
How Marijuana is Used
Most
users roll loose marijuana into a cigarette (called a "joint").
The drug can also be smoked in a water pipe, called a "bong."
Some users mix marijuana into foods or use it to brew a tea.
Marijuana cigarettes or blunts often include crack cocaine,
a combination known by various street names, such as "primos"
or "woolies." Joints and blunts often are dipped in
PCP and are called "happy sticks," "wicky sticks,"
"love boat," or "tical." Hash users either
smoke the drug in a pipe or mix it with tobacco and smoke it
as a cigarette. Lately, young people have a new method for smoking
marijuana: they slice open cigars and replace the tobacco with
marijuana, making what's called a "blunt." When the
blunt is smoked with a 40 oz. bottle of malt liquor, it is called
a "B-40."
Effects of smoking marijuana are felt within minutes, reach
their peak in 10 to 30 minutes, and may linger for two or three
hours. The effects experienced often depend upon the experience
and expectations of the individual user as well as the activity
of the drug itself. Low doses tend to induce a sense of well-being
and a dreamy state of relaxation, which may be accompanied by
a more vivid sense of sight, smell, taste, and hearing as well
as by subtle alterations in thought formation and expression.
This state if intoxication may not be noticeable to an observer.
However, driving, occupational or household accidents may result
from a distortion of time and space relationships and impaired
coordination.
Stronger doses intensify reactions. The individual may experience
shifting sensory imagery, rapidly fluctuating emotions, a flight
of fragmentary thoughts with disturbed associations, an altered
sense of self-identity, impaired memory, and a dulling of attention
despite an illusion of heightened insight. High doses may result
in image distortion, a loss of personal identity, and fantasies
and hallucinations.
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