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If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee
#51

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (02-25-2012 04:56 PM)houston Wrote:  

Mixx was smoking flavored tobacco.

In every single city, with different people who did not know each other, and years apart?

C'mon man. [Image: dodgy.gif]

Weed is bullshit. Wanna get high? Have a mother, 35,and daughter, 17, suck your cock at the same time (i have actually done this)...then come and talk to me about your weed.


MIxx
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#52

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (02-25-2012 10:12 PM)oldnemesis Wrote:  

Quote: (02-25-2012 02:35 PM)TudoBem Wrote:  

My definition of beta worker bee encompasses a strong majority of the population.
Alphas are born to control betas.

Leadership is not control. It is taking the risks and accepting the responsibility. If you're leading your company and it goes south, for you it will be a disaster. But everyone else will just find a new job. If your company get sued, you may be on the hook. Your employees will just shrug and move on. And so on.

Quote:Quote:

If you are a young pup and don't have the startup cash or credit history to secure a loan and start a business, then you need to get a labor job preferably in construction which gets you out in the open air, and save every goddamn penny you can, and then never work for anyone else, ever again.

And then you'll have the toughest boss in the world - yourself.

I seek risk and accept it, and thrive on it. Win, lose, or draw, my life is goddamn interesting.
And I strongly disagree with your last statement. Being my own boss is the only way I am comfortable living. It's the only way I am ever motivated to reach for my full potential. Why would I bust my ass so some turd living in Miami or Monaco gets a bit richer?

Dude, don't become an institutional man.

Don't become an institutional man




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#53

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

All I get with stoned is drowsy, hungry, and sometimes really bad sleep paralysis and anxiety.
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#54

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Tudobem- I was just giving my opinion, no need to start slinging beta this beta that around.

& not to sound arrogant but I never have and never will be at a lack of inner game. Inner game is my game. I look back on where I've come from and what I've been able to do so far in my time on this planet... There's no better feeling than that. And you might hate on my mindset when it comes to money but for my age, and the fact that I start truly hustling next year.. I've got more excess cash than most people 5-10 years older than me

We often like to think that being alpha with money is dropping the cash on the car, the lavish vacations, custom suits. Sorry to break it to you man but being alpha with your money is being smart with it. You don't get rich by spending big young. And 'little things' add up.

Still, no female would ever label me as frugal, haven't had any complaints there and don't foresee having any. I'm not cheap when it comes to females. Regardless I don't have anything to prove to anyone.

You invest and turn your money into more money into more money. And even more important than being smart with your money, is being confident and supporting your approach when somebody (like you in this case) busts your balls for it.

I have friends who drop more $ on weed in a year than I do on all of my 'entertainment expenses' combined


Now to the actual weed topic......

It is a gateway drug. Everybody starts with weed, then moves on to harder shit. Or do highschool and middleschool kids start out snorting coke and smoking meth straight away? Just saying man.

I don't have a problem with weed at all, in fact I think it should be legalized. But when it comes to this debate, most people put it up on a pedestal and refuse to think that there is anything negative about it.. at all. And then they take it personally when you try to play devil's advocate..............
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#55

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

i've seen weed fuck up to many of my friends lives. All of them wish they never got into it as they got older. it is an addictive drug whether people want to admit it or not.
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#56

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (02-26-2012 11:56 AM)rozayINTL Wrote:  

Tudobem- I was just giving my opinion, no need to start slinging beta this beta that around.

& not to sound arrogant but I never have and never will be at a lack of inner game. Inner game is my game. I look back on where I've come from and what I've been able to do so far in my time on this planet... There's no better feeling than that. And you might hate on my mindset when it comes to money but for my age, and the fact that I start truly hustling next year.. I've got more excess cash than most people 5-10 years older than me

We often like to think that being alpha with money is dropping the cash on the car, the lavish vacations, custom suits. Sorry to break it to you man but being alpha with your money is being smart with it. You don't get rich by spending big young. And 'little things' add up.

Still, no female would ever label me as frugal, haven't had any complaints there and don't foresee having any. I'm not cheap when it comes to females. Regardless I don't have anything to prove to anyone.

