Thrice |
05-05-2010 09:41 PM |
I am so lost right now. The longer you don't smoke, the higher you get. I don't know the scientific reasoning behind it, or if it is even directly related to the amount of THC presently in ones body. From my experience, a lot of it is mental. So, the first toke of the day is the best. Why? Is it because of the amount of time since you last smoked? I truly think not. It has something crazy to do with resetting your brain during sleeping. ie: Say I smoke at 10am, then again at 10pm the same day. I feel that second smoke is not as good as if I were to smoke at 12am, sleep, then 9am the next day. Taking into account, that no variables were changed, and the second smoke at 9am was not a wake and bake. I don't know if that made any sense to anyone, but it works for me. I do not know when the point is for me when I start to fall victim to tolerance, but this is basically how I smoke, and you can draw your own conclusions from it. Starting clean slate, I smoke and get high, then like to ride it all the way down, and not smoke again for at least 4 hours, or until my head is back where I started, this way I feel I get closest to the full effect every time. I do this for a few weeks, then the period in between gradually becomes shorter and shorter until I get into 'stay high' mode. This is when I feel I become psychologically addicted, and not only smoke from the moment I wake up to the moment I pass out, but also find myself waking up early just to smoke. After a month or so of this I start to feel burnt out, and quit for a few months. In the first few days, it is nearly impossible to fall asleep before the sun rises, and difficult to work up an appetite. I find myself thinking about smoking bud constantly. I notice my musical taste stray away from dubstep and chill stuff to more lyrical and rock and roll based. After the third day, all is good and I find myself typing longer and longer run on posts on MB than ever, until I start it up again anywhere from one to six months later.
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