Pubdate: Sun, 27 Dec 2015 Source: New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Copyright: 2015 The Santa Fe New Mexican Contact: http://www.santafenewmexican.com/SendLetter/ Website: http://www.santafenewmexican.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/695 Author: Richard Dean Jacob TIME TO RETHINK CONSEQUENCES OF NEW MARIJUANA ERA The classic 1936 anti-marijuana propaganda film Reefer Madness revolved around very melodramatic events where high school students, lured by pushers to try marijuana, descended into a sensational multitude of drug-induced depravities. In decades hence, this cautionary tale of a drug menace gone mad has been rightfully seen as an extremely exaggerated take on the use of marijuana. Today the pendulum has swung to quite another extreme. Recently a Gas & Grass (combination gas station and marijuana dispensary) has opened in Colorado Springs so customers can get a variety of errands done in the same place for their unprecedented convenience - including the purchase of lottery tickets, beverages and cigarettes. The March 2014 issue of Psychology Today published an article titled, "It's Time to Address the Marijuana Issue: To put it simply, What are we thinking?" In it, the author, Dr. Robert Berezin, writes that "the substance abuse epidemic is so incredibly destructive to the well-being of our society ... it's problematic enough to deal with the hard drugs and prescription pharmaceuticals." He furthers that marijuana is a psychoactive drug, and while not physically addictive, it is powerfully habituating. Dr. Berezin says that he has treated all the addictions and that marijuana usage has gotten a "pass" - a substance whose habitual use negatively affects the brain and can be distorting and destructive to the personality and optimum functioning in life. Kyle Grimshaw-Jones of Conscioushealing.com has compiled a list of negative energetic/spiritual effects of habitual marijuana usage - all detrimental to our consciousness and being. The inventory includes but is not limited to: marijuana overexpands and weakens our etheric field that is the blueprint/ plan for our physical body (worked on, for example, in acupuncture and human energy field work); this overexpansion may cause energy leakage through breaks in our etheric field (which can become sites of physical disease and entity attachment); this weakening of the grid-like etheric field can allow an increase in the loss of our self-efficacy and our making decisions based on lower instincts rather than true intuition, right livelihood, and constructive activity; the marijuana high takes us into the astral plane that is not the goal of spiritual evolution (even while facilitating creativeness this can disconnect us from our higher self and result in mental fragmentation, delusionary thinking and dependency); the chronic marijuana user can be eventually induced into remarkable degrees of denial. Today I'm amazed at middle-age and older individuals still heavily reefing away who so conveniently forget how, as teens, stoners would develop "burn out" - dark circles under their eyes, short-term memory loss, lethargy and lack of initiative. In this discourse, I am not making a case for or against the legality of cannabis but rather for an expanded base of enlightenment and choice. It's a problem for many of us that marijuana legalization fosters a public perception that pot is a benign and harmless drug or even beneficial. Something overlooked nowadays in the touting of the therapeutic benefits of medical marijuana is the fact that any possible advantageous credits from psychoactive THC (which the marijuana plant contains) does not outweigh its inherent risks - that it's actually CBD (the non-psychoactive component cannabinoid in cannabis) that is the real champion in today's medical marijuana world for its therapeutic wonders. It's been scientifically validated that CBD works to cancel out the detrimental effects of THC. Oftentimes, CBD is almost totally absent in high-THC recreational marijuana that research studies continue to show results in neural damage and lifelong impairment and especially hinders the proper development of the adolescent brain. In a time of high-alcohol craft beer becoming commonplace while states pass tougher drunken-driving laws by lowering blood-alcohol concentration limits, and texting-while-stoned fatalities make news, it's time for ever-clearer assessments and reality checks concerning the substances we use and the choices we make. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom