US Marijuana legalization was a mistake. Highly-concentrated pot is destroying my son's life.

Article Archive


Marijuana legalization was a mistake. Highly-concentrated pot is destroying my son's life.
Aubree Adams
Sun, October 17, 2021

I absolutely loved living in Colorado.
Family-oriented Pueblo is the state’s best-kept secret. Lake Pueblo, Pueblo Mountain Park, and Devil’s Canyon are perfect places to hike. We lived in an old Craftsman home in the historic district, with a beautiful garden and wonderful neighbors. I felt like I was living in a dream.

And then legalized marijuana came, and everything changed. It’s taken nearly a decade for Colorado’s elected leaders to understand the damage pot is doing to our children. I saw it years ago.

My eldest son entered eighth grade in 2014, the year recreational marijuana stores opened in Colorado. Soon, his behavior changed. He became irrational and repeated things that didn’t make sense. I dismissed it as adolescent mood swings. He’d just broken up with a girlfriend. That’s all it was, I told myself.
By his freshman year, I realized he was using marijuana. I was still in denial, though, until he attacked his younger brother and then tried to kill himself. The hospital treated him and sent him home. A few days later, when it was clear he was still suicidal, I took him back to the emergency room. Don’t worry, they told me. It’s just marijuana.

Marijuana is a serious drug​

Eventually, my son told me he was dabbing, which I had never heard of. A dab (or wax or shatter) is a highly concentrated form of THC, marijuana’s active ingredient. It’s heated and smoked, delivering an instant, overwhelming high. Crack weed, my son called it. He knew it was making him crazy. He wanted to quit, but addiction had him firmly in its grip.
And yes, he was addicted. Addiction is a pediatric disease. In 9 out of 10 cases, it originates with drug or alcohol use before age 21. Marijuana, which has been linked to mental illness and psychosis in teens and young adults, slowly takes away your humanity. That’s what it did to my son, who turned to running the streets with homeless people. He had no trouble finding people to feed his addiction in return for selling their legally home-grown marijuana.

I quit working, making it my full-time job to save my son. I soon found out that getting treatment wasn’t easy. Beds were full. Officials minimized marijuana's addictiveness.

I found a highly regarded treatment center in Utah; they required $36,000 up front that I didn't have. Finally, I found a place in San Diego that helped restore his health. He regained confidence and looked good. In the meantime, I had learned about a recovery community in Houston, where host families provide positive peer support. My son got better when he left Colorado, so I moved him there in 2016. My other son, who had developed posttraumatic stress disorder, and I followed in 2018.

Rein in this monster​

Sadly, my story isn’t unique. Families across Colorado have experienced the same heartbreak and worse. More and more, marijuana is implicated in teen suicides. From 2014 to 2018, marijuana was present in nearly one-third of teen suicides. Pot is taking our children from us.

That’s why a bipartisan legislature this year passed a bill that begins to rein in this monster. The bill:

► Authorizes a study on the effects of high-potency THC products on the developing brain and how to keep those products away from teens. These unbiased experts will make a recommendation for next steps to the legislature.
► Requires doctors issuing medical marijuana recommendations to consider the person's mental health history;
► Orders a report on hospital discharge data when marijuana use is likely;
► Directs coroners to screen for THC in non-natural deaths;
► Reduces the amount an 18-year-old medical card user can purchase in a single day. This closes a loophole that could be exploited to stock up on marijuana concentrates, which they sell to their younger friends.

It’s a baby step, but it’s significant that the state that pioneered marijuana legalization is finally recognizing there are harmful consequences.
https://sneed.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/jak7w08mDzAJLOn6illRPA--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTY0MDtoPTg1Mw--/https://sneed.yimg.com/uu/api/res/1.2/91HvKEaM2zkXIzgusNabag--~B/aD0yMzY0O3c9MTc3MzthcHBpZD15dGFjaHlvbg--/https://media.zenfs.com/en/usa_today_opinion_532/b3d13bcf29d399940a5e61bf2b333571
Aubree Adams in Houston, Texas, in October 2021.

We can’t keep going down this road. We can’t keep sacrificing our children on the altar of pot. Big Marijuana promotes high-potency, addictive concentrates with no proof they are safe for anyone. Colorado’s commission, when it reviews all the research already done, will confirm that this product is dangerous to children and much too easy for them to get.

Maybe lives will be saved. Maybe other states will be warned against following Colorado’s lead Maybe no more families will have to endure the hell that mine has.
But it comes too late for me and my oldest son. He started using again. I haven’t seen him in a year.

