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same-deep-water-as-you

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Joined: 17 Apr 2007
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Yay For Brains
Posted: 04-17-07 22:32pm

pretty much when you get stoned your doing minimal brain damage to your self which is causing this. Getting stoned acts similar to like when your body begins to heat up too much, see our cells are like a lock and key, they fit perfectly into each other to work and make us function, and when our body heats up or we get stoned those cells begin to unravel making them not able to fit with their partner to work correctly.
Problem is, when this happens its irreversible, those cells cannot go back to their normal shape, and when it happens in yuor brain your doing brain damage to your self, maybe minimal at this stage but its going to utterly screw you if you keep it up.
The cells in your brain when yu get stoned are begining to not work correctly, lose their shape and cause you to hear things that are not there, the more you use drugs the more your cells unravel and the more n more your cells in your brain are pretty much being plucked off one by one. Which is worse than it sounds.
But this is what getting stoned does, it messes with your perceptions, causes hallucinations, and gives you brain damage getting more n more worse as the time goes on along with wasting a whole lotta mney.
enjoy Smile
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TequilaSunrise

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Joined: 18 Apr 2007
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Posted: 04-19-07 15:47pm

that's the biggest load of crap I've ever heard. I smoked pot for over twenty years straight. And now I am a very successful man. I feel that I am an intelligent person. Good family life. Good church. Good Business.

I'm glad I smoked pot all those years, because I wouldn't be the person that I am today if I didn't. I wouldn't be as successful as I am today if I didn't.

This is just propoganda.
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sillyakchick

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Posted: 04-19-07 15:56pm

:roll:Good god, here we go again with this ridiculous reefer madness B.S. I don't even know why this is in the schizophrenia forum. Here are real facts about marijuana. Let's not propogate fear and paranoia. I am not advocating marijuana use, but it will help people to make their own decisions based on fact, not fallacy.

Heavy Marijuana Use Doesn't Damage Brain
Analysis of Studies Finds Little Effect From Long-Term Use
By Sid Kirchheimer
WebMD Medical NewsJuly 1, 2003 -- Long-term and even daily marijuana use doesn't appear to cause permanent brain damage, adding to evidence that it can be a safe and effective treatment for a wide range of diseases, say researchers.


The researchers found only a "very small" impairment in memory and learning among long-term marijuana users. Otherwise, scores on thinking tests were similar to those who don't smoke marijuana, according to a new analysis of 15 previous studies.


In those studies, some 700 regular marijuana users were compared with 484 non-users on various aspects of brain function -- including reaction time, language and motor skills, reasoning ability, memory, and the ability to learn new information.


Surprising Finding

"We were somewhat surprised by our finding, especially since there's been a controversy for some years on whether long-term cannabis use causes brain damage," says lead researcher and psychiatrist Igor Grant, MD.


"I suppose we expected to see some differences in people who were heavy users, but in fact the differences were very minimal."


The marijuana users in those 15 studies -- which lasted between three months to more than 13 years -- had smoked marijuana several times a week or month or daily. Still, researchers say impairments were less than what is typically found from using alcohol or other drugs.


"All study participants were adults," says Grant, professor of psychiatry and director of the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research Center at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine.


"However, there might be a different set of circumstances to a 12-year-old whose nervous system is still developing."


10 States OK Marijuana Use

Grant's analysis, published in the July issue of the Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, comes as many states consider laws allowing marijuana to be used to treat certain medical conditions. Earlier this year, Maryland became the 10th state to allow marijuana use to relieve pain and other symptoms of AIDS, multiple sclerosis, cancer, glaucoma, and other conditions -- joining Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington.


Medicinal marijuana is available by prescription in the Netherlands and a new marijuana drug is expected to be released in Great Britain later this year. In the U.S. and elsewhere, Marinol, a drug that is a synthetic form of marijuana and contains its active ingredient, THC, is available by prescription to treat loss of appetite associated with weight loss in AIDS patients.


Grant says he did the analysis to help determine long-term toxicity from long-term and frequent marijuana use. His center is currently conducting 11 studies to determine its safety and efficacy in treating several diseases.


"This finding enables us to see a marginal level of safety, if those studies prove that cannabis can be effective," Grant tells WebMD. "If we barely find this effect in long-term heavy users, then we are unlikely to see deleterious side effects in individuals who receive cannabis for a short time in a medical setting, which would be safer than what is practiced by street users."


Grant's findings come as no surprise to Tod Mikuriya, MD, former director of non-classified marijuana research for the National Institute of Mental Health Center for Narcotics and Drug Abuse Studies and author of The Marijuana Medical Handbook: A Guide to Therapeutic Use. He is currently president of the California Cannabis Medical Group, which has treated some 20,000 patients with medicinal marijuana and Marinol.


'Highly Effective Medicine'

"I just re-published a paper of the first survey for marijuana toxicity done in 1863 by the British government in India that was the most exhaustive medical study of its time in regards to possible difficulties and toxicity of cannabis. And it reached the same conclusion as Grant," Mikuriya tells WebMD.


"This is merely confirming what was known over 100 years ago, as well as what was learned by various government findings doing similar research -- marijuana is not toxic, but it is a highly effective medicine."


In fact, marijuana was available as a medicinal treatment in the U.S. until the 1930s.


Lester Grinspoon, MD, a retired Harvard Medical School psychiatrist who studied medicinal marijuana use since the 1960s and wrote two books on the topic, says that while Grant's finding provides more evidence on its safety, "it's nothing that those of us who have been studying this haven't known for a very long time.


"Marijuana is a remarkably safe and non-toxic drug that can effectively treat about 30 different conditions," he tells WebMD. "I predict it will become the aspirin of the 21st century, as more people recognize this."
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Georgia59

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Posted: 04-25-07 12:38pm

What does any of this have to do with schizophrenia??

This is not the place for a debate on marijuana.
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sillyakchick

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Posted: 04-25-07 12:50pm

Georgia59 wrote:
What does any of this have to do with schizophrenia??

This is not the place for a debate on marijuana.


Agreed. This is where the "enlightened" poster decided to place this garbage.
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