A return to pot?
Here it comes, or if you live in my large city, it just passed by on the street. I cannot walk down St-Laurent without a solid weed sillage, and not just from young ones.
I'll get my pot politics out of the way: I'm in favour of legalization, given the government's still-to-be specified oversight.
My first job in Canada, in 1971, was with a government agency which researched and treated addiction; we closely followed the four successive reports of the Le Dain Commission, a federal government-mandated inquiry into the non-medical use of drugs.
In late '72, I heard the summation, delivered at a staff conference, by Commission member Dr. Ralph Miller: after extensive study and debate, they recommended to either decriminalize or legalize (the members were split) adults' use of marijuana. That idea has taken 45 years to achieve political traction. (A 2013 interview with Dr. Miller in which he tells anecdotes about the four years of the Commission is here.)
I'm eager to see what happens in my age cohort when legal pot hits town, probably by mid-2018. My friends range from my-body-is-my-temple types who will not ingest caffeine, let alone pot, to those who have toked daily for almost 50 years.
A 2016 SFGate article reports that, according to a CBS News finding, the fastest-growing demographic for pot use in the US is persons over 55. Increasingly, they turn to cannabis for medicinal properties: for pain associated with arthritis, fibromyalgia, and sciatica; to decrease the muscle spasms of multiple sclerosis; to mitigate nausea brought on by chemo. (Current Canadian law permits medical use for registered legal patients.)
And there are other benefits. Paula says she feels more relaxed and confident in bed: "I leave the lights on, all the lights on."
In university, I was the share-joint-at-party type, but after graduation, dropped pot because I'd never liked to smoke anything, and my then-husband was struggling with kicking cigarettes. (Tobacco, it turns out, is the physically-addicting smoke.) But it's hardly like I haven't been around it.
Six years ago, after decades of abstinence, I ate a homemade pot cookie given as a birthday present and had an adverse reaction. When I posted that, a commenter asked if "it was really necessary" to share the experience.
It was, Anonymous. Edibles—from jerky to pralines—will not be available to Canadians until the products can be approved, so those interested may make their own. The potency will vary—so my encounter might be instructive.
Whether edibles are sold at a dispensary (or whatever we're getting) or not, those unused to THC should proceed cautiously, especially if you are already taking medication. Cannabis is biologically complex; reactions vary depending on strain, route of ingestion and the user's mind set. I was unprepared to the tsunami of anxiety and paranoia that little cookie delivered.
After the incident, I thought, So much for that! But now, my post-50 friends have aches and pains; many are curious, or already know that cannabis products work for them. Ought I re-up?
When I was in Oregon last month, I was startled to see a huge NEED WEED? billboard near my hotel, and wanted to know more.
Several family members demurred, but Jennie, a retired public administrator, would talk. When Oregon passed the amendment in late 2016, Jennie, who was over 65, checked out the local dispensary. On an early foray, she bought a packet of squibs: gummies infused with THC.
She drove to her downtown bridge club, parked, chewed a portion of a squib (following package directions), and joined her fellow players for lunch. About 45 minutes into her first game she realized that she felt different: "The low back pain I always get from sitting so long was gone."
"So, how was your game?" I asked her.
"Average", she said, "but after, at four o'clock, I walked over to the House of Pancakes and ate a short stack with scrambled eggs, and a sundae!"
"Did you drive?" I asked her. "Didn't think I should", she said, "I called Paul (her son) and asked him to drive me home. Takes an hour for him to get there, so I ordered the Bananas Foster French toast."
I figure we have a self-regulatory mechanism, because not many women past 50 are willing to onboard the caloric load of an Olympic shot-putter all that often.
Jennie has learned the difference between the two primary active phytochemical ingredients (THC and CBD).
She does not smoke. Besides the edibles, she sometimes uses a transdermal patch, which has allowed her to go off the super-iboprophen that upset her stomach. She has learned how she responds to various products; new ones appear on the Oregon market nearly monthly. Her local store gives good advice.
"So, you choose the ones that help your back but don't make you 'happy'?" I asked. Jennie laughed an "oh, child" laugh and said, "Little bit of both, sometimes."