You invest and turn your money into more money into more money. And even more important than being smart with your money, is being confident and supporting your approach when somebody (like you in this case) busts your balls for it.

I have friends who drop more $ on weed in a year than I do on all of my 'entertainment expenses' combined


Now to the actual weed topic......

It is a gateway drug. Everybody starts with weed, then moves on to harder shit. Or do highschool and middleschool kids start out snorting coke and smoking meth straight away? Just saying man.

I don't have a problem with weed at all, in fact I think it should be legalized. But when it comes to this debate, most people put it up on a pedestal and refuse to think that there is anything negative about it.. at all. And then they take it personally when you try to play devil's advocate..............

-1

Fail.


http://scienceblog.com/12116/study-says-...eway-drug/

Marijuana is not a “gateway” drug that predicts or eventually leads to substance abuse, suggests a 12-year University of Pittsburgh study. Moreover, the study’s findings call into question the long-held belief that has shaped prevention efforts and governmental policy for six decades and caused many a parent to panic upon discovering a bag of pot in their child’s bedroom.

The Pitt researchers tracked 214 boys beginning at ages 10-12, all of whom eventually used either legal or illegal drugs. When the boys reached age 22, they were categorized into three groups: those who used only alcohol or tobacco, those who started with alcohol and tobacco and then used marijuana (gateway sequence) and those who used marijuana prior to alcohol or tobacco (reverse sequence).

Nearly a quarter of the study population who used both legal and illegal drugs at some point – 28 boys – exhibited the reverse pattern of using marijuana prior to alcohol or tobacco, and those individuals were no more likely to develop a substance use disorder than those who followed the traditional succession of alcohol and tobacco before illegal drugs, according to the study, which appears in this month’s issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry.

“The gateway progression may be the most common pattern, but it’s certainly not the only order of drug use,” said Ralph E. Tarter, Ph.D., professor of pharmaceutical sciences at the University of Pittsburgh School of Pharmacy and lead author of the study. “In fact, the reverse pattern is just as accurate for predicting who might be at risk for developing a drug dependence disorder.”

In addition to determining whether the gateway hypothesis was a better predictor of substance abuse than competing theories, the investigators sought to identify characteristics that distinguished users in the gateway sequence from those who took the reverse path. Out of the 35 variables they examined, only three emerged to be differentiating factors: Reverse pattern users were more likely to have lived in poor physical neighborhood environments, had more exposure to drugs in their neighborhoods and had less parental involvement as young children. Most importantly, a general inclination for deviance from sanctioned behaviors, which can become evident early in childhood, was strongly associated with all illicit drug use, whether it came in the gateway sequence, or the reverse.

While the gateway theory posits that each type of drug is associated with certain specific risk factors that cause the use of subsequent drugs, such as cigarettes or alcohol leading to marijuana, this study’s findings indicate that environmental aspects have stronger influence on which type of substance is used. That is, if it’s easier for a teen to get his hands on marijuana than beer, then he’ll be more likely to smoke pot. This evidence supports what’s known as the common liability model, an emerging theory that states the likelihood that someone will transition to the use of illegal drugs is determined not by the preceding use of a particular drug but instead by the user’s individual tendencies and environmental circumstances.

“The emphasis on the drugs themselves, rather than other, more important factors that shape a person’s behavior, has been detrimental to drug policy and prevention programs,” Dr. Tarter said. “To become more effective in our efforts to fight drug abuse, we should devote more attention to interventions that address these issues, particularly to parenting skills that shape the child’s behavior as well as peer and neighborhood environments.”

Indeed, according to the study, interventions focusing on behavior modification may be more effective prevention tactics than current anti-drug initiatives. For example, providing guidance to parents – particularly those in high-risk neighborhoods – on how to boost their caregiving skills and foster bonding with their children, could have a measurable effect on a child’s likelihood to smoke marijuana. Also, early identification of children who exhibit antisocial tendencies could allow for interventions before drug use even begins.

