>Someone give me some redpills on how to quit this jew poison. One of the things that makes quitting hard is that memories recall the good times had with weed. Most weed use is ritualistic, so you never 'just' smoked weed, you smoked weed AND watched porn, or you smoked weed AND played video games, or you smoked weed AND drove around. When you cut weed out and try to go about your life as you lived it before, you're left with an awareness of how much better it once was (or constantly was) when you were high.
To get past that, you have to start by picking up new habits. Reading a book, going hiking, shopping at different grocery stores, whatever. Find something new that you enjoy well enough that you can do without smoking weed. Use every psychological trick in your toolkit to make those events fun, and start doing those events regularly. This will give you a foothold at examining a life without weed, because once you've established these habits you will have an idea of things you can do that won't remind you of using, which you get to fall back to if you find yourself really struggling.
This leaves your weed-related habits. If possible, drop these if you can. If you can't (I personally love doing the dishes while high), then you'll want to take one of those old habit moments and redefine it in the most positive way that you can the next time you go back to it. Using doing the dishes as an example, don't JUST do the dishes, but take a moment to really dig into the feel of your kitchen and redefine the space in which you work. Organize it so that you're always using your right hand to grab ingredients and your left to grab plates, pots, and pans for example. Apply SOME form of deeper meaning to your habit, invest your heart fully into it, and then you'll have a memory milestone to fall back on that's not connected to weed. Ideally, by revising the entire workflow of your space, you'll have a pre-weed way of doing things and a post-weed way. Good luck!
this sounds like pussy shit if you want to quit doing something, just stop doing it, simple as
Wyatt Anderson
Yeah, there was an entire thread devoted to telling the guy that, but he wanted other forms of help. Weed isn't physically addictive, so it's only addictive through mental means. The method I outlined is all about addressing those mental hooks.
just shut the fuck up and smoke weed or don't. It's that easy. Gonna be taking a fat dab in like 10 mins and play some vidya
Samuel Collins
Even worse, a Canadian
Parker Thomas
senpai you are wise. I've quite weed and started again a number of times. Presently I'm 16 days sober. I've stopped smelling it dripping from my pores now, which is nice.
It is not physically addictive, but it can be psychologically addictive. You can do it. You'll have some bad dreams initially. Gradually your memories will return. Portions of your brain will reactivate. You may struggle a bit with inner monologue. That's normal. You can control the thoughts. Eventually you'll be left with the abilities and insights you've gained from it, but you'll regain the brain function you suppressed with it. It takes time, but the initial first week is the most difficult part. You'll be glad you stopped now. In the future, you may smoke it again in a communal way, with family or friends, as our ancestors did. You will find you have more power over it. I have faith in you brother.
Austin Torres
Envy.
Henry Reyes
yes our country sucks. We're working on it.
Carter Jones
Thanks man I’m currently smoking my last bit of weed I have and I’m quitting
so severe insomnia, total loss of apetite (instantly vomit after eating), sweating profusely while shivering cold are not physical symptoms? because thats what I experienced when I quit weed. quitting cigarettes was a cakewalk compared to quitting weed.