I Smoke Cigarettes to Help Me Quit Marijuana and It Doesn’t Work?

Question by Mozin: I smoke cigarettes to help me quit marijuana and it doesn’t work?
I decided a while back that I should smoke a cigarette every time after I smoke a marijuana bowl. This would help me to help me quit smoking marijuana. I heard cigarettes are gross and give you lung cancer so I don’t like it at all. It’s not working though, whats the best way to stop?

Best answer:

Answer by Edward
I’m not trying to be mean, but that really is the dumbest thing I have heard in a long time.

Tobacco products contain one of the most addictive substances on the planet. Smoking cigarettes is only going to get you ADDICTED TO CIGARETTES!!!

First, quit using all tobacco products. When you get that worked out of your system try quitting marijuana. You may need help with tobacco.

Marijuana addiction is primarily mental/psychological. If you don’t feel you can quit it alone, ask for help from a councilor, therapist, doctor, adult family member, or religious leader. If there is a for addictions like Narcotics Anonymous near you, going to meeting might help. Just make sure it isn’t one where they replace their drug of choice with cigarettes and coffee!

What do you think? Answer below!

 


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2 Responses to I Smoke Cigarettes to Help Me Quit Marijuana and It Doesn’t Work?

  • Ashley says:

    I think there is something wrong with your logic and that if that’s how you think then you shouldn’t be smoking anything.

    Cigarettes kill and Marijuana numbs your mind.

  • Metalplanttag says:

    The realty is that weed as a drug is addictive, but it has one property that makes it easier to quit, the drug remains in the body for many days after using so there is a natural weaning process as the drug is slowly released back into the blood stream after the last use. For a serious addictive syndrome to develop the use generally has to be heavy (once a day or more) and for a prolonged period. The brain builds a tolerance the toxic effects with steady usage, so over time more has to be used to get that high.

    You may want to read this document http://www.kap.samhsa.gov/products/brochures/pdfs/bmdc.pdf which I have reproduced a small amount below.
    “Studies have demonstrated that tolerance and withdrawal develop with daily use of large doses of marijuana or THC (Haney et al. 1999a; Jones and Benowitz 1976; Kouri and Pope 2000). About 15 percent of people who acknowledge moderate-to-heavy use reported a withdrawal syndrome with symptoms of nervousness, sleep disturbance, and appetite change (Wiesbeck et al. 1996).
    Many adults who are marijuana dependent report affective (i.e., mood) symptoms and craving during periods of abstinence when they present for treatment (Budney et al. 1999). The contribution of physical dependence to chronic marijuana use is not yet clear, but the existence of a dependence syndrome is fairly certain. An Epidemiological Catchment Area study conducted in Baltimore found that 6 percent of people who used marijuana met Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) (American Psychiatric Association 1994), criteria for dependence and 7 percent met DSM-IV criteria for substance abuse (Rosenberg and Anthony 2001). Coffey and colleagues (2002) found that persons who use marijuana more than once a week are at significant risk for dependence. In the 1990s, the number of people who sought treatment for marijuana dependence more than doubled (Budney et al. 2001). Therefore, a large group of adults who smoke marijuana is dependent and may need and benefit from treatment.”
    · The greatest risk of harm from cannabis use is in young people and those who are pregnant or have serious mental illness
    · A tenth of cannabis users develop dependence, with three quarters of them experiencing withdrawal symptoms on cessation
    · Most dependent users have concurrent dependence on tobacco, which increases the health risks and worsens outcomes for cannabis treatment
    http://www.bmj.com/content/340/bmj.c1571.full

    Marijuana abuse accounts for up to 20 percent of admissions into drug treatment programs.

    According to Budney et al., the withdrawal syndrome associated with cannabis use is similar to that for tobacco but of lesser magnitude than withdrawal from other drugs like opiates or alcohol.

    Cannabis Withdrawal from the American Psychiatric Association:

    A. Cessation of cannabis use that has been heavy and prolonged

    B. 3 or more of the following develop within several days after Criterion A

    1. Irritability, anger or aggression

    2. Nervousness or anxiety

    3. Sleep difficulty (insomnia)

    4. Decreased appetite or weight loss

    5. Restlessness

    6. Depressed mood

    7. Physical symptoms causing significant discomfort: must report at least one of the following: stomach pain, shakiness/tremors, sweating, fever, chills, headache

    C. The symptoms in Criterion B cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning

    D. The symptoms are not due to a general medical condition and are not better accounted for by another disorder

    First, direct comparisons of cannabis withdrawal with tobacco withdrawal have consistently found that the magnitude and time course of the cannabis withdrawal effects appear comparable to the well-established tobacco withdrawal syndrome. Second, cannabis users report using cannabis to “relieve withdrawal symptoms” suggesting that withdrawal might contribute to ongoing abuse of cannabis. Third, a substantial proportion of adults and adolescents in treatment for cannabis dependence acknowledge moderate to severe withdrawal symptoms, and some complain that they make cessation more difficult. In fact, cannabis users report having relapsed to cannabis use or initiating use of other drugs (e.g. tranquilizers) to provide relief from cannabis withdrawal symptoms. Last, persons living with cannabis users observe significant withdrawal effects suggesting that such symptoms are disruptive to daily living.

    Thus, cue-elicited craving for marijuana activates the reward neurocircuitry associated with the neuropathology of addiction, and the magnitude of activation of these structures is associated with severity of cannabis-related problems. These findings may inform the development of treatment strategies for cannabis dependence. – http://www.pnas.org/content/106/31/13016.abstract?sid=ca43e649-7ac1-4b18-94ac-ac62e23b6cea

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