Quote Originally Posted by Coelho
I didnt understand this way... i did understand that the more you smoke the more resistent to the THC effects you get (tolerance), but the memory impairing effects remains the same, regardless the level of tolerance. So we keep forgetting, no matter how tolerant to THC we are.





My personal experience tends to confirm it... i have a reasonably high tolerance, in fact my highs last much less than they used to, and are also far less intense, and yet my memory remains almost as bad as it became after i started to smoke... :jointsmile:
But if you were more resistant of the effects of THC, wouldn't you also become more resistant to the impairing effects on memory as well? Like when you first smoke, you feel more burnt-out, but as you smoke more, you feel the effects of the burnout less. Why wouldn't it be the same with memory impairment.

I mean I feel like I have a good memory overall and that cannabis hasn't impaired it, only in the short-term when high.
thcbongman Reviewed by thcbongman on . French Tolerance Study 2/09 Chronic treatment with Delta(9)-tetrahydrocannabinol impairs spatial memory and reduces zif268 expression in the mouse forebrain. Boucher AA, Vivier L, Metna-Laurent M, Brayda-Bruno L, Mons N, Arnold JC, Micheau J. CNIC, Université de Bordeaux, CNRS UMR, Talence, France. Few studies have investigated the effects of chronic cannabinoid exposure on memory performance and whether tolerance occurs to cannabinoid-induced memory impairment. Here, we studied the effects of repeated Rating: 5