Thursday, May 7, 2026
Home Blog Page 385

Cannabis For Tremors — What’s Working Right Now And What’s Not

Tremors are uncontrollable, unintentional movements that affect a limb or a part of it. It’s one of the most common movement disorders and it can happen anywhere in the body. They usually affect the arms, vocal cords, head, legs, and torso.

Tremors can also occur intermittently or during separate times after breaks, but they can also be constant or sporadic. Those at most risk for tremors are older and middle-aged adults but it can happen to people at any age and of any gender. Though tremors are not life-threatening, they tend to be embarrassing and can make life difficult while basic everyday and work tasks challenging and sometimes even impossible.

Tremors are typically caused by problems within parts of the brain that are responsible for movement control. Though there are no known causes for most kinds of tremors, some are inherited genetically. They can also be caused by certain neurological disorders such as strokes, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, or traumatic brain injury.

Parkinson’s Disease: THC Might Help Ease Symptoms
Photo by Astrid860/Getty Images

There are different types of tremors that fall into two categories: resting tremor or action tremor. To treat it, medications are usually prescribed such as beta-blocking drugs, anti-seizure medications, tranquilizers, Botulinum toxins, medications for Parkinson’s disease, ultrasound, and in extreme cases where patients don’t respond to treatment, surgery.

How Cannabis Helps

Studies have shown that cannabis can help with different types of tremors.

The latest study was conducted by researchers from the Department of Neuroscience at the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences from the University of Copenhagen. The results, which were published in the medical journal Nature Neuroscience, revealed that cannabis was beneficial for patients suffering from pathological tremors.

The researchers discovered that the cannabinoids within the plant interact with the astrocyte, a star-shaped cell located in the spinal cord which reduces tremors. For the study, the researchers used a mouse model to demonstrate how cannabis reduces tremors caused by neurodivergent disorders or traumas, which lead to involuntary shaking in the limbs or the head. It affects some 200,000 people a year within the United States alone.

RELATED: Study: CBD Reduces Anxiety And Tremors In Parkinson’s Patients

“We have focused on the disease, essential tremor. It causes involuntary shaking, which can be extremely inhibitory and seriously reduce the patient’s quality of life. However, the cannabinoid might also have a beneficial effect on sclerosis and spinal cord injuries, for example, which also cause involuntary shaking,” explains Jean-Francois Perrier, PhD.

“We discovered that an injection with the cannabinoid WIN55,212-2 into the spinal cord turns on the astrocytes in the spinal cord and prompts them to release substance adenosine, which subsequently reduces nerve activity and thus the undesired shaking. These findings may result in the development of targeted treatment with little or no side effects. In probing astrocytes to understand the biological effects of cannabis, the researchers take a novel approach as earlier studies have focused primarily on neurons,” he says.

“One might imagine a new approach to medical cannabis for shaking, where you – during the treatment of cannabis-based medicinal products – target the treatment either at the spinal cord or the astrocytes – or, at best, the astrocytes of the spinal cord,” explained Eva Carlsen, PhD, who also worked on the study. “Using this approach will avoid affecting the neurons in the brain responsible for our memory and cognitive abilities, and we would be able to offer patients suffering from involuntary shaking effective treatment without exposing them to any of the most problematic side effects of medical cannabis.,” she says.”

RELATED: Parkinson’s Disease: THC Might Help Ease Symptoms

Another study, this time from January 2020, found that one dose of CBD was beneficial in reducing anxiety and tremors among people with Parkinson’s disease. These tremors were found to be triggered by anxiety.

Parkinson's Patients
Photo by TheDigitalArtist via Pixabay

This is not surprising since CBD is a well-known anxiolytic, but milder treatment options without side effects are necessary because Parkinson’s tends to affect the older population. CBD has been shown to be safe and have minimal effects, making it an excellent treatment alternative. “This is the first study that shows the anxiolytic effects of CBD in patients with PD and its ability in attenuation of the tremor amplitude in anxiogenic situations,” says the researchers.

