Benefits Smoking Cannabis

Smoking Marijuana (Cannabis ...

Cannabis Coach - Benefits Of Quitting On Smoking Review

Author: Anne Davids

Have you always wanted to get off your habit of smoking marijuana? Has it always seemed so hard to stay away from puffing the sweet smoke of cannabis? If you want to say goodbye to this nasty habit, let the Cannabis Coach help you. This guide is an easy quit marijuana audio program that will take you by the hand in quitting the bad habit that you have developed.

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The Cannabis Coach will help you stop smoking (including cannabis) with the use of a program that has been proven to have a 100% success rate. This guide does not have empty promises and will not leave you feeling guilty. It also does not have 12-step programs that you will need to accomplish. It is simply a marijuana addiction treatment that works and is guaranteed to be 100% risk free.

This guide will help you break free of your bad habit so you can finally stop marijuana from controlling your life. This is what you need if you have already had enough but you cannot seem to find the strength to quit your marijuana smoking habit on your own. This audio guide will help you reduce and eventually eliminate your marijuana cravings, and at the same time, give you back the passion and drive you once had in your life.

With the help of this guide, you will be able to recognize and overcome your reasons why you have always failed at quitting smoking pot in the past. It will also guide you through what you might be thinking, feeling, and struggling with so you can have real life solutions that simply work.

It is about time that you say goodbye to using pot, let the Cannabis Coach show you how. With all the risks to your life and health, you better take your first step at quitting smoking marijuana today with the help of this guide.

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Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/quit-smoking-articles/cannabis-coach-benefits-of-quitting-on-smoking-review-1793744.html

About the Author

This author writes about How Long Does It Take To Quit Smoking and Marijuana Health Effects.



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10 Responses to Benefits Smoking Cannabis

  1. Boomer says:

    If I smoked a dime of cannabis a week, what are the health benefits?

    • Anonymous says:

      Well, unless you were told by your doctor to try this, I would say you will get excellent health benefits, an education, 3 meals a day, your own little room, clothing that you don’t have to worry about being stylish and maybe even find a little “romance” with someone named Big John or Bubba. Oh yeah, after a few weeks, maybe months, you will probably have a brain that has the same IQ as the person who is supplying it to you. I would have to say that your IQ seems rather small if you even have to ask this question, I suppose you could be having one of it’s “health benefits” (zoning out of the real world) by putting it out here knowing full well it’s totally illegal and has only led people to go looking for stronger drugs.

      But if it makes you feel better, you are the one at risk. When you aren’t experiencing the “health benefit”, stop and think about what you are doing to your brain and your body, not to mention your future – or lack of one at this rate. Wise up!

  2. The Dictator says:

    I am giving up smoking tomorrow(cigarettes and cannabis)-what benefits can I look forward to?
    ……….and when will they happen approximately?

  3. Richard R says:

    Beneficial uses of cannabis?
    Man has a 5,000 year history of cannabis use. Smoking is a fairly recent development. It is safe, yet we are told it is dangerous and has no beneficial uses. That is not true. I want to find out how people use it and how it benefits them. Is it a medication? If so, how is it used? What legitimate commercial uses does it have? Serious answers, please.

    • Anonymous says:

      Cannabis has many negative side effects but yes it is true that it does have medical purposes. In fact the University of Mississippi has 5 acres of cannabis for “research”.

      Cannabis causes an increase in creativity, stress relief and pain relief. But in my opinion the most beneficial use of cannabis is the food cravings that people get (munchies) because when someone is in the higher stages of a serious disease that causes them to become anorexic they can use cannabis to eat.

      Commercial uses is a completely different issue. Cannabis was prohibited in 1942 because it had no medical use, at this time cannabis in the U.S was not used for medical purpose but rather as hemp, to make rope, sailings and even jeans. When hemp was prohibited the cotton industry then become the leading manufacturer in clothing.

      Now, they tried to synthesize the effects of cannabis in a pill, Marinol, which is 99% THC. This is HORRIBLE. The most potent cannabis, ready to smoke is about 14-17% THC, but the reason cannabis works and gives you the high when you smoke, eat, drink, etc.. is because of CBN (cannabinoids). Marinol has no CBN which would mean that THC is the only chemical in the drug, this will knock you out for five days, will not give you hunger and takes about five hours to begin working.

      I’ve never smoked, eaten or used cannabis, but i had to research it thoroughly.

      Hope this helped :)

  4. Anonymous says:

    Should people caught smoking cannabis have their benefits taken off them?
    It’s funny how cannabis doesn’t cause problems,and yet,I know sooo many people who haven’t worked in ages,who seem to never have hardly worked,and they all have this cannabis smoking habit.Why didn’t they give it up when they grew up just like the rest of us?

