleep is better, generally speaking people can fit marihuana into every corner of their lives if they want, but truly I have not deen many people actually benefitting from marihuana, but moreboften I saw how it kept people from seeing a doctor and actually treating a condition. I rarely meet people that benefit from marihuana, but they exist, but all of them will tell me of the benefits.
As a former addict, this is a brilliant breakdown of how it works. Dr K nailed it.
I’ve given it up after 10+ years of misuse. The way I’ve given it up has been very important. The way I describe my biggest hangup with it is that when I was misusing, is it was in effect like a drag suit deploying too early in the proverbial race. Not that I’m in a hurry, I’m actually learning to slow the fuck down, but I was dragging behind. I was not keeping up with the promises I made to myself which really was holding me back from achieving the little and bigger goals I set for myself. Stagnation resulted and that is probably the worst feeling ever. I could go on but that’ll do. Thank you both for sharing, I hope people who have trouble making healthy adjustments in their lives without hearing other peoples’ testimonials and breakdown like this, find this video and the help that they’re ready to receive and put to action to improve their lives. Rock on 🤘
Thank you so much to both of you. This is the conversation that needs to be heard. I love HG for his ability to recognize and approach his biases as q clinician
Thanks for sharing doctor ❤️
I smoke weed every day and don't really want to, so I can't wait to watch this!
Look into Allen Carr homie, haven’t smoked since
@@listeningtomusic7665 thank you!!!
you can stop, mate. the first week is hard (mainly because it's very difficult to sleep) but it rapidly gets easier after that. i smoked every day for over 20 years and was up to an oz/week. stopped almost a year ago. you can stop too.
@@mdlouie Wow.. Thank you!! 😁💯
The way they described getting all the juice out of lemons resonated with me. I feel like I need new lemons in my life, particularly a change of scenery, but I financially cannot afford the new lemons. I’ve definitely regressed in mindset as a means of surviving the negative feelings I was having about wanting that but not being able to do it. Trying to put myself in a position to afford new lemons but it’s feeling like it’s gonna be a few years before there’s any fruiting and I’m not really sure how to deal with that, especially feeling better, other than just accepting where I am, meaning having to accept I’m not happy in life. Thanks for reading if you did 🙏🏻
Be grateful for what you have for now that’s the number one key. There are rich people with thousands of lemons who commit suicide. The key to happiness is being grateful for what you have as you strive for more.
not all lemons have to equate to money, you can exercise for free and if you havent done it in a while then you have lots of dopamine to extract from that lemon. you got this!
There’s a lot of truth here. But what we are talking about is recreational enjoyment vs self-medicating. It requires tremendous self-awareness and discipline to recognize the differences. But why is self-medicating with a substance like marijuana deemed unhealthy while medicating with Prozac, Paxil, or Lexapro considered benign?
I’ve smoke everyday for 12 years and While I don’t experience almost any of the symptoms he speaks on, they do a great job of breaking down not dealing with issues regardless of how you decompress. Can’t run from your issues
This. If you use it as a treat as a way to wind down from a day of hard work, I don’t see the problem.
I smoke before going to the gym or reading complex philosophy. Explain to me how that’s a bad thing. 😂
@@gianni_schicchi couldn’t agree more
Amazing video. As someone his in sober from long term severe cannabis addiction this is exactly what cannabis does. Also I’m in recovery from CHS (cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome) I thought cannabis was saving me from my life of pain when it was the very thing causing it.
I found myself in the same situation as the interviewee. This video has been rather eye opening to me, about needing to face the negative emotions. I had been pushing them aside and piling up for a decade and im scared to face whats to come.