Dr. Allan Frankel MD even blogs about his experience of a cannabinoid known as THC-V found to be extremely effective in helping his 70-year old patient who was struggling with essential tremors. According to him, it was the most severe type of essential tremors that he had come across in his 39 years of work. Because it was so extreme, the patient was hardly able to walk and kept getting thrown off by the tremors, unable to swallow food and even write her name.

RELATED: Marijuana And Parkinson’s Disease: What New Research Uncovered

Within 24 hours of consuming sublingual THC-V, she displayed almost normal speech while showing that she had been able to gain better control of her tremors. She was also able to eat, which shows how cannabis can be life-saving for many. He also notes that the THC-V was also effective in taking the edge off the THC effects.

Using CBD For Tremors

When medicating with cannabis for tremors, stay away from THC which is not recommended for the elderly population especially those who do not want to get high. CBD is different, though if you’re younger you can feel free to experiment with products that have a combination of CBD and THC.

CBD is extremely helpful in calming down the body and mind, which is why it’s so beneficial for anxiety reduction, convulsions, stress and anxiety, and of course, tremors. For this reason, we’re seeing a rise in the use of CBD for Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, and other similar disorders that can cause tremors.

This article originally appeared on Cannabis.net and has been reposted with permission.

4 Ways Cannabis Is Becoming A Greener Industry

It’s not easy being green, or is it? In honor of Earth Month, cannabis companies look closely at their environmental impact.

An industry revolving around growing plants seems like it would be ‘green,’ but cannabis cultivation and distribution is energy and resource-intensive. Cultivators tend to use hundreds of plastic tubs and fiberglass containers to grow these plants and need to use lots of water and electricity in order to keep an operation running. Legal cannabis production in the United States consumes enough electricity annually to power 92,500 homes for a year, and that number will only increase as the industry expands.

According to the Southwest Energy Efficiency Project (SWEEP), indoor cultivation operations utilize ten times more energy per square foot than a typical office building. The nature of growing cannabis is complex and for the most part, incredibly wasteful, but between regulations around cultivation and child-proof packaging, cannabis companies ironically have fairly limited options for “going green.” 

To truly make a difference, we must start with restructuring various policies in place. Non-profits in the cannabis space and agricultural world have an eye on this issue and are looking for solutions. The Resource Innovation Institute (RII) is a non-profit organization with a mission to advance resource efficiency to cultivate a better agricultural future. Yesterday, RII released its ‘Cannabis Energy & Environment Policy Primer For Federal, State and Local Policy Makers and Regulators’ providing detailed information and guidance on energy and environmental operational matters. This is meant to help policymakers who may want to consider how plant waste can be processed through methods like composting or decreasing the impact on landfills. 

Just as changing regulations for a Schedule 1 substance is ongoing, the cannabis industry is also focused today on adopting and advancing new methods and technologies to make a positive impact for the industry’s tomorrow.

Adopt Sustainable Cultivation Methods

Cannabis cultivation can have a range of environmental impacts, from air quality to land use to light pollution and more. Lightshade, a vertically integrated dispensary chain in Colorado reduced its cultivation’s water usage by 1.2 million gallons this year by introducing a water recirculation system. This system recycles and treats captured irrigation water from the plants, increasing water use efficiency and reducing the burden on the municipal water system. Nick Drury and Dan Banks, Lightshade Directors of Cultivation Operations, have made sustainability a mission in Lightshade’s cultivations. 

RELATED: Cannabis Companies Begin To Embrace Sustainability

Last week, Lightshade began working with Cascade Energy and Resource Innovations to identify better energy management practices at Lightshade’s five indoor and greenhouse cultivation facilities. By executing the Xcel Energy Strategic Energy Management Program, Lightshade is hoping to gain valuable insight on how cannabis cultivation facilities use energy and ways to improve energy use practices. This is the first program to truly illuminate where cultivation facilities can reduce waste, enabling companies to reduce energy costs or increase energy efficiency. 