I have an image of the Book Club making a foray to the pot shop, the helpful young associate helping the grandmother decide whether to try Glass Slipper or Bubble Gum; I'm sure the day the doors open, a novice my age will post her iPhone video.
I might tag along, and admit I'm not curious solely for medical reasons. There is also the effect that witnesses for the 1969–1972 inquiry mentioned, and which the Commission reported in one succinct and very Canadian paragraph:
"A major factor appears to be the simple pleasure of the experience. Time after time, witnesses have said to us in effect: We do it for fun. Do not try to find a complicated explanation for it. We do it for pleasure." 6
Sounds almost like chocolate.
I'll get my pot politics out of the way: I'm in favour of legalization, given the government's still-to-be specified oversight.
My first job in Canada, in 1971, was with a government agency which researched and treated addiction; we closely followed the four successive reports of the Le Dain Commission, a federal government-mandated inquiry into the non-medical use of drugs.
In late '72, I heard the summation, delivered at a staff conference, by Commission member Dr. Ralph Miller: after extensive study and debate, they recommended to either decriminalize or legalize (the members were split) adults' use of marijuana. That idea has taken 45 years to achieve political traction. (A 2013 interview with Dr. Miller in which he tells anecdotes about the four years of the Commission is here.)
I'm eager to see what happens in my age cohort when legal pot hits town, probably by mid-2018. My friends range from my-body-is-my-temple types who will not ingest caffeine, let alone pot, to those who have toked daily for almost 50 years.
A 2016 SFGate article reports that, according to a CBS News finding, the fastest-growing demographic for pot use in the US is persons over 55. Increasingly, they turn to cannabis for medicinal properties: for pain associated with arthritis, fibromyalgia, and sciatica; to decrease the muscle spasms of multiple sclerosis; to mitigate nausea brought on by chemo. (Current Canadian law permits medical use for registered legal patients.)
And there are other benefits. Paula says she feels more relaxed and confident in bed: "I leave the lights on, all the lights on."
In university, I was the share-joint-at-party type, but after graduation, dropped pot because I'd never liked to smoke anything, and my then-husband was struggling with kicking cigarettes. (Tobacco, it turns out, is the physically-addicting smoke.) But it's hardly like I haven't been around it.
Six years ago, after decades of abstinence, I ate a homemade pot cookie given as a birthday present and had an adverse reaction. When I posted that, a commenter asked if "it was really necessary" to share the experience.
It was, Anonymous. Edibles—from jerky to pralines—will not be available to Canadians until the products can be approved, so those interested may make their own. The potency will vary—so my encounter might be instructive.
Whether edibles are sold at a dispensary (or whatever we're getting) or not, those unused to THC should proceed cautiously, especially if you are already taking medication. Cannabis is biologically complex; reactions vary depending on strain, route of ingestion and the user's mind set. I was unprepared to the tsunami of anxiety and paranoia that little cookie delivered.
After the incident, I thought, So much for that! But now, my post-50 friends have aches and pains; many are curious, or already know that cannabis products work for them. Ought I re-up?
When I was in Oregon last month, I was startled to see a huge NEED WEED? billboard near my hotel, and wanted to know more.
Several family members demurred, but Jennie, a retired public administrator, would talk. When Oregon passed the amendment in late 2016, Jennie, who was over 65, checked out the local dispensary. On an early foray, she bought a packet of squibs: gummies infused with THC.
She drove to her downtown bridge club, parked, chewed a portion of a squib (following package directions), and joined her fellow players for lunch. About 45 minutes into her first game she realized that she felt different: "The low back pain I always get from sitting so long was gone."
"So, how was your game?" I asked her.
"Average", she said, "but after, at four o'clock, I walked over to the House of Pancakes and ate a short stack with scrambled eggs, and a sundae!"
"Did you drive?" I asked her. "Didn't think I should", she said, "I called Paul (her son) and asked him to drive me home. Takes an hour for him to get there, so I ordered the Bananas Foster French toast."
I figure we have a self-regulatory mechanism, because not many women past 50 are willing to onboard the caloric load of an Olympic shot-putter all that often.
Jennie has learned the difference between the two primary active phytochemical ingredients (THC and CBD).
