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#I know my parents would both benefit from cbd or just any pain relief cause they’re both in so much pain
rosicheeks · 1 year
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Tinkering with Cannabis: The First 90 Minutes Episode 51
Strain: Wedding Cake
Company: Sira Naturals
Locations: Somerville, Ma
Cannabis Connoisseur: Molly
Website: www.siranaturals.org
​Hello again to all my cannabis loving and canna-curious friends, and welcome back for another episode of The First 90 Minutes! Today we will be toking and talking about a strain that I consider to be one of the white whales of cannabis, Wedding Cake. This strain is very hard to find, and I have been in search of it for quite a while. Finally, while surfing Leafly one day, Sira Naturals in Sommerville, Ma had this pretty lady in stock, limiting patients to 1/8th per day, so I headed on over to see my friend Molly and pick up my product. So what makes this strain so special? Well, I have been in search of it because I am a huge fan of GSC (Girl Scout Cookie), which is a parent of Wedding Cake (the other parent being Cherry Pie), and I have tried the Wedding Cake CBD and it was amazing, so I have been in search of the THC strain ever since. The top three terpenes that make up this strain are limonene, caryophyllene, and myrcene. Limonene helps with anxiety and stress, caryophyllene has amazing anti-inflammatory benefits, and myrcene is a pain reliever, anti-inflammatory, and a sedative. When combining Wedding Cake’s terpene profile with the THC measurements of up to 21.o%, it is no surprise that consumers report feeling relaxed, happy, euphoric, uplifted, and hungry on this strain. It has been recommended for those battling stress, depression, pain, anxiety, and insomnia, with potential negatives of dry mouth, dry eyes, dizziness, anxiety, and paranoia.
​Today I will be medicating with Wedding Cake to combat anxiety, depression, stress, and fatigue. Starting the session off at 8:09 p.m. with two hits from a glass pipe, with the flavor is peppery and sweet with undertones of vanilla dancing on my pallet. The aroma is sweet and peppery. At 8:11 p.m. I am starting to feel a little mood uplift and a slight cerebral shift in my level of focus. My head feels like it is feeling up with helium and is entering a dreamy state. There is a sense of paranoia creeping in early on that has the “everyone knows I am high” mindset, which is not great for the anxiety, but I have been able to talk myself down so far. At 8:19 p.m., I can feel the paranoia starting to mellow out and the mood uplift continues as I roll into a happy, mellow, and floaty cerebral buzz. My body is starting to feel really calm and my legs are feeling a little tingly. I am not feeling any changes to my level of fatigue and I am not finding that my focus has improved, but my anxiety has decreased noticeably.
​At 8:54 p.m., I realize I zoned out and I missed the 8:39 p.m. check-in. I am watching T.V and relaxing while just letting my mind wander. My body feels relaxed, I feel tired, and my mind feels stress-free. I am currently not experiencing any additional mood changes, and I continue to feel mellow and calm. My thoughts are wandering from things I need to do to assessing things that have been bugging me, to trying to determine how I will achieve certain goals. I am still experiencing the anxiety and paranoia flare-ups when I am in social situations, but when I am alone, I feel very relaxed and calm. At 9:09 p.m., I feel sleepy and my mind continues to wander as my head remains in a cloudy, dreamy state. I am still experiencing absolutely no sense of focus with this strain. My appetite is beginning to peak, and my mood is very calm and happy. At this point, depression, and stress I was feeling have all dissipated, but the fatigue has not been touched. The anxiety continues to intermittently flare-up depending on whether I am alone or around other. In a way, the dreamy cerebral state is almost intensifying this as it has made me so calm and relaxed that I could easily find myself drifting off to sleep.
​Rounding the corner to our 90-minute mark at 9:29 p.m., I am still feeling very foggy-brained, yet calm and relaxed. My mind is continuing to wander, and if I focus on activities that are quiet and I remain in a place where I can relax and just be alone, I am fine. However, anything that includes others, or is done in the presence of others continues to invoke twinges of anxiety. My level of focus continues to be very low, and I feel like my response times are very slow, which I am finding contributes greatly to the social anxiety I am experiencing. I am unsure as to whether I am overthinking things, or whether I am responding appropriately, and it continues to be difficult for me to follow the conversation, especially if there is more than one person involved. Continuing to track these effects until the end at 10:00 p.m., I am finding that now the level of clarity is much improved, and I feel extremely calm and mellow. Now that the effects have worn off, I am finding that social interaction is back to normal, my focus has improved, and I am left feeling very relaxed and happy. The depression has not returned, and it won’t be long before I head off to bed.