Energy is generally the highest controllable cost for indoor growers. Indoor cannabis cultivation uses significant amounts of energy, mostly driven by intense horticultural lighting, heating ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC), and dehumidification systems. One technology several cultivators lean on is switching to LED lighting. These solutions can not only improve THC levels and yields, they also contribute to a 37% savings in lighting energy consumption and 25% overall energy savings as reported in a recent Sacramento Municipal Utility District study on LED technology.

RELATED: Earth Day Marijuana: How To Be Eco-Friendly With Your Weed

Some operations are leaning on new LED light innovations to conserve energy, while others leverage Full Spectrum Light, a combination of the sun and HPS lights. Lost Coast, a new cannabis flower label in Colorado uses this combination because they believe it allows for strong growth and full expression of the plant. Utilizing the sun in tandem with HPS lights also reduces the cultivation’s energy usage. Lost Coast is leveraging clean cultivation processes that take advantage of indigenous microorganisms to produce fertile soils with a high output. No chemical fertilizers that can kill micro-organisms, destroying long-term sustainability potential, or pesticides that can seep into the earth, contaminating soil, water and other vegetation. Instead, they are using hand-made, all-natural plant inputs, using living soil within a natural microbiological ecosystem. 

Will New York’s Cannabis Law Create Sweeping Changes For Its Hemp Industry?
Photo by Remedy Pics via Unsplash

Avoiding pesticides completely and putting in the effort required to bring a living ecosystem into your garden allows Mother Nature to work her magic, effectively strengthening all phases of plant growth. This means a few different things. Not only is the process more sustainable, but there’s also a bit less upkeep required for the cultivator in the end, and more relying on nature to run its course. So what’s the benefit of buying flower grown this way? Higher quality terpene profiles, flavors, aromas, and most importantly, a clean and enjoyable smoking experience. 

Engage Vendors for Sustainable Materials 

Next to toilet paper and paper towels, isopropyl alcohol was also flying off of the shelves during the pandemic. ISO is often used for killing germs on your glass pipe or bowl after a stranger takes a puff, making it an essential part of any group smoke session with friends. Even before rubbing alcohol was out of the picture for everyday use, Moose Labs introduced a germ-preventing solution called the MouthPeace. The MouthPeace is a physician-backed device made for a safer and cleaner smoking experience. Made with high-quality platinum-cured silicone, the MouthPeace creates a sanitary barrier between users’ mouths and their pipe, joint, or vape, preventing germ spread at the source. 

RELATED: States Pushing Cannabis Operations To Be More Earth Friendly

Even though MouthPeaces are essentially face masks for your bong or joint, they are far from becoming the next PSA of floating masks in the ocean. The MouthPeace itself is reusable, eliminating the need for rubbing alcohol and cotton swabs between users. Plus, it’s made with silicone, an arguably better material for the environment compared to plastic. Silicone is a hybrid material, meaning that it needs both natural resources and fossil fuels for production. Silicone is a bit better than plastic, especially if the item in question is going to be reused over and over since it’s also a more long-lasting material that can withstand extreme temperatures. Silicone can also be recycled, it doesn’t degrade into small pieces making it ocean-friendly, and it doesn’t release any toxins in the air when burned. 

Each MouthPeace comes with replaceable activated carbon Filters which use and triple-layer filtration to remove resins and tar particles from each inhale. The replaceable filters are sustainable as well, made from recycled, biodegradable materials. 

In honor of Earth Day, from April 22nd to May 22nd, Moose Labs is donating 10% of proceeds made on the ‘Earth’ colored MouthPeace to the Earth Island Institute, a non-profit conservation group. This is kicking off the company’s ‘Colors for a Cause’ initiative where a portion of proceeds made on specific MouthPeaces are going towards a designated nonprofit. 