She does not smoke. Besides the edibles, she sometimes uses a transdermal patch, which has allowed her to go off the super-iboprophen that upset her stomach. She has learned how she responds to various products; new ones appear on the Oregon market nearly monthly. Her local store gives good advice.
"So, you choose the ones that help your back but don't make you 'happy'?" I asked. Jennie laughed an "oh, child" laugh and said, "Little bit of both, sometimes."
I have an image of the Book Club making a foray to the pot shop, the helpful young associate helping the grandmother decide whether to try Glass Slipper or Bubble Gum; I'm sure the day the doors open, a novice my age will post her iPhone video.
I might tag along, and admit I'm not curious solely for medical reasons. There is also the effect that witnesses for the 1969–1972 inquiry mentioned, and which the Commission reported in one succinct and very Canadian paragraph:
"A major factor appears to be the simple pleasure of the experience. Time after time, witnesses have said to us in effect: We do it for fun. Do not try to find a complicated explanation for it. We do it for pleasure." 6
Sounds almost like chocolate.
Comments
hugs,
Janice
And I really hope the self-righteous, narrow-minded prejudice against cannabis use, such as that manifested by your Anonymous of some years back, fades away. Such a double standard when we weigh the damage done by cannabis (which is not negligible either, tbh) against that done by alcohol or tobacco.
Annie: I agree, some of that pot is just...stinky. I smell it on the street. Though I am by no means advocating someone try pot if it does not agree, cannabis is a complex botanical and the new products have been modified to decrease certain unwanted effects.
Unknown: Oh yes, and interestingly that is actually a desired effect among elders who have loss of appetite. A friend's mother hs been prescribed Marinol in her nursing home, to stimulate her appetite.
materfamilias: Bad Ma! Too funny! Looking forward to edibles, as I still don''t like the idea of smoking, but a gummie is attractive for the very reasons you cite ;)
Jean Shaw: Perhaps a friend could obtain a small "test" amount?
Jane Pinckard: Thanks for the personal anecdote. A friend who is a writer has been blocked by anxiety and pressure to produce and found that a small amount of marijuana calmed him so he could write. A •small• amount- too much and he said ""I just look out the window at my birds."
My only complaint is the smell as you walk on the streets of Montreal. Now we dodge this ever present pungent weed smoke in addition to cigarettes and streams of vape.
I'm interested to see how this plays out regarding enforcement and regulation.
Catherine
I have some reservations about recreational use and worry about such issues as driving under the influence. I see that the commercials have already started about not doing this but feel that it's inevitable. People seem to have finally got the message about not drinking and driving but now we are going to have to deal with other impairments.
Personally, I've never used it - mostly because I don't like losing control and I don't smoke. Plus - I don't like that sickly, sweet smell. Some of my neighbours indulge occasionally and the smell drifts into my apt. and I find it rather overwhelming.
I guess we'll have to see what happens - I imagine there will be a big uptick to start and then the novelty will wear off for many and things will settle down.
Here's a story for you. A friend of ours recently gave his son an extra dresser that they had and he needed. He left it for him to pick up and went out. When my friend came back the dresser was gone but a dime bag had appeared on his pillow. It apparently was in one of the drawers. No questions asked or explanations given. He and I tried it with the usual effects we remembered from our youth. But no one else in the group would. It was a bit awkward finding everything hilarious and the others just sitting there looking at us.
Leslie Milligan: Thanks especially for naming the product. We won’t get it here but your neighbouring readers can benefit if the wish.
Aunt Kitten: See Leslie’s recommendation, above. Even when legal there will still be an illegal market. And Elizabeth, next comment, offers hoppe that there will be less on the street.
Elizabeth Hensley: I didn’t know that, and now that you mention it, did not smell it in OR either.
Margie: The matter of driving worries me too.
Venasque: Is that not a strange state? You might have felt like a lab specimen!
One of my sons told me that late last November, he and his roommate got baked, and rm asked, "Do you have any chocolate?" I had given him two of those big Lindt Advent calendars, one for him, and one for his brother (which he was supposed to take to his house in a few days). Son and rm ate both of them! This all came out when I asked his brother how he liked his calendar.