​This test was the second test I conducted for this strain. The initial test was done with 3 hits from a glass bowl, and the experience was similar, all the way down to the intensity of the anxiety and paranoia. It was the level of intensity of these negatives related to the effects that made me decide to retest this product using with two hits instead of three to see if the experience was any different. Unfortunately, other than the difference in the intensity, the experience remained the same. I found this strain helpful in lifting my mood, however the twinges of paranoia and anxiety really caused some fluctuations in the mood enhancement and stress relief. I found that I had to be alone in order to fully enjoy this strain and reap the benefits of its effects. I was disappointed that both tests caused me such anxiety and paranoia because I was excited about this strain, and GSC is one of my favorite strains and I have never experienced these effects previously. I have also tried strains with Cherry Pie, and I have never experienced anxiety or paranoia with those products either. I cannot say for sure what it was that caused these negatives in the two tests that I conducted, but I can say that the results were enough for me to definitively say that this strain is not a great fit for me. This is not to say that this would not be a great product for others out there, and I can say that if the paranoia and anxiety did not arise, the mood enhancing properties of this strain are fantastic. For me, I would have to rate this product at 4.0 stars. Again, it is not that this is not a fantastic product, it is well packaged, well grown, excellent quality, and as always, I commend Sira Naturals on another job well done, but the genetic makeup of the strain was just not the right fit for my personal needs. Sira, I still mark this as another great product for the books. Keep up the great work.
If you are a patient, or adult above the age of 21 in Massachusetts, check out the following link for where you can purchase this product:
https://www.siranaturals.org/where-to-buy-cannabis-massachusetts
Well my friends, we have reached the end of this review. Thank you for joining me and stay tuned for more product reviews!
Disclaimer:
****Please remember, this blog is an account of my personal experience with this product. Not everyone has the same experience with every product and that is okay. I always recommend starting out with one or two hits to see if that is enough, and you can always increase your dose from there.*****
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theherblifeblog · 5 years
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Can I Be A Drug Advocate As the Sister of A Drug Addict?
by Kait Heacock
The night I learned of my brother’s overdose, I cooked a large pot of food. Every time I’ve eaten this meal after, I’ve thought of it as the death meal. I was in survival mode: make enough food to feed myself for the next couple of nights because eating was one of the fews things I could guarantee. Eat, breathe, sleep, maybe. That week I drank too much and smoked weed every night. The weekend in Atlantic City, a new couple’s getaway, was damaged beyond repair, but we went, and I consumed everything I could to feed the vacuum inside me.
The Epidemic
Much like survivors of gun violence focus on gun reform or breast cancer survivors raise money for research, those of us touched by the opioid crisis feel a personal responsibility. I did not save my brother; that fact will remain with me for the rest of my life. But I refuse to sit quietly and watch other families fall apart, not when there are potential real solutions. Opioids are a big pharma backed scourge made possible by doctors rushing to dull the symptoms of chronic pain rather than treat the cause. We should stop scapegoating cannabis and put actual funding into more in-depth research.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s latest report found the number of opioid-related overdoses rose by nearly 28% between 2015 and 2016. These overdoses break down into prescription opioids, synthetic opioids, and heroin. It was heroin that took my brother, though his entry point was the painkillers given to him after foot surgery. After some fifteen years struggling with alcoholism and drug addiction, a doctor handed him a death sentence when they filled out that prescription.
In a report released in April 2018, JAMA found a correlation between legalizing marijuana and a reduction in opiates, and this follows a report from 2017 by the National Academies finding evidence “to support that patients who were treated with cannabis or cannabinoids were more likely to experience a significant reduction in pain symptoms.”
 According to a .gov drug abuse website, “Marijuana use disorder becomes addiction when the person cannot stop using the drug even though it interferes with many aspects of his or her life.” The website carries a whiff of reefer madness, so quick to offer marijuana as a gateway drug because it still holds the counterculture stigma of “turn on, tune in, drop out.” I was raised in the DARE, “just say no” generation, where we were taught that all drugs are the same. Unfortunately there are people, including those high up in our government, who can’t separate cannabis from other drugs.