Test and Deploy Eco-friendly Packaging 

For some brands, sustainability isn’t just about what you do to make a certain product eco-friendly, the packaging plays a major role as well. Consumer packaging is a major avenue of creating waste that takes many forms in cannabis through child-proof packaging, disposable vape batteries, plastic doob tubes, security bags, RFID tags, etc. Most of this packaging is necessary in order to meet certain mandates, but there are opportunities to make sustainable decisions through careful selection of packaging materials and exploring reuse or recycling options.

Rules vary per market, but several dispensaries in Colorado even allow you to bring back your empty plastic bottles so they can be re-used and/or properly recycled. If that’s not an option for you, next time you’re shopping for cannabis in the dispensary, aim for products that come in packaging made from glass, hemp plastics, or recycled plastics. 

Cannabis Companies Begin To Embrace Sustainability
Photo via Ready Made by Pixels

While there may be a lack of sustainable options due to tight regulations for THC products, hemp companies have a little more wiggle room. Advocates for Cannabis (A.F.C), a full-spectrum hemp product company is experimenting with packaging made from hemp mushrooms. A.F.C creates “Products For Change” that are derived from organically cultivated, non-GMO and pesticide-free hemp. The company prides itself on exceptional quality control from soil to oil, working collaboratively with industry-leading growers, scientists, and extractors to produce cGMP (Current Good Manufacturing Practices) compliant products. The woman-owned company launched A.F.C Hemp + Myco-Immunity Capsules in March that come in high-quality reusable glass jars. The glass “keep jar” is protected by biodegradable mushroom packing material and hemp fiber as opposed to cardboard or plastic.

“Our uniquely tactile unboxing experience brings consumers closer to nature, so they can not only benefit from consuming these superfoods in a familiar capsule format, they can also touch packaging grown from mushrooms, feel the hemp fiber, and then re-use the practical jar to minimize waste. This is all part of the idea of a ‘new’ luxury – a product that makes sustainability sexy,” said Anna Addison, CEO & Co-Founder of A.F.C.

Earth Day, Every Day

During this Earth Day, the industry’s collective focus on the increase in the production of plant-based medicines and food crops can be realized while also reducing our carbon footprint and impact on the environment. At this point, every little step we take matters, as long as it’s a step in the right direction.

5 Cannabis Accessories You Don’t Need But Still Want

0

Not all cannabis accessories are required for a smoke session. But there are some that can add a dimension to your weed consumption while also looking super cool.

Cannabis accessories range widely. You can go from basics, like rolling paper and grinders, to items geared for more recurring cannabis users, like bongs and pipes. Now that marijuana is growing more and more popular, out come different types of accessories, some that seasoned users haven’t even heard of.

While these items don’t make the bread and butter of the cannabis experience, they are useful when in the right context, adding a different dimension to your cannabis usage and accommodating different kinds of people. They’re also very cool.

Here are 5 cannabis accessories you don’t need but probably still want:

Meraki or RAW glass tips

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by @merakitips

Tips for joints serve two purposes: keeping things more sanitary and looking very cool. While we might be reducing their duties a bit, joint tips won’t make or break your weed experience, but they might add some fun to your sessions. These tips are reusable, resulting in less waste, and will provide you with a different feel in your mouth, something nice for those who don’t appreciate getting paper or a little bit of weed stuck to their lips. The brand Meraki makes tips that reusable and dipped in terpenes, featuring a hippy look thanks to their use of wood. RAW makes glass tips that are also reusable and are perfect for people who prefer the feel of glass pipes.

Houseplant home collection

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Houseplant (@houseplant)

RELATED: The 4 Biggest Problems With CBD Products

Sure, you don’t need an electric lighter that works like the lighters that used to be in your car 15 years ago, but it sure is cool. Seth Rogen’s Houseplant produces grade A weed and cannabis accessories, all coming stylishly packaged and looking nothing like old school weed paraphernalia.

Omura vaporizers

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Omura (@omura)

Omura is another brand that places a lot of importance on design, producing beautiful looking vaporizers that look more futuristic than weedy. Offering products that contain both THC and CBD, Omura’s vaporizers are more expensive than other vaporizers but come with all of the perks associated with them. They use a Flowerstick instead of vape oils, which can be filled with your favorite cannabis flower, adding a dimension of customization that a lot of cannabis users will appreciate.

