I guess I would call it a flashback...
Hi, I'm new to the forums and this is my first post...
Here's my sitch: I haven't smoked in a really long time (nearly a year) and recently started exercising. The other day, a few hours after I got done lifting I noticed I felt high. It was weird, my eyes were red and droopy and everything... Anyone know anything about this? I've got a test coming up tomorrow and I'm wondering if it's going to effect it. I'm 6'0" 245lbs.
Any help would be appreciated.
I guess I would call it a flashback...
Quote:
Originally Posted by thejoemama
Hi, I'm new to the forums and this is my first post...
Here's my sitch: I haven't smoked in a really long time (nearly a year) and recently started exercising. The other day, a few hours after I got done lifting I noticed I felt high. It was weird, my eyes were red and droopy and everything... Anyone know anything about this? I've got a test coming up tomorrow and I'm wondering if it's going to effect it. I'm 6'0" 245lbs.
Any help would be appreciated.
If you haven't smoked in nearly a year then no worries as THC doesn't stay in your system usually any longer than 35-40 days.
I guess I would call it a flashback...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Italiano715
If you haven't smoked in nearly a year then no worries as THC doesn't stay in your system usually any longer than 35-40 days.
Strange, because I was definitively high yesterday. My question was is it possible there was a fat cell that had something in it still after all that time and it just now got metabolized? If so, how will that do on a drug test? Will metabolites show up, I mean...
I guess I would call it a flashback...
Your having what I like to call Paranoia. No it won't be in your system....It has been a whole year. :wtf:
I guess I would call it a flashback...
"copy/paste"
Exercise seems to have an effect on your emotional reaction to stress. It does this by altering your mood. Fit people are usually in high spirits after a lengthy exercise, sometimes to the point of elation or joy. This feeling is associated with the presence of endorphins, which are released by the pituitary gland in the brain.
The word "endorphin" is a combination of "endo" and "morphine" -- meaning endogenously produced morphine, or internally produced painkiller. Endorphins are the body's natural pain reliever. It may be that the brain interprets exercise as a form of "pain" or it may be that the rise in fatty acids caused by long, gentle exercise acidifies the blood, which triggers the release of endorphins.
In any case, you can get from exercise a natural high, similar to a drug high but with none of the bad side effects. People who do long, continuous, gentle exercise enjoy the most effective stress therapy known to man.