    • Anonymous says:

      how the hell do people on benefits afford to smoke cannabis!!!!
      i work full time and dont have spare cash for luxuries!!
      so yes take it off them

  5. Trailerpark Pirate says:

    The Legalization of Cannabis: Applications and Benefits?
    February 28, 2006The Legalization of Cannabis: Applications and Benefits
    Cannabis and humans have shared a long history together. The first known evidence of the use of cannabis in a human culture is from the Middle East and originates almost 6,500 years ago. The cannabis plant is useful in all its varieties and can be used in its flowered form to relieve chronic pain. There is no question that the use and exploration of the cannabis plant should be legalized because of the plants many beneficial applications. The various beneficial aspects of the plant are its medical uses, its industrial usage, and its use in agriculture, but all must first be met with knowledge of the nature of cannabis’ psychoactive properties.
    Cannabis is known foremost for its psychoactive properties. “Of all plants, it [cannabis] is the only genus known to produce chemical substances known as cannabinoids. The cannabinoids are the psychoactive ingredient of marijuana; they are what gets them high.” (Frank 21) It should be noted that from this point the terms cannabis and marijuana will be used interchangeably. This is also what made its use so prolific in ancient times; the high was considered to be a gift from God. Currently, due to its status as a Class 1 narcotic, the cannabis plant is primarily cultivated for this reason alone. In order to agree that the plant should be legalized, one must understand the experience while high, the dangers inherent as well as the benefits.
    The experience that a user of cannabis experiences after smoking the flowered tops of the plant is extremely euphoric. The intensity of the high is directly proportional to the amount ingested; however, the effects at low doses can range from a sense of well-being to talkativeness and appreciation of music. In high dosages, hallucinations may occur, along with a distortion of your perception of time. The effects of inhaling cannabis are extremely safe, for the most part. Unlike alcohol, for example, there have been no known overdoses from cannabis, although users of the plant may experience mild to extreme discomfort if they ingest too much for their tolerance level. The government’s main reason to make the cannabis plant illegal was due to its addictive properties. In the 1936 film Reefer Madness, marijuana cigarettes were portrayed as being more harmful then normal cigarettes, more addictive even than heroin. However, most medical studies have shown marijuana’s addictive potential is merely psychological. In other words, there is no physical addiction, but you can get hooked psychologically. This can be compared to a person who cannot stop eating candy bars. They are considered to be addicted, but there are no physical symptoms. One of the truly valid points that the opponents of the legalization of cannabis make is that the smoke is carcinogenic. However, it is common knowledge that the cannabis plant can be cooked or mixed with alcohol to remove the active ingredients, making it possible to ingest the active substances without the carcinogenic effects of smoking. Since 1975, researchers have been able to isolate the cannabinoids in marijuana, and recently doctors have been prescribing pills known as SativeX, which give users the same effects as smoking the plant. These alternatives to smoking bode well for the medical future of the plant, allowing users to experience the pain-numbing effects without having to smoke.
    The medical potential of the cannabis plant is phenomenal. In a statement by Mel Frank, one of the world’s foremost leaders on the use of the cannabis plant, he says “The Pén-ts’ao Ching, [the oldest pharmacopoeia known] prescribes marijuana preparations for malaria, beriberi, constipation, rheumatic pains, absent-mindedness, and female disorders.” (Frank 7) Even the cannabis root can be ground up into a paste and applied to broken bones to relieve pain. Users of the plant also experience what’s known as the munchies, which can be useful to stimulate appetite. When ingested, it can also be used as a nausea suppressant. Because of all of the potential arguments for its legalization, the impact of the cannabis plant in today’s medical and legal environment cannot go unmentioned.
    Despite the plants many uses, it was illegalized in the United States during the year of 1914, by the Harrison Narcotic Act. Since then, its use in any aspect, including the medical profession, has been frowned upon by the U.S. Government. The only exception to this occurred during World War II, when the government planted fields of cannabis to supply naval rope needs. Today it remains a listed as a “Schedule 1 Drug, defined as having ‘No acceptable Medical use in treatment in the United States.’ This remains the case, but in 1973 Oregon decriminalized the possession of small amounts of marijuana; since then, 10 other states have followed suit, making the penalty for possession of small amounts of marijuana equivalent to that of a m

    • Anonymous says:

      Errr…This really isn’t a question but I support the legalization of Marijauna for medical use because then if you grow your own 6 (I think that’s the legal limits) plants, you know you won’t be smoking nasty cut.

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