Lagunitas Hi-Fi Hops

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Lagunitas Hi-Fi Hops (@hifihops)

RELATED: These Are The Next Big Cannabinoids To Go Mainstream

There are a lot of cannabis infused drinks, with a lot of variability, making it difficult to choose between drinks that are tasty and that also get you high. One trustworthy option includes Lagunitas Hi-Fi Hops, which is made by Lagunitas brewery but contains no alcohol since mixing alcohol and THC isn’t yet legal. Still, since the drinks contains hops it feels pretty beer-y, featuring over 5 mg of THC, CBD or a mix of both depending on the type of drink you purchase.

Keith Haring cannabis collection

 If you’re looking for a truly gorgeous looking pipe, bong or weed tray, look no further than Keith Haring’s collection of weed paraphernalia. Haring Glass sports the traditional Haring designs so beloved by skateboarders and stoners, printed in devices you can get high with. They might be expensive but they will make your house look cool, which might just be worth the investment.

This Is When You’ll Need Your Next COVID-19 Shot

Health experts predict that another round of the COVID-19 vaccine is necessary to extend protection.

Now that more and more people are getting their COVID-19 vaccines in the U.S., a large percentage of the population is wondering whether they’re done with the virus forever or if their immunity will at some point fade away. All evidence points to the latter.

MD Özlem Türeci, co-founder and chief medical officer of BioNTech, believes it is very likely that most people will need to get inoculated on a yearly basis.

In an interview with CNBC, Türeci said that the COVID-19 shot will likely be like a flu shot. “We see indications for this also in the induced, but also the natural immune response against SARS-CoV-2. We see this waning of immune responses also in people who were just infected and therefore [it’s] also expected with the vaccines.”

RELATED: Can You Get COVID-19 In Between Vaccine Dosages?

Can You Get COVID-19 In Between Vaccine Dosages?
Photo by Spencer Davis via Unsplash

Moderna and Pzifer vaccines are highly effective at curbing the spread of the virus, having around 91% and 95% of efficacy of protection. There’s not enough data to say how long this will last, but, thanks to preliminary data and over a year of having lived with the virus, experts know that the vaccines’ effects last for a minimum of six months.

“We are studying the durability of the antibody response,” David Kessler, Biden’s administration’s COVID response chief science officer, said during a White House press briefing. “It seems strong, but there is some waning of that, and no doubt the variants challenge … they make these vaccines work harder. So I think for planning purposes, planning purposes only, I think we should expect that we may have to boost.”

RELATED: This Vaccine Side Effect Can Affect Your Whole Body

New strains of the virus are a cause for concern for hospitals and people, changing the composition of the virus and increasing its spread. Still, there’s no reason to think that the vaccine isn’t as effective for an altered version of the virus when it’s 95% effective at curbing the spread of the original strain of the virus. mRNA vaccines, like Moderna and Pzifer, have a leg up when it comes to addressing virus variations, being easier to adapt in the future and accommodate other symptoms of the disease.

Miss Representation: Stoner Women In Film And Television

0

Over the years, tv and movies have unveiled a world of ordinary women who smoke weed. Yes, as interesting, funny and empowered as they are, they are ordinary people. 

This article by Lola Sasturain was originally published on El Planteo. 

Mainstream cinema and television owe us stoner women. By this I mean ladies who smoke weed like the real flesh and blood ones do. Not tragic women ruined by drugs, or defenseless little creatures who fearfully take their first toke. 

Epics stories of drug trafficking, crime and subsequent redemption, such as the movie The Garden of Joy or the TV series Weeds, shall be left out of this ranking. This article praises those female characters who smoke like real women do, just like men: eagerly, because they enjoy it, and as part of their daily lives. 

Undoubtedly, the indie universe has portrayed thousands of multidimensional and realistic female characters who smoke weed, much more complex and diverse than those selected here. But this is a whimsical list, based on this writer’s own history as a mass culture and weed consumer. It’s even quasi-biographical. 