For the record, former Attorney General Sessions, cannabis is not the same as heroin.
There were moments following my brother’s death when I wondered if I could do it too, need something so much I’d risk my life for it. I hovered on the brink but never dove off it. Is want and need the difference between dependence and addiction?
 In an alternate universe, my brother was told cannabis was not just another “illicit drug” made to fuck him up, but that it was a medicinal alternative to address the pain caused by his surgery.  
The Survivors
In an alternate universe, my brother survives. Not lives, survives. Because this is an epidemic.
I look for answers because I don’t have a brother anymore. A cursory glance at headlines suggest we exercise to combat the epidemic. The Trump administration wants to explore policy allowing the death penalty to be sought for drug dealers, and yet there is no mention of punishing pharmaceutical companies. We are fumbling in the dark for an answer to this plague. Is it really so absurd to suggest cannabis?
Entrepreneur and Ellementa co-founder Ashley Kingsley is a survivor. She is two years sober from pills and alcohol, and attributes her recovery to cannabis. Ashley suffered from undiagnosed Endometriosis for years, and from the age of 15, doctors prescribed her everything from sleeping pills to Percocet. When she was finally diagnosed, she underwent multiple surgeries and began to rely on opiates to dull the pain.
“It was like I had to feed something inside of me, like this beast,” Ashley described of her pill addiction. She tried AA, yoga, therapy—everything to get sober. “I was functional. I wasn’t jobless or homeless. I wasn’t what people pictured.”
Melissa Heldreth, co-founder of Panacea Plant Sciences, considers her family survivors too: “My brother was one of the lucky ones. He is one year and eight months off heroin, and it’s been a struggle for years.”
Melissa is also sober, and she uses cannabis for anxiety and pain relief. She, like so many others who become advocates, knows firsthand the risk of using cannabis when drug addiction is in your family, your life, yourself. When I shared with her my fear of a potential cannabis addiction, she told me, “I 100% understand this battle of thought process, but I look myself in the mirror every day and know this is the right thing for me. I’ve never been healthier or happier in my life.”
 She supports her and her brother’s recovery stories with evidence, pointing me to studies on how CBD stops addiction. “THC is what stops heroin and alcohol withdrawals that could potentially kill a person. While there are people with addictive personalities who should watch their intake, studies show that weed, itself, is not addictive,” she explains.
 “This is my main mission in life, to help end the stigma in using cannabis for sober people. To show people this is a less risky, healthier way to elevate so many things that doctors push prescriptions for. Prescriptions that are extremely addictive,” Melissa adds.
Ashley echoes the sentiment, saying, “Cannabis has changed my life—in so many ways. I want these kinds of stories out there.”
My Survival
I admit that I relied heavily on alcohol, weed, and sex to numb, self-medicate, and distract myself after my brother’s death. I was in survival mode. We don’t always make the best choices in desperate situations. In the nearly six years since, I’ve stopped sleeping around for the sake of departing my body, and I’ve stopped the reckless nights of binge drinking just to force myself to sob on the walk home, a needed pain extraction that was as messy as my wet face.
In the years since my brother’s death, my relationship with cannabis has only deepened. I’ve utilized it in both my running and writing routines, began learning its medicinal benefits through work with a women’s wellness network, and now proclaim myself a cannabis advocate.
I want to normalize cannabis and proclaim its benefits, but it’s hard to do that when first you have to fight stigma and stereotypes. I worry people can’t—or refuse—to see the plant in a new light. But I also worry that their shortsightedness prevents them from utilizing something that can help with pain, sleeping problems, and in my case, wading through the emotional chaos left inside of me in the wake of my brother’s death.
What I’ve found the most interesting in my experiences using cannabis to affect my mood is that it seems to help me better hone in on what I’m feeling and process it. When I drank, it was a distraction from what I was really feeling, or like I was only able to experience the raw, visceral tears. Don’t get me wrong, I’m all in for an ugly cry, but sometimes I wanted to dig deeper than that, and that’s where cannabis shaped a lot of my grief journey. It slowed me down and helped me shed the inhibitions that kept me from truly exploring my grief.