Although this research has significant implications for drug abuse prevention approaches, Dr. Tarter notes that the study has some limitations. First, as only male behaviors were studied, further investigation should explore if the results apply to women as well. Also, the examination of behaviors in phases beyond alcohol and marijuana consumption in the gateway series will be necessary.
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#57

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (02-26-2012 12:00 PM)velkrum Wrote:  

i've seen weed fuck up to many of my friends lives. All of them wish they never got into it as they got older. it is an addictive drug whether people want to admit it or not.

-1

Fail

http://www.cannabismd.net/addiction/

Addiction is generally defined as a physical or psychological dependence on a substance, especially alcohol or other drugs, with use of increasing amounts.[1] For the sake of clarification, physical addiction is covered separately from psychological dependence on this website. (See also the section titled Dependence.) Scientific research on cannabinoid compounds has not demonstrated a strong association with biochemical addiction. In their exhaustive quest for evidence of addiction, federally funded researchers have resorted to relying on questionable data, such as the withdrawal symptoms reported by children who were referred to social service and criminal justice agencies. These researchers may argue that the court-ordered testimony of troubled youths “proves” that marijuana is addictive;[2] however, such questionable data is not scientific evidence of chemical addiction. In another case, an addictions researcher reported on his experiment in which rats displayed withdrawal symptoms upon a sudden discontinuation of THC. Critics point out that the reported withdrawal effects were created with very high doses of THC, and by the introduction of a second drug, a THC-blocking agent used to trigger the withdrawal symptoms. Withdrawal symptoms are not found in rats without using a THC-blocking agent,[3] and even among troubled youths, withdrawal symptoms are relatively mild and of short duration. [4], [5]

Dopamine, a neurochemical produced in the central cortex of the brain, is thought to provide the brain’s “reward system.” Interference with dopamine production is considered a major symptom of biochemical addiction. While two studies alleged a minor link between THC and dopamine production in the brains of rats,[6] these were refuted by several subsequent studies showing that cannabis does not radically affect dopamine levels.[7], [8], [9] In assessing the importance of a possible link between cannabis use and dopamine levels, it should be noted that dopamine activity has also been detected in the brains of video game players who were paid money every time they reached a new level of the game.[10] Clearly, minor evidence of dopamine activity is not the sloe indicator of addiction. If it were, than all pleasurable activities would be defined as addictive. Moreover, the scientific evidence that cannabis use produces any amount of increased dopamine activity remains entirely inconclusive. Assessing the scientific literature on marijuana’s addictive potential for the Criminal Justice Commission of Australia, Peter Nelson reported, “… involvement with the ventromedial striatum suggests connections to dopamine circuits. However, the expected reinforcing properties usually associated with these dopamine pathways are difficult to demonstrate in the case of THC.”[11]

Cannabinoids bond to anandamide nerve receptors that are primarily concentrated in the frontal lobes of the brain,[12], [13] rather than in the central cortex where dopamine is produced. THC is mild, with effects resembling those of caffeine or chocolate rather than classic addictive drugs such as alcohol, amphetamines, cocaine, opiates, and nicotine. In fact, a 1996 report from Daniele Piomelli of the Neurosciences Institute in San Diego indicated that chocolate contains three compounds that are chemically similar to cannabinoids. Studies involving rats showed that cannabinoid chemicals found in chocolate amplify the effect of natural cannabinoids found in the brain. The article published in Nature concluded that these compounds may, “participate in the subjective feelings of eating chocolate.”[14] In the April 1999 issue of Nature Neuroscience, Piomelli and colleagues at the University of California, Irvine reported that anandamide acts as an inhibitor of dopamine neurons.[15] Far from triggering chemical addiction in the brain, THC, the natural anandamide analogue, may actually help to balance erratic dopamine levels.