Here is a select group of women who used marijuana in high-circulation mainstream content that many of us girls grew up with. Movies that came to us, no research needed, and unveiled the world of women who smoke cannabis, and are also ordinary people. Yes, as interesting, funny and empowered as they are, they are ordinary people. 

Sex And The City (1998-2004)

Although it is not a pot-show, it does deserve some recognition. The two episodes where the girls smoke weed meant a lot to many girls of my generation (childhood in the ’90s, teen years in the ’00s). Why? Because it would be the first time we’d see an absolutely fabulous adult woman smoking a joint on television. 

Even though it is never implied that they are usual consumers, when the joint pops up it does so naturally, without moral judgments and without being deemed “dangerous.” For the time and the target of the series, this was no small feat. 

RELATED: Celebrities Continue To Cash In On Cannabis

The relationship these women have with marijuana is similar to that of many more-or-less progressive ladies of that generation: they like it, they have respect for it, and whenever they smoke (which is not often) they get very high and have a great time. 

There are two famous weed scenes in Sex And The City: 

The first scene is from the third season (2000). In it, Carrie smokes with Wade, her ‘boy on duty’ (one of the inconsequential ones). Wade is an eternal teenager who still lives with his parents, and of course, provides the weed. 

It is perhaps one of the most memorably round up scenes in the entire series. The couple spends a weekend of pure marijuana and chill, but when the boy’s parents come home, he holds her responsible. Between indignation and perplexity, Carrie takes a master stand: yes, the weed is mine… and since I brought it, I’m taking it with me. In the next scene, we see her smoking with her friends. 

Keeping the herb is a deeply symbolic act of empowerment that runs to the core of this article. Weed is for independent women, and not for lazy overgrown babies who don’t know what to do with their life. 

RELATED: 7 Celebrities Who Recently Made The Leap Into The Cannabis Biz

The second scene is from the last season, when Carrie is depressed because her boyfriend left her via post-it note. Samantha offers her a joint, which they smoke in the street and almost go jail for it. Yes, they are safe because they are white, splendid women, in addition to appealing to pity. But it is still a good scene. 

Jackie Brown (1997) 

At the start of the millennium, every teenager who wanted to declare themselves a “moviegoer” had to have, indispensably, seen all the Tarantino films so far. Tarantino wouldn’t be the first feminist, but those were great movies. 

Jackie Brown, the most low-profile of his famous nineties trilogy, was centered on, and held up by, some very interesting female characters. 

We are going to focus on the character of Melanie, who seems to embody (more than a decade before legalization) the model of the marijuana-smoking California girl. 

RELATED: Are Weed Moms The New Wine Moms?

Blonde, tanned and super-laid-back, Melanie is a millionaire dealer’s girlfriend, in whose beach house in Baja California she spends her days smoking weed. Everything around her is danger and crime, yet she is the one who toking non-stop, not the criminals who surround her. Within cinema stereotypes, Melanie is like any male stoner. 

Hers is perhaps the best marijuana quote uttered by a woman in all-time mainstream cinema. A phrase written to blow the minds of teenagers from 1997 to eternity. In the scene, her boyfriend tells her that smoking so much weed is going to kill her ambitions, to which she replies: “Not if your ambition is to get high and watch TV.” 

Broad City (2014-2019) 

The smoothest, funniest and most relatable series about friends in their late twenties living in New York, in an effective 20-minute episode format. 

Broad City is one of the best shows out there to watch while being super-high. In these two girls’ adventures, cannabis appears as an everyday habit. It is impossible to choose a single weed scene among so many great ones. 

Broad City’s starring duo — the great Abbi Jacobson and Ilana Glazer — did a lot for the acceptance of us women who are funny, ridiculous, awkward, and lovable. It also provided a realistic and tender account of what marijuana is for female users around 30: a little spice to life, a moment to disconnect, something that is shared with friends to have interesting talks or simply laugh until it hurts. It’s neither glamorous nor chic: they smoke roaches, they dwell with dealers, and sometimes argue over who’s scoring. Just like life itself. 

