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Edited my first comment. Deleted. Adding a link to an article on Atlantic website by Annie Lowrey on the same subject: daily use of thc. The idea is that habitual use looks much like addiction. She offers a statistic that users surveyed who reported daily use rose from about 10% to about 40% roughly correlated with the legalization movement in several states. That means about 40% of current users are daily users. She says some people self-report having problems, anxiety, guilt about leaving things undone, etc. The majority of users at this point don't have, or don't report problems. This is important regarding legalization policy at the national level. I believe there is a dearth of public dialogue about "best practices", due to the long history of underground culture and disapproval by some members of society. The article doesn't offer much advice on best practices, such as the common wisdom with which most people are familiar regarding pharmaceutical products, wherein dosage and frequency are carefully set forth. Simply put, after one gets "high", it is necessary to allow the effect to dissipate before being able to get high again. Chronic use results in a kind of "twilight zone" which is neither high nor straight. The article does a good job of raising issues, but more needs to be said. I don't know the etiquette here, so I don't know if providing a link will be frowned upon. If I'm being rude, please advise. <a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2018/08/americas-invisible-pot-addicts/567886/" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank">https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2018/08/americas-invisible-pot-addicts/567886/</a>

I can't smoke, I'd have to just do the edibles.


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