The common scientific criteria for determining the addictive quality of a drug are examples of animal studies in which subjects self-administer an addictive substance. When given the choice between food and narcotics, for example, animals commonly self-administer the drug to the exclusion of all other activity, often starving themselves to death. Unlike heroin, cocaine, and other substances of abuse, there are no clinical studies showing animals self-administering cannabinoid compounds. In 1993, the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment reached this conclusion:

While marijuana produces a feeling of euphoria in humans, in general, animals will not self-administer THC in controlled studies. Also, cannabinoids generally do not lower the threshold needed to get animals to self-stimulate the brain reward system as do other drugs of abuse.[16]

Clinical studies indicate a very low potential for addiction to cannabinoid drugs. In addition, there is no real-world evidence suggesting that THC is chemically addictive.[17] Epidemiological studies show that the large majority of people who try marijuana do not continue to use it on a regular basis. Moreover, the majority of people who ever use cannabis stop using it entirely before the age of thirty. Of an estimated 65 million “experimenters,”[18] only about 0.8% of Americans use cannabis on a daily basis.[19] The fact that millions of Americans have stopped using marijuana voluntarily and without difficulty is strong epidemiological evidence that cannabis is not chemically addictive.

Despite federally funded sociological and scientific findings that marijuana produces only mild dependence in some heavy users,[20], [21] the federal government has officially classified cannabis as a Schedule I substance that has “a high potential for abuse.” Recent research determining that cannabinoids are not chemically addictive and do not have a high potential for abuse forms the basis of a petition filed with the Drug Enforcement Administration. That petition prompted the federal drug agency to enter into a legally binding review of the existing evidence by the US Department of Health and Human Services in 1997.[22] Two years later, investigative authors of the 1999 Institute of Medicine report determined that, “… marijuana was not particularly addictive.”[23] Yet cannabis is still classified as having, “no medical value and a high potential for abuse.” In 1999, Dr. Podrebarac wrote to the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy: “The recently released Institute of Medicine (IOM) study on the medical use of marijuana clearly supports rescheduling it for medical use.” The US Drug Czar’s office refused to comment on the rescheduling issue.

Cannabis authority Tod Mikuriya wrote extensively on the value of cannabis in treating addiction. Consider the following excerpt:

“In 1839, William B. O’Shaughnessy visited cannabis buyers’ centers in India and mingled with the “dissolute and depraved” to learn about the preparations of this social drug for clinical medical trials and found it to be useful in the treatment of tetanus and seizures.

In 1843, Clendinning utilized cannabis substitution for the treatment of alcoholism and opium addiction. Potter recommended full-dose Squibb cannabis extract for withdrawal from opium addiction.

In 1894, the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report recognized the comparative safety of cannabis in its unsurpassed ethnographic studies within different cultures with a concern that if prohibited it would cause the use of more dangerous drugs.

McMeens, citing Fronmueller in 1860, found that the use of cannabis in place of, or combined with, opiates reduced harm from increased dose, tolerance, dependence, and side effects of opiates. In 1897, cannabis was confirmed as useful in the treatment of delirium tremens and as an alternative to opium for analgesia. Dutt independently described the comparative safety of cannabis in Materia medica of the Hindus. Yeo and colleagues warned about addiction to morphine in the treatment of neuralgia and suggested cannabis as an alternative.”

The connection between dependency on drugs and mood disorders may be caused by unsuccessful attempts to self-medicate uncomfortable feelings with the “cure,” causing more harm and aggravation of the underlying condition. Moreau described cannabis as being useful in the treatment of depression in 1845. Throughout both the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, the drug was listed in medical texts and pharmaceutical catalogues for treatment of melancholia or mania.

Notwithstanding some polysubstance abusers who maladaptively combine cannabis with other psychoactives, there appears to be a significant number of persons who have learned that cannabis can totally substitute for other psychoactive drugs.

Following the therapeutic paths of Clendinning, throughout the nineteenth and twentieth century, cannabis was found useful in the treatment of opiate and sedative abuse. Brunton described the use of cannabis for the treatment of opiate dependence or as a substitute when opiates were not tolerated. Shoemaker found cannabis to be used for the cure of opium or chloral habits. Birch advocated for the use of Indian hemp in the treatment of chronic chloral and opium poisoning. Mattison, an early addcition specialist, recommended cannabis as a substitute for morphine and cautioned his fellow physicians about hypodermic use of the opiate.

