when i am with my girlfriend, my penis is
not as full looking and it takes oral sex
for an erection.
when i am alone playing playstation and
smoking marijuana my scrotum drops lower,
my penis is much fuller looking unerect
and erections will come with no kind of
contact at all, much bigger erections.
is it a mental block that i can only
overcome when i am high or is it a
physical thing? am i too nervous around
her? a big package doesnt do much good
unless i can share it with her.
|
Tylanas
Especially EHEALTHy
Joined: 13 Jul 2005 Posts: 12984
Thanks: 3
Thanked:0
Re: Only Marijuana Helps? Posted: 02-22-07 15:12pm
southsida
wrote:
when i am with my
girlfriend, my penis is not as full
looking and it takes oral sex for an
erection.
when i am alone playing playstation and
smoking marijuana my scrotum drops lower,
my penis is much fuller looking unerect
and erections will come with no kind of
contact at all, much bigger erections.
is it a mental block that i can only
overcome when i am high or is it a
physical thing? am i too nervous around
her? a big package doesnt do much good
unless i can share it with
her.
marijuana can increase blood pressure,
which is why more blood can get into the
penis.
However, i would strongy suggest not
smoking marijuana. Ever. It does
kill brain cells, no matter what any crazy
druggy says to you. It is unhealthy. I'd
kick the habit, and be a better man for
your girlfriend.
Effects on the Brain
[...] The short-term effects of
marijuana can include problems with memory
and learning; distorted perception;
difficulty in thinking and problem
solving; loss of coordination; and
increased heart rate. Research
findings for long-term marijuana abuse
indicate some changes in the brain similar
to those seen after long-term abuse of
other major drugs. For example,
cannabinoid (THC or synthetic forms of
THC) withdrawal in chronically exposed
animals leads to an increase in the
activation of the stress-response system5
and changes in the activity of nerve cells
containing dopamine6. Dopamine neurons are
involved in the regulation of motivation
and reward, and are directly or indirectly
affected by all drugs of abuse.
Effects on the Heart
One study has indicated that an abuser's
risk of heart attack more than quadruples
in the first hour after smoking
marijuana7. The researchers suggest
that such an effect might occur from marijuana's
effects on blood pressure and heart
rate and reduced oxygen-carrying capacity
of blood.
Effects on the Lungs
[...] Even infrequent abuse can cause
burning and stinging of the mouth and
throat, often accompanied by a heavy
cough. Someone who smokes marijuana
regularly may have many of the same
respiratory problems that tobacco smokers
do, such as daily cough and phlegm
production, more frequent acute chest
illness, a heightened risk of lung
infections, and a greater tendency to
obstructed airways9. Smoking
marijuana possibly increases the
likelihood of developing cancer of the
head or neck. A study comparing 173 cancer
patients and 176 healthy individuals
produced evidence that marijuana smoking
doubled or tripled the risk of these
cancers10.Marijuana abuse
also has the potential to promote cancer
of the lungs and other parts of the
respiratory tract because it contains
irritants and carcinogens9,11. In
fact, marijuana smoke contains 50 to 70
percent more carcinogenic hydrocarbons
than does tobacco smoke12. It also induces
high levels of an enzyme that converts
certain hydrocarbons into their
carcinogenic form—levels that may
accelerate the changes that ultimately
produce malignant cells13. Marijuana users
usually inhale more deeply and hold their
breath longer than tobacco smokers do,
which increases the lungs' exposure to
carcinogenic smoke. These facts
suggest that, puff for puff, smoking
marijuana may be more harmful to the lungs
than smoking tobacco.
Other Health Effects
Some of marijuana's adverse health effects
may occur because THC impairs the immune system's
ability to fight disease. [...]
mice exposed to THC or related substances
were more likely than unexposed mice to
develop bacterial infections and
tumors15,16.
Effects of Heavy Marijuana Use on Learning
and Social Behavior
Research clearly demonstrates that
marijuana has the potential to cause
problems in daily life or make a person's
existing problems worse. Depression17,
anxiety17, and personality disturbances18
have been associated with chronic
marijuana use. Because marijuana
compromises the ability to learn and
remember information, the more a person
uses marijuana the more he or she is
likely to fall behind in accumulating
intellectual, job, or social skills.
Moreover, research has shown that
marijuana’s adverse impact on memory and
learning can last for days or weeks after
the acute effects of the drug wear
off19,20,25. Students who smoke
marijuana get lower grades and are less
likely to graduate from high school,
compared with their nonsmoking
peers21,22,23,24. A study of 129 college
students found that, among those who
smoked the drug at least 27 of the 30 days
prior to being surveyed, critical skills
related to attention, memory, and learning
were significantly impaired, even after
the students had not taken the drug for at
least 24 hours20. These "heavy" marijuana
abusers had more trouble sustaining and
shifting their attention and in
registering, organizing, and using
information than did the study
participants who had abused marijuana no
more than 3 of the previous 30 days. As a
result, someone who smokes marijuana every
day may be functioning at a reduced
intellectual level all of the
time. More recently, the same
researchers showed that the ability of a
group of long-term heavy marijuana abusers
to recall words from a list remained
impaired for a week after quitting, but
returned to normal within 4 weeks25. Thus,
some cognitive abilities may be restored
in individuals who quit smoking marijuana,
even after long-term heavy
use. Workers who smoke marijuana are
more likely than their coworkers to have
problems on the job. Several studies
associate workers' marijuana smoking with
increased absences, tardiness, accidents,
workers' compensation claims, and job
turnover. A study among postal workers
found that employees who tested positive
for marijuana on a pre-employment urine
drug test had 55 percent more industrial
accidents, 85 percent more injuries, and a
75-percent increase in absenteeism
compared with those who tested negative
for marijuana use26. In another study,
heavy marijuana abusers reported that the
drug impaired several important measures
of life achievement including cognitive
abilities, career status, social life, and
physical and mental health27.
[...]
Addictive Potential
Long-term marijuana abuse can lead to
addiction for some people; that is, they
abuse the drug compulsively even though it
interferes with family, school, work, and
recreational activities. Drug craving and
withdrawal symptoms can make it hard for
long-term marijuana smokers to stop
abusing the drug. People trying to quit
report irritability, sleeplessness, and
anxiety32. They also display increased
aggression on psychological tests, peaking
approximately one week after the last use
of the drug33.