Last night, my friend and I were hanging out with another friend of ours. She wanted to smoke some weed so my other friend knew where we could get someone. We ended up getting synthetic weed or something, he didn't tell us exactly what it was. In the past, I've done weed twice and synthetic once and nothing has ever happened to me. But last night, after 3 really big hits or so, I was completely gone. I felt like I was in another world. I felt people touching me and hearing funny things. My friend took me outside and I started crying for like a minute and then stopped. I remember very little from last night, but I know I threw up whatever I ate before. Why did this happen if nothing has happened before?
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yeah i think it effects everyone differently, but yeah it sounds normal to me but not the crying part, i know it makes you hear things and could make you feel like crying when you smoke it depressed, but if you smoke way to much of it you could feel like puking after...maby because you aren't a really big stonner like i am and you are just starting to smoke the herb
i even puked, cried, and herd sounds that weren't real when i smoked weed. but not all the time i only cried once while high and only puked once but yeah you do hear alot of stuff that aren't real
TRY SMOKING IT AGAIN see if it does happen again if not keep smokin
i even puked, cried, and herd sounds that weren't real when i smoked weed. but not all the time i only cried once while high and only puked once but yeah you do hear alot of stuff that aren't real
TRY SMOKING IT AGAIN see if it does happen again if not keep smokin
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Quit smoking; it is bad for your health. The normal side effect of smoking anything is lung damage.
It is not another world; it is your perceptual world that your brain is making, no different from any other imaginary world you create from mental contents, cognition, and sense perceptions.
If you think some unknown drug is affecting your behavior so as to be less in touch with reality, then you are messing up your mind. Too bad for you; that is your karma in action.
Try this:
MINDFULNESS MEDITATION
Consciousness is probably a function of a cognitive neural network processing both sensory data and memory. Sentient experience can be subjectively deconstructed into four foundations of mindfulness:
1. Mindfulness of body.
2. Mindfulness of feelings as pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral (physical sensation).
3. Mindfulness of state of mind (attitude, emotion).
4. Mindfulness of contents of mind (ideas, learned skills, memory, mental images, beliefs).
For about 20 minutes: Sit in a comfortable position (some prefer with crossed legs, back erect) with as little noise and distraction as possible. Focus your mind only on your breathing (i.e., in breath, out breath, short breath, long breath, etc.)
As you do this there will be the usual background of a continuous stream of thoughts, random or specific ideas, and images, feelings that come and go. Any of these can distract you, but you can just ignore them. There is no need to suppress any of it. These are the things that usually drive your perceptions and behavior, even your dreams.
It is not another world; it is your perceptual world that your brain is making, no different from any other imaginary world you create from mental contents, cognition, and sense perceptions.
If you think some unknown drug is affecting your behavior so as to be less in touch with reality, then you are messing up your mind. Too bad for you; that is your karma in action.
Try this:
MINDFULNESS MEDITATION
Consciousness is probably a function of a cognitive neural network processing both sensory data and memory. Sentient experience can be subjectively deconstructed into four foundations of mindfulness:
1. Mindfulness of body.
2. Mindfulness of feelings as pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral (physical sensation).
3. Mindfulness of state of mind (attitude, emotion).
4. Mindfulness of contents of mind (ideas, learned skills, memory, mental images, beliefs).
For about 20 minutes: Sit in a comfortable position (some prefer with crossed legs, back erect) with as little noise and distraction as possible. Focus your mind only on your breathing (i.e., in breath, out breath, short breath, long breath, etc.)
As you do this there will be the usual background of a continuous stream of thoughts, random or specific ideas, and images, feelings that come and go. Any of these can distract you, but you can just ignore them. There is no need to suppress any of it. These are the things that usually drive your perceptions and behavior, even your dreams.