Alcohol abuse, stimulant, sedative, and opioid abuse and dependence are conditions potentially treatable with cannabis substitution. All of these conditions involve management of mood and emotional reactivity. Although there have been numerous synthetic homologues developed, short-acting psychotropic drugs continue to have high potential for dependency and abuse. The quality of immediacy for mood management would appear to be inseparable from abuse potential but cannabis appears to be the exception because of lesser or milder withdrawal symptoms.

California cannabis center members and patients in my private practice independently rediscovered and confirmed that cannabis is a safer substitute for many prescribed and most nonmedical psychoactive drugs in the control of depression, anger, and anxiety. Cannabis substitution may be a gateway drug back to sobriety and dealing with the underlying psychopathalogic etiologies.[24]


Related sections: Cerebral Effects, Dependence, Tolerance, Treating Addiction

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[1] Taber’s Cyclopedic Medical Dictionary. Philadelphia: F.A. Davis Company, 1987

[2] “US Study: Marijuana is addictive.” Reuters, March 31, 1998

[3] “New Scientist special report on marijuana.” New Scientist, February 21, 1998

[4] “US Study: Marijuana is addictive.” op. cit.

[5] Institute of Medicine, Marijuana and Medicine: Assessing the Science Base. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1999

[6] “Similar effects found in pot, harder drugs.” Maugh, Los Angeles Times, June 27, 1997

[7] Castaneda, et al., “THC does not affect striatal dopamine release: microdialysis in freely moving rats.” 1991

[8] Gifford, Gardner, and Ashby, “The effects of intravenous administration of delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol on the activity of the A 10 dopamine neurons recorded in vivo in anesthetized rats.” Neuropsychopharmacology Vol. 36, No. 2, pp. 96-99, 1997

[9] “The July 1995 Gettman/High Times petition to repeal marijuana prohibition: An extensive review of relevant legal and scientific findings.” Source: http://www.hightimes.com/ht/new/petition...index.html

[10] "Researchers watch dopamine changes in brain of video game players.” Associated Press, May 21, 1998

[11] Nelson, “A Critical Review of the Research Literature Concerning Some Biological and Psychological Effects of Cannabis.” Advisory Committee on Illicit Drugs, Cannabis and the Law in Queensland, pp. 113-152, Source: Schaffer Library of Drug Policy, http://www.druglibrary.org

[12] Piomelli, “Functional role of high-affinity anamdamide transport, as revealed by selective inhibition.” Science, Vol. 277, No. 5329, p. 1094(4), August 22, 1997

[13] Gettman, op. cit. See also: Gettman, “Marijuana and the human brain.” High Times, March 1995

[14] “Chocolate and Cannabinol.” The Washington Post, August 26, 1996

[15] Stein, “Bits and Pieces.” Geriatric Psychiatry News, Issue 3, No. 7, June/July 1999

[16] U.S. Congress OTA, 1993

[17] Grinspoon, Bakalar, Zimmer, and Morgan, “Marijuana Addiction.” Science, Vol. 277, p. 749, August 8, 1997

[18] Annas, “Reefer Madness—The federal response to California’s medical-marijuana law.” The New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 337, No. 6, August 7, 1997

[19] Zimmer and Morgan, Marijuana Myths: Marijuana Facts. New York: The Lindesmith Center, 1997

[20] U.S. Code Congressional and Administrative News, 1970

[21 Institute of Medicine, Marijuana and Medicine: Assessing the Science Base. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1999

[22] “DEA refers marijuana rescheduling petition to HHS.” The Law Offices of Michael Kennedy, NY, 1998

[23] Official report backs medical use of marijuana.” Reuters, March 17, 1999

[24] Mikuriya, “Dependency and Cannabis.” Chapter 20, p. 225-227
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#58

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Tudobem

This whole thread is a fucking fail. You come out with the generalization that if you don't smoke pot you are more likely to be a beta worker bee?

