Andre von Mollendorff shares about the dangers of using marijuana from his own experience and research.
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I had come to the point of Psychosis, a condition in which the affected individual loses touch with external reality (Compton 2016). Paranoia set in. I was convinced there was a wider conspiracy going on in the world and that I was 'the chosen one' who would expose it. This was the point when things started to get severe. Fortunately, my parents were alerted, and I was removed to a safe place for recovery.
Conclusion:
The use of marijuana led me down a path of distorted reality, distorted social acceptance and distorted identity. Who was I if I was not using marijuana?
After working with young adults for the past two decades, I have seen a similar pattern repeat itself for frequent marijuana users. After my period of recovery, which included an encounter with God, much spiritual guidance and counselling, I found myself back at what seemed like early teens. I had to start again learning how to re-engage reality. I had to learn to deal with the typical stressors of life without escaping to my imaginary world. A world where I was the 'enlightened one', and where everyone else didn't have a clue!
I want to urge you if you are a young person experimenting or thinking of experimenting with Marijuana, consider the long-term effects. Not only on your mind and physiology but also on your identity. Start to ask yourself the question, who am I really? Face that reality, ask those hard questions now and become who you are, not what some substance makes you out to be!
Works Cited:
Atikons DL 2016. Marijuana's Effects on the Mind Intoxication, Effects on Cognition and Motivation, and Addiction. In Compton MT (ed) 2016. Marijuana and Mental Health (1st ed), 11-32. Arlington, Virginia: American Psychiatric Publishing.
Compton MT (ed) 2016. Marijuana and Mental Health (1st ed). Arlington, Virginia: American Psychiatric Publishing.
Côté JE and Levin CL 2016. Identity Formation, Youth, and Development: A Simplified Approach. New York, NY: Psychology Press, Taylor and Francis. Kindle Edition.
Erikson EH 1968. Identity: Youth and crisis. New York, NY: Norton.
Fontes MA, Bolla KI, and Cunha PJ 2011: Cannabis use before age 15 and subsequent executive functioning. Br J Psychiatry 198(6):442-447.
Grant JE, Chamberlain SR and Schreiber L 2012: Neuropsychological deficits associated with cannabis use in young adults. Drug Alcohol Depend 121(1-2):159-162.
McDonald J, Schleifer L, and Richards JB 2003: Effects of THC on
behavioral measures of impulsivity in humans. Neuropsychopharmacology
28(7):1356-1365.
Great article - I certainly go with the line that people after a 'high' are trying to escape life's realities, no matter how they dress it up. If you cant get happy without drugs, then you have to be missing something.