DocNicksche
Well-Known Member
Hi there!
I'm not sure if there already is a thread like this, or if I posted it in the right place...
Lately I'm wondering, if cannabis consumers are - lets say "treated" - the same by scociety (generally non-consumers) anywhere in the world? Or, if there is a significant difference between legal or illegal areas?
Here's my story regarding this:
I'm a 40 years old guy from Europe. I live and have lived in an illegal area my whole life. I had my first experience with cannabis when I was 12 or 13, so pretty early. I mean, I'm not sure if that even was weed we had back then! It was terrible and I don't think I felt anything... I smoked occasionally then and stopped until my later teens, when I started smoking on a daily basis. And I haven't stopped ever since. It became part of my Life and although I lived in illegal area, I never really cared about hiding that I love weed
This would work in private life, but not in professionell Work Life. I studied bioengineering and work for international companies in the medical sector. And there, I strictly have to hide "my hobbies" through the years and different companies, there were very rare cases, I would be "close enough" with a work friend, to share them. Don't get me wrong, I'm a wake and bake guy and I smoke/vape before work all the time. They just never saw me sober!
And, also in private life, you have those people, who just don't understand anything about cannabis and just see it as a drug... sometimes, generally with a lot of explaining and discussion, you can convince someone that it isn't a bad thing, only the law makes it one. But these cases are rare! And I don't want to explain myself to everyone.
So, you are kind of forced to separate work and private life pretty strictly and, also in private life, you somehow can only be your "real self" with a couple of people who are either likeminded, or generally just accept the fact you consume. For others, you may start to seem to separate yourself and may be seen as a weirdo especially, when reaching a certain age, where those other people believe they became adults and you're still stuck
I'm not sure if there already is a thread like this, or if I posted it in the right place...
Lately I'm wondering, if cannabis consumers are - lets say "treated" - the same by scociety (generally non-consumers) anywhere in the world? Or, if there is a significant difference between legal or illegal areas?
Here's my story regarding this:
I'm a 40 years old guy from Europe. I live and have lived in an illegal area my whole life. I had my first experience with cannabis when I was 12 or 13, so pretty early. I mean, I'm not sure if that even was weed we had back then! It was terrible and I don't think I felt anything... I smoked occasionally then and stopped until my later teens, when I started smoking on a daily basis. And I haven't stopped ever since. It became part of my Life and although I lived in illegal area, I never really cared about hiding that I love weed
This would work in private life, but not in professionell Work Life. I studied bioengineering and work for international companies in the medical sector. And there, I strictly have to hide "my hobbies" through the years and different companies, there were very rare cases, I would be "close enough" with a work friend, to share them. Don't get me wrong, I'm a wake and bake guy and I smoke/vape before work all the time. They just never saw me sober!
And, also in private life, you have those people, who just don't understand anything about cannabis and just see it as a drug... sometimes, generally with a lot of explaining and discussion, you can convince someone that it isn't a bad thing, only the law makes it one. But these cases are rare! And I don't want to explain myself to everyone.
So, you are kind of forced to separate work and private life pretty strictly and, also in private life, you somehow can only be your "real self" with a couple of people who are either likeminded, or generally just accept the fact you consume. For others, you may start to seem to separate yourself and may be seen as a weirdo especially, when reaching a certain age, where those other people believe they became adults and you're still stuck