Nice articles.
The best way for you to make your point is by posting a study with 24 citations? Talk about over compensating. I don't blame you, if I was in your position I'd probably do the same thing.
So marijuana is not a gateway drug a couple of totally legitimate studies say so...

For any social issue whether it be for universal health care, oil/gas drilling, tax reform.. there are countless "studies" you can find to make your point. But then again there's common sense as well.
Reply
#59

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (02-26-2012 12:01 AM)MiXX Wrote:  

Quote: (02-25-2012 04:56 PM)houston Wrote:  

Mixx was smoking flavored tobacco.

In every single city, with different people who did not know each other, and years apart?

C'mon man. [Image: dodgy.gif]

Weed is bullshit. Wanna get high? Have a mother, 35,and daughter, 17, suck your cock at the same time (i have actually done this)...then come and talk to me about your weed.


MIxx

Weed can affect people very differently. The times that I've gotten too stoned or did mushrooms were probably the some of the worst in my life.

I'd much rather have tandem BJ from mom and daughter!!
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#60

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (02-26-2012 01:17 PM)rozayINTL Wrote:  

Tudobem

This whole thread is a fucking fail. You come out with the generalization that if you don't smoke pot you are more likely to be a beta worker bee?

Nice articles.
The best way for you to make your point is by posting a study with 24 citations? Talk about over compensating. I don't blame you, if I was in your position I'd probably do the same thing.
So marijuana is not a gateway drug a couple of totally legitimate studies say so...

For any social issue whether it be for universal health care, oil/gas drilling, tax reform.. there are countless "studies" you can find to make your point. But then again there's common sense as well.

It is interesting how some people, when confronted with new information, become aggressive and defensive, rather than appreciating the opportunity to learn something.
Reply
#61

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (02-25-2012 06:34 PM)TudoBem Wrote:  

That is dangerously close to a beta mindset and may indicate you need some work on inner game. I am not hating at all. I just think that instead of worrying about saving money, just worry about increasing your monthly disposable income.

My first post in this thread, I simply gave my 2 cents.

Your response?

1. Stated that my post was the "biggest load of horse shit ever."
2. Saying I was dangerously close to having a beta mindset
3. Suggesting that I need to work on my "inner game."

........
"It is interesting how some people, when confronted with new information, become aggressive and defensive"

Seriously?
Reply
#62

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (02-26-2012 02:53 PM)rozayINTL Wrote:  

Quote: (02-25-2012 06:34 PM)TudoBem Wrote:  

That is dangerously close to a beta mindset and may indicate you need some work on inner game. I am not hating at all. I just think that instead of worrying about saving money, just worry about increasing your monthly disposable income.

My first post in this thread, I simply gave my 2 cents.

Your response?

1. Stated that my post was the "biggest load of horse shit ever."
2. Saying I was dangerously close to having a beta mindset
3. Suggesting that I need to work on my "inner game."

........
"It is interesting how some people, when confronted with new information, become aggressive and defensive"

Seriously?


Sounds like you are way too concerned with what other people think.
Smoke a few hits of some grade A greenery, and relax, you'll live longer.
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#63

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

I don't like to get high because it makes me passive and less talkative. But I keep a stash of weed around. Reason 1: With the right girl you can get high and have a great time. Reason 2: I often suffer from muscle tensions and because of some lactose-intolerance I get digestive problems from time to time. Weed fixes that.

I smoke perhaps once every two weeks. My career is just fine.
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#64

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

I can't believe people in 2012 still think weed is addictive and dangerous. Hilarious. I might be dangerous around some food if its available [Image: wink.gif]
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#65

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

[attachment=4958]
This then
[attachment=4956]
Or for Canadians
[attachment=4957]
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#66

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

There's a difference between caring what others think, and simply calling somebody out when they act like a bitch. No hard feelings, I bet you're a great person to chill with.
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#67

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (02-26-2012 05:47 PM)rozayINTL Wrote:  

There's a difference between caring what others think, and simply calling somebody out when they act like a bitch. No hard feelings, I bet you're a great person to chill with.