I haven’t always felt comfortable admitting that cannabis helped me fight my way out of the dark places I had fallen into in the wake of loss. I worried people would think I was no different than him, using drugs to escape my problems. To preempt that, as anyone with addiction in their family should consider doing, I’ll take breaks from using cannabis and alcohol to check the want versus need ratio, sometimes for a week, maybe a month. I don’t ever want to need it, don’t want to abandon everything and wind up like my brother, frozen in his Alaskan backyard, hundreds of miles away from his children.
In an alternate universe, my brother and I sneak away from Thanksgiving dinner at our parents’ house, pass a joint by the lake, and talk about how big his kids are getting. But I don’t get to live in that universe. I live in this one; I survive in this one.
If you or someone you know is suffering and needs help there are resources available:
U.S.A.
The National Drug Helpline offers 24/7 drug and alcohol help to those struggling with addiction. Call the national hotline for drug abuse today to receive information regarding treatment and recovery.
Tel:1- 888-633-3239
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline Tel:1-800-273-8255
Canada
For questions or concerns about substance use during pregnancy, please contact Motherisk’s Alcohol and Substance Use Helpline​ at 1-877-327-4636 (toll-free in Canada).
For access to a listing of programs offered to First​ Nations and Inuit, visit: Addictions Treatment for ​First Nations and Inuit​​.
The new Canada Suicide Prevention Service (CSPS), by Crisis Services Canada, enables callers anywhere in Canada to access crisis support by phone, in French or English: toll-free 1-833-456-4566 Available 24/7
Crisis Text Line (Powered by Kids Help Phone) Canada Wide free, 24/7 texting service is accessible immediately to youth anywhere in Canada by texting TALK to 686868 to reach an English speaking Crisis Responder and TEXTO to 686868 to reach a French-speaking Crisis Responder on any text/SMS enabled cell phone.
KidsHelpPhone Ages 20 Years and Under in Canada 1-800-668-6868 (Online or on the Phone) First Nations and Inuit Hope for Wellness 24/7 Help Line 1-855-242-3310 Canadian Indian Residential Schools Crisis Line 1-866-925-4419 Trans LifeLine – All Ages 1-877-330-6366
Visit thelifelinecanada.ca for more services.
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Alexandra Miller: treating Complex PTSD and endometriosis with cannabis
Alexandra Miller is a 27-year-old survivor who consumes cannabis to treat her Complex PTSD (CPTSD) and Endometriosis, a chronic disease which in her case resulted from sexual violence. Alex studied Spanish / Gender studies and today lives in Maryland where she runs Alni CBD Body Care (@alnicbd). Here, she shares her experiences of childhood and sexual trauma, overcoming her eating disorder, treating Endometriosis, moving away from alcohol and prescription pills and how that all led her to cannabis. In her own words:
Trigger warning for descriptions of the aftermath of sexual violence
Growing up, my childhood was extremely abusive. I am the eldest of 3 children, our parents divorced when I was 7. It was a very ugly and bitter divorce. The way they behaved and put us in the middle set a horrible example for us in relationships, holding grudges and civility. My mother has untreated mental health issues, so there was constant emotional, psychological and physical abuse.
I moved out at the age of 16 to live with my father and step-family. There, I experienced other forms of abuse, mainly psychological. I developed an eating disorder as a way to deal with my anxiety and to take back some form of control, living in such a repressed household. Moving to a different town and changing high schools in 10th grade was extremely stressful, on top of the abuse and trauma. I put all my focus into school, softball, SAT prep and my eating disorder.
After a while of starving myself and a year of losing my period due to the eating disorder, my father sent me to inpatient treatment, followed by outpatient treatment. The experience at the inpatient hospital was a combination of One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest & Girl, Interrupted. After some years of struggling, I was "recovering" from my eating disorder, but not really, since I transferred my coping mechanism to binge drinking alcohol when I left for college.
Around the time of my eating disorder is when I first discovered cannabis.  It helped with my appetite and to get over the feeling of being full after a meal. I wish more people with eating disorders had access to cannabis; I had to use it illegally until I moved to Colorado.  My early years of medicating with cannabis were spent punished by my father, who kept confiscating my medicine. He was quick to put me on antidepressants, yet criticized cannabis; I knew something was innately wrong. In my view, if it improved my quality of life and did no harm, there was no reason for it to be illegal, and my view is the same to this day. 
I was 17 when I left for college, freshly "recovered" from my eating disorder. Once away at school, I turned to alcohol to cope, regularly getting blackout drunk. I wish cannabis was more promoted in society, that way maybe I wouldn't have felt the social pressures to drink. Alcohol is also more readily available and accessible than cannabis, which is unfortunate.