Im a relatively successful stoner. Got my sh*t together, for the most part. Im certainly not living a perfect life but Im definitely not a loser. Self employed. Married. We own multiple properties. Etc. Weed will definitely make your mind race and cause you to dredge up thoughts from the past. I actually think its this form of anxiety that people are addicted to because it sort of makes things interesting. Over the years the anxiety has gotten more intense yet I still enjoy it for some reason. However, dwelling on and overthinking things is also why stoners dont get stuff done. To be a successful stoner you really need to talk yourself out of these cycles and into productivity as effectively as possible. To some degree Ive learnes to use that weed generated anxiety as motivation.
I'm absolutely addicted to weed, and honestly have no plans of stopping. It makes me happy, hungry, and tired. Three things critical to my survival that I struggle to attain without it (hell, I spent a huge chunk of my life suicidal before discovering weed). But I'm still happy to watch these videos to be able to weigh up the pros and cons and I recently stopped smoking during the day, which cut down my hours spent high. I think that's a decent compromise.
I think people like you and me who are in very bad situations beforehand can get a lot of benefits from it, it helps you get up and live. But K makes a good point, while your smoking weed you aren't thinking about the things that a normal person would at your age, and you don't do the things that normal people do. Not that I (and I assume you) would do those normal things anyways. It impairs your growth. Lol if I wasn't poor I would get a therapist but for now weed is my only friend
Let me preface this by saying I am not telling you what you should do only sharing my experiences. I sincerely hope that weed continues to work for you, but as I and many others who are in similar situations come to realize at some point: weed is the perfect solution until it isn’t. I self-medicated with weed for years until it ended up making my anxiety and depression 10x worse. At that point, I realized I had completely neglected working on any other healthy coping mechanisms and lost so much time to complacency. The one thing that helped me turned on me. 1 year sober now. It hasn’t been easy, but I do enjoy having more mental clarity and motivation for self-improvement.
@@kvlt22 To be honest, I'm feeling the best I've felt in years, and am the most productive I've been my entire life. Maybe I could do even better if I cut out the weed but I'm currently doing nofap (day 26/90) and don't really want to push it just yet.
Well let me tell you this to save your time in case you decide to quit smoking weed. Never do it on a daily basis or else you will definitely 100% have increased anxiety in life(at least to a certain extent and sometimes even more), your cognitive thinking will be affected, loss of appetite, brain fog, laziness. I met a therapist and he made me realize this. Guys please go to a therapist coz that helps and probably you won’t need more and more money coz even 1 or 2 sessions with therapist work like a magic for many and you don’t have to go there again and again it’s not a tuition class lol🤣
You can then work on yourself after a few sessions so you don’t need to spend after that on a therapist.
Trust me you’re gaining a lot in life by quitting weed not losing something in life.
@@mihirjoshi8934 I appreciate the input, I've put my all into therapy and got nothing out of it. All progress I made was from my own inner work and demon slaying. I do want more specialised therapy down the line but I'm a young adult who can't afford it. I'm not attempting to justify myself but I don't even smoke that much anymore and I'm not taking that splint off until I'm sure it won't end up hurting me more.
One of the best videos I've ever watched regarding cannabis consumption, I use it medicinally for neuropathy, and it does indeed have side effects - perhaps I don't see them quite as much because I'm running around after two ADHD kids - but they are definitely there! I'd like to thank you both. In particular for the interviewee, you're immediately employable. You're naturally analytic, and you'll be a sound investment for any employer. Good luck with your life!
I relate to this guy so much he puts it into words perfectly. Only difference is I smoke morning to night day by day for more than 10 years. I'm glad to be here and try to put myself back on track.
Great way of explaining what it does. I agree, THC is fun at first, then free will slowly goes bye bye, the magic goes away, you need it to function, constantly with drawling from it, and you ultimately end up using it to mask the side effects it produces rather than the benefits it once had. I've quit and restarted so many times I can see it clearly. Currently off of it. No way one can take a 4-5 day break if they're a chronic user. Getting off THC is also pure hell for me, can't sleep, can't regulate emotions or feel any sort of happiness/joy/pleasure. The first 3 days are the worse, and then after about a week things start feeling more normal again.