Aubree Adams is director of Every Brain Matters. She is the parent coordinator for a Houston recovery community, where she lives with her youngest son and two dogs.

It’ll be interesting to see how this goes. I’ve noticed that there is a push by wealthy Democrats in Colorado to reform/repeal marijuana because of additives.
 
She is the parent coordinator for a Houston recovery community,

There we go. Other ad-dovacy article.

But to stay on point that concentrate stuff is too much work and powerful. Fun novelty at a party but people with serious dab rigs are weird. It's crazy how much wax and shatter people can go through in a day when you see how expensive it is.
 
Aubree Adams is director of Every Brain Matters.

How would she know, given that it sounds like she doesn't have one herself.

I'm not a big weed guy but this 21st Century Reefer Madness stuff sounds like a work of fiction. 'Running the streets with homeless people' in Pueblo? This comes off as an affluent single parent trying to rationalize their failure to actually parent their child and using marijuana as an excuse.

I think that potheads vastly underrate the potential effects that weed can have on people, but this just comes off as sensationalized bullshit.
 
Imagine thinking weed is the underlying problem, and not your own actions and responsibilities.
If you have an addictive personality it’s best to avoid things that are addictive.
How would she know, given that it sounds like she doesn't have one herself.

I'm not a big weed guy but this 21st Century Reefer Madness stuff sounds like a work of fiction. 'Running the streets with homeless people' in Pueblo? This comes off as an affluent single parent trying to rationalize their failure to actually parent their child and using marijuana as an excuse.

I think that potheads vastly underrate the potential effects that weed can have on people, but this just comes off as sensationalized bullshit.
On the one hand potheads are annoying when talking about its benefits, but on the other hand Karens in the government want to tell people what they can and can’t do. I voted for legalization even though I personally avoid pot.
 
Weed will always be the devil when it comes to recreational lifestyles. Smoking, drinking, gambling, porn, bad food and poor education are more destructive to a person than a lifetime of smoking joints. Yet it's easy to blame shit on, so here we are.

Just legalise it everywhere for Christ's sake and let's stop this madness.
 
People really need to know what words mean. Assassin is derived from the Arabic word for marijuana. They would then kill Crusaders in a purple haze. So to assume that marijuana was a safe drug that made people non-violent is nuts. It doesn't even apply to hippies because of Charles Manson.
 
There we go. Other ad-dovacy article.

But to stay on point that concentrate stuff is too much work and powerful. Fun novelty at a party but people with serious dab rigs are weird. It's crazy how much wax and shatter people can go through in a day when you see how expensive it is.
We've all had that roommate in college who never seems to have money for rent but always manages to get hold of weed.

I can't imagine things changing anytime soon.
 
That's a wonderful bill.

Authorizes a study on the effects of high-potency THC products on the developing brain and how to keep those products away from teens. These unbiased experts will make a recommendation for next steps to the legislature.
Hey, would you like co-author a study on why marijuana is dangerous and how we can keep it away from teens? plz be "unbiased" wink wink

Requires doctors issuing medical marijuana recommendations to consider the person's mental health history;
Imagine the damage it would do to our brave pharmaceutical industry, if people who are sad and stressed had easy access to marijuana!

Directs coroners to screen for THC in non-natural deaths;
"Covid statistics"
 
People really need to know what words mean. Assassin is derived from the Arabic word for marijuana. They would then kill Crusaders in a purple haze. So to assume that marijuana was a safe drug that made people non-violent is nuts. It doesn't even apply to hippies because of Charles Manson.
Common mistake. The order were actually the Asasiyun which basically means "faithful people." Hashashin which means "people who smoke hash" was an insult directed at criminals. Basically implying that these fanatical killers were blazed punks. Assassins really didn't fight Crusaders specifically either. They were infamous for getting their members ingrained as guards for high up political figures then they would kill their targets in suicide attacks.
 
Sounds like he has an undiagnosed mental illness. Weed will have that effect on some people who do. But I'm not a doctor, so fuck if I know. But on one point, I agree-dabbing is no joke. I tried it a few times, and really didn't like it at all. Felt too keyed up, my heart was pounding. It was almost like a panic attack. I began smoking weed fairly late in life-I was 26-and for awhile my use was chronic (no pun intended). Eventually, though, I became disgusted with myself. I had put on a lot of weight, I had neglected myself and basic needs (for a time, I had only one pair of pants. What a slovenly shit I was!). I don't buy it anymore, and the only time I partake is when this one friend of mine invites me over to hang out (which isn't too often because he works third shift and his schedule is such that he's basically always tired, and his girl just had another baby six months ago).
 
Back