One night my sophomore year, a couple of friends and I went to drink at a mutual acquaintance's house. I got black out drunk as usual and followed a cat into a back bedroom. From that point on I don't remember anything until the following morning when I woke up and was gushing blood out of my vagina. I woke up in the bed of a male acquaintance I had seen around but never talked to. I tried to hide the blood from him, because as women we are taught to be ashamed of our own blood. The blood soaked through my underwear, jeans, and a fleece I was using underneath to protect the rapist's car seat when he drove me a few blocks back to my house.
This was only my third sexual partner and it was not consensual. I did not know it wasn't normal to bleed like that after sex. I got back home and just laid on a towel for a few minutes before calling a former friend who told me to call 911. No one in the hospital knew what to expect when I called and said I was bleeding out of my vagina, but once I got there, they saw it was an emergency. I was rushed into emergency surgery to repair a vaginal laceration and received a blood transfusion. They said the injury was so deep my bowel was exposed.
To this day I have severe pelvic pain, gastrointestinal issues, and adhesions as a direct result of this physical trauma. I also have a chronic disease called endometriosis, which was also caused by this trauma (most women are born with it, my case is extremely unique). Since I told the nurses and doctors it was an accident (didn't know what happened since I was unconscious), no police were called to the ER and no rape kit or any evidence was collected. I really wish they had at least called a victim's advocate to explain to me my options. I didn't even know what a rape kit was! It's scary I didn't realize for a few years it was a rape, even though I almost died.
I also had a grand mal seizure a year after the assault, due to built up stress & insomnia.  A neurologist tried to blame the seizure on my cannabis use and put me on a heavy dose of anti-seizure meds.  These meds would poison me within a few weeks, sending me to the hospital during my first week back at university as a transfer student. 
2016 was the hardest year for me, when I tried to report about 8 years later. The cops told me the rapist "didn't understand female biology" and that's why he didn't know it was an emergency I was bleeding... They also said we were both drunk... The rapist was never prosecuted or charged. He is still walking free to this day. 
I started abusing my PTSD anxiety medication (I was taking up to 50mg of Valium per day at my worst); I became violent to my current partner (spent a night in jail!); and I attempted suicide with pills (it makes me gag just thinking about swallowing all those pills now!).
As far as the anti-depressants & anti-anxiety meds, the latter proved to be the worst. I experienced one of the worst traumas a human can experience, and even still I say never use benzodiazepines. After just a few years of taking them, I noticed my personality changed for the worse, I was having more mood swings, I couldn't sleep, my memory was awful, it felt like my memories were being deleted, and I became violent. While trying to wean off the anxiety meds, I had several seizures, one I had in a crosswalk and woke up in an ambulance. I still have a chip in my tooth from that seizure, hopefully I can afford to fix it one day, but at least I am alive!
Weaning off of prescription anxiety meds was the first time I discovered CBD and its success in treating anxiety and PTSD. When taking CBD, for the first time I felt a sense of calm and happiness *whoosh* over me. It has no negative side effects, I don't have a seizure when I miss a dose, and it helps with my anxiety AND depression. I have been using cannabis (THC) for nausea since my eating disorder, but in 2016 I was diagnosed with endometriosis, which has been the more recent cause of my nausea and digestive problems, along with pain, inflammation, sharp cramps, chronic fatigue, sore body, muscle spasms, sciatica, and GI issues. I use THC and CBD to treat all of my ailments, a mixture of cannabis and hemp. I of course incorporate other cannabinoids whenever possible, i.e. CBG, CBN, THC-A, THC-V, CBD-A & more. 
Within the endometriosis and chronic pain communities, only some people are aware of the benefits of cannabis and hemp. I had the advantage of living in Colorado and working in the cannabis industry, so I had a lot of information to share with people in my online support groups. Both in the medical dispensary where I worked and talking to other people with chronic pain online, I discovered that many people were being taken advantage of, being brainwashed into thinking they must pay a high price for CBD! (Fun fact: it is NOT anymore difficult to extract CBD than any other cannabinoid, do not let people fool you! My boyfriend has been managing cannabis extraction labs since 2014 and has taught me a lot.)