[Image: grouphug.gif]
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#68

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (02-25-2012 03:02 PM)MiXX Wrote:  

Quote: (02-25-2012 02:56 PM)the chef Wrote:  

hit a bong

For all yo mofos out there thinking weed gets you high..[Image: bsflag.gif] it does not do shit!!!

What an ignorant comment. Mixx, many people have said that it can take several tries to work...contrary to your opinion it's not a big conspiracy.

If you don't believe us and you're still open minded, have someone bake you some brownies. Once you get high once, you'll get high with every bong hit.

Weed has made my life better in many ways, first and foremost making me happier. If you're mature to handle it, it can be a great tool for self-exploration and appreciation. It's a shame how many people believe the lies and never even get to experience it once. Never getting high on weed is like never getting a blowjob... you're missing out!
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#69

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (02-25-2012 10:34 PM)UrbanNerd Wrote:  

It's utterly incredible how some thing can be linked to being a beta or alpha. After all of my postings on this board I STILL don't know the true definitions....AND DO NOT really care.

Mostly it is a label some people like to apply on themselves. Therefore they try to alter the definition so the label suits them perfectly. They think it is cool being labeled as alpha.

(personally I think I'm beta, even though my wife disagrees with that - but I don't care)
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#70

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

this topic is retarded minus the smoking being awesome part. my least favorite part of job searching is potential drug tests. i will be so fucking high the minute i accept a job offer.
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#71

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (03-02-2012 02:30 AM)STLmatic Wrote:  

this topic is retarded minus the smoking being awesome part. my least favorite part of job searching is potential drug tests. i will be so fucking high the minute i accept a job offer.

Yo STLmatic,

Are you from St. Louis, or do you live there?

If so, what's good on the north side? How about ESTL?

Let's talk shop.

Aloha!
Reply
#72

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Are we really doing a whip and measure session on the effects of weed and it's status as a 'gateway drug'?

When I smoke, I don't get high, I get low; I am in no mood to game and I just wanna chill, mow some food and watch a flick, nothing wrong with that...I won't burn one before I hit the club like some of my friends, I'll burn one after the club, I get too far into my own cabeza when I'm high; its fun when there is no work to be done, girls to chop or things to do, but otherwise it just makes things harder than they need to be.

I have met two people, one guy, one girl, who I have smoked with more than once, and none of this schwag ditch weed either; I'm talking light green fluffy and crystally with the yellow and red hairs; I wanted to eat all the food in the world, they were the same as they always were, no effect. Not everyone who smokes weed gets high, maybe it's genetic, maybe it's exposure, I don't know, I'm not a scientist. I used to be a chronic blaze, like seven times a day, and now I'll cook one once or twice a month with friends or a girl, I have no desire to go out there and find it in the meantime.

As for the 'Gateway Drug' argument...yes and no. Sure it can open your mind into trying other things, but at the same time what you get in to is totally dependent on the crowds you run in; you could smoke weed every day and be oblivious to all other drugs and have no desire to try it, but then some cute chick wants you to pop some E's and fuck her all night and well...you're going to do it. I know people that have smoked and done nothing but smoke for 30 years and tried no other drugs, and I know people that got into other stuff in addition to weed because of the crew they run with, the only constant variable.
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#73

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (03-02-2012 03:57 AM)Nonpareil Wrote:  

'Gateway Drug'

St. Louis is the "Gateway City" which is more the reason to hear what STLmaniac has to say.

Aloha!
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#74

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

I can tell you about STL for game purposes Kona. Don't go there.

HIGH obesity rates, fractured nightlife, cold climate and plain grey and depressing.
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#75

If You Don't Smoke Pot or Have Quit It, You Are More Likely to Be a Beta Worker Bee

Quote: (03-02-2012 07:51 AM)Vicious Wrote:  

I can tell you about STL for game purposes Kona. Don't go there.

HIGH obesity rates, fractured nightlife, cold climate and plain grey and depressing.

You got laid on the East Side though, right?

I used to live there. Was wondering if all the hot spots were still the same. Of course, I'll go in the summer.

When was the last time you were there?

Aloha!
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