Sort your head out, then get back on the smoke. Surely there was a reason you went through drug councilling to get off the stuff? If you still have unresolved issues then starting toking again is only going to make things worse.
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Sort your head out, then get back on the smoke. Surely there was a reason you went through drug councilling to get off the stuff? If you still have unresolved issues then starting toking again is only going to make things worse.
+1, exactly what I was thinking after reading this. :stoned: (only a little less crazy sounding, but it IS all in your head and you can change it)Quote:
Originally Posted by bhouncy
It's all in your head. the boogy man is not coming to get you. just pack a bubbler and put on your fav tunes and enjoy the ride. stop lookin out the window in your underwear with a baseball bat in hand, they're not coming for you.
I had to quit for 20 years to complete my career in the Air Force, random drug testing made it too much of a risk and I had a family to take care of.
Once I retired, I smoked a doobie of killer weed with my cousin. It was my first high in twenty years and it hit me really hard. I lost focus on what everyone was saying and everything seemed too loud and vibrant. I had to get away from everyone and be by myself. Once I did that, I was able to reacquaint myself with the effects and calm down. I was just out of practice and as one poster mentioned, I had some negative things in my own mind that I had to square away. It wasn't the weed.
Now I find that I have changed from a "social smoker" to more of a solitary smoker. I enjoy the effects much more when I'm free from trying to hold a conversation at the same time . . . I always keep forgetting what the heck I'm talking abou . . . and um . . . er ah . . .