I worked in cannabis edibles manufacturing before becoming a medical dispensary store supervisor. With my endometriosis diagnosis, however, I had to quit that supervisory job, since I could no longer stand and work for 45+ hours a week with the pain, fatigue, and nausea. While at home, I was helping connect people in my support groups with affordable CBD, as well as tinkering with some recipes for CBD salve for my own pain and to share with others.  One thing led to another and I created Alni CBD Body Care!
It is my mission to share with as many people as possible the wonderful benefits of CBD, especially since it is a natural alternative to harmful pharmaceutical medications. CBD and cannabis activism is also close to my heart due to the fact that I have had several friends die of drug addiction or overdose. They unfortunately did not live in states with legal access to cannabis. CBD and cannabis have been proven to help people with withdrawal symptoms, as well as the emotional aspect of becoming sober. Some women with endometriosis or other chronic pain conditions become addicted to their narcotic pain medication, because that is the only option where they live. My goal is to help make natural pain relief in the form of CBD topicals and other products available to as many people with chronic pain as possible. :)
Healing from this trauma takes work every single day, it is very hard. I have good days and bad days. The hardest part is dealing with the chronic pain and not having any of my medical expenses covered by victim's compensation. I would be fine if I just had endometriosis, but knowing a crime committed while I was drunk made me feel like it was partly my fault. This is one of the reasons I was so happy to discover Survivors for Cannabis. Connecting with and helping and empowering fellow survivors is the only way I am able to heal. 
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fridayweed · 6 years
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HELP! Trying to get grandmother off opiates and on THC, CBD and Kratom I need some help.I am known in the family as the black sheep for my drug experimentation. I've been smoking marijuana and dabbling with other substances for around seven years and during those years, I have been educating my family on the harmless nature and massive benefits of marijuana. After a long time and many conversations, my parents have finally come around and have realized that marijuana is not only harmless, but is beneficial in a medical sense.Anyways, my grandmother has recently fallen into poor health. She has chronic pain in her back and knees and is on hydrocodone and a pain patch. She has gone through multiple surgeries lately and she constantly feels a "pins and needles" sensation in her legs which is causing a great deal of discomfort. My parents have reached out to me to search for CBD tincture, THC edibles, and possibly kratom to help her get off of opiates while also providing pain relief and relaxation for her. All of those things are simple to find but not so simple to get her to try. She has recently expressed interest in getting off of opiates but the withdrawals are preventing her from doing so. She got addicted to hydrocodone and a pain patch after a surgery in November 2017. I was hoping the kratom would curb her cravings for opiates and the THC and CBD would ease the pain and induce relaxation. To give you a little info on my grandmother, she is in her mid 70s and is staunchly against marijuana. She has lived in the south her entire life and thinks marijuana is as deadly and destructive as heroin and meth.What are some ways to get her to try THC, CBD, or kratom? One member of my family suggested not telling her what she is taking; I am very much against this. I have always been against dosing someone with any psychoactive drug (especially for the first time) without first telling them what they are taking and what effects they should expect. She is very adverse to educational information because she is so heavily conditioned by anti-drug propaganda but if any of you know of any videos or articles I could share with her to help persuade her, it would be really helpful. Also, if any of you have any tips for persuading her to try something new, unfamiliar, and illegal, that would also help.I unfortunately live a long ways away, otherwise I would go sit with her, educate her for a while, maybe dose in front of her and let her watch my reaction to the drug, and then spend time with her during her first dose to make sure she was okay and had a positive environment. I have a great deal of experience when it comes to trip sitting and I know marijuana is much less intense than psychedelics, but sometimes marijuana can cause bouts of paranoia or anxiety (especially if the user is unfamiliar with its effects and is also opposed to trying it due to its legal status) and I'm not so sure my family would know how to properly bring her back to a positive mindset if she did happen to experience any negative side effects of THC.I was thinking a low dose of 10-20mg THC edibles in the evening for pain relief and relaxation so if it knocks her out she can just go to sleep, 2-3g of kratom tea during the day for pain relief and relaxation, and a moderate to high dose of CBD during the day due to its lack of psychoactive properties to ease the sensation in her legs.All my family and I want is for her to be both healthy and pain free, something her doctor's orders are not providing. In fact, her doctor's orders are making her more ill.Any advice would be appreciated. Thank you. #Weed #Cannabis #Marijuana #Ganja #tumblr https://ift.tt/2ObNpYN
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