The show also has the most precise and refined stoner humor ever performed by women on TV. You can tell that the show was created by the lead characters themselves, and they know very well what they are talking about. 

Without a moral angle, cannabis is the protagonist of many memorable scenes where various taboos are broken, such as smoking weed in family. This was immortalized in an episode where the girls travel to Florida and, among other things, share a joint with Ilana’s mother and aunt, who are two Jewish ladies. 

RELATED: The Best Weed TV Shows You Should Be Watching

This is a great scene, full of references to pop culture: it is filmed in the That 70’s Show manner, and Fran Drescher, who plays the aunt, is a pop icon herself. 

Smiley Face (2007) 

Granted, it is not Gregg Araki’s best movie. Without a doubt, it is one of the most mainstream and superficial in the flagship director of Queer cinema from the early 90s’ catalog. However, his characteristic “f*ck gender roles” vision is very much alive in this comedy. 

In the film, a young actress named Jane (played by Anna Faris) has an absolutely psychedelic day, somewhere between funny and terrifying, after accidentally eating a tray of cannabis cupcakes. 

Smiley Face is hyperbolic and not very realistic. Still, it gives the exhausting (and often moralizing) tale of a “crazy day after accidentally doing drugs” an interesting twist. Since the woman who gets high is already a stoner and knows how to do drugs properly, she is prepared to face what comes with such accidental intoxication. 

The movie has some of the best-portrayed, most realistic scenes about being high in public. It could totally star Seth Rogen but, instead, it stars a young, blonde-haired Britney Spears-type. 

The role of John Krasinski, on the other hand, is one usually played by “the girl” in movies. He is a weirdo without charisma who is in love with the leading lady and goes out of his way to help her, even though she is a total mess. 

A truly absurd stoner comedy, no more, no less. 

Atlanta (2016-) 

Full disclosure: there are many problems in Van’s life that I cannot possibly conceive from my place in society. She is a young, working class, African American mother. I am not. And yet, the characterplayed by Zazie Beetz, is extremely relatable. 

Van is always tired, has an acid sense of humor, a very short fuse, and a curious disposition for everything to go wrong. She is also fierce, independent and completely lovable. Like most characters in this great, bittersweet comedy, Van smokes weed, but only occasionally. 

There’s an episode where the profound problem of inequity of the less privileged sectors before the law is portrayed in the act of smoking. Van shares a joint with a friend from her teenage years who is African American as well, but also a millionaire influencer. She represents the path that Van did not take, because hardly anyone could. 

The inequity is noticeable: Van cannot smoke as freely as her rich friend because she does not have the same privileges. In fact, she has forgotten that the next day she has an interview for a job at a school, and therefore has to take a drug test. A thousand tragicomic contraptions follow, in order to try and pass that test, ultimately without success. 

Van reminds us that it doesn’t matter how beautiful, friendly, open and intelligent you are. Being a girl who smokes weed is difficult, but being a lower class African American girl who smokes weed is way harder. 

Is This The Biggest Downside To Marijuana Legalization?

0

There are often concerns that legalizing the leaf will create a situation that will increase youth consumption, addiction rates, and launch society into a downward spiral of apocalyptic decline.

Marijuana has been legal now in some parts of the United States for around two decades. It all began with the legalization of a reasonably liberal medical marijuana program in California back in 1996 and progressed into a scene where adult residents in 17 states now have the freedom to purchase cannabis in the same way they might beer.

It’s a concept that is preventing thousands of people from going to jail every year as a result of personal marijuana possession. It also boosts local and state economies, creates thousands of new jobs and helps put the food on the tables for more than 200,000 families nationwide. But are there any downsides to marijuana legalization that should be considered?

Marijuana legalization itself seems to be working out in most of the states where this new way of life has taken hold. There are often concerns that legalizing the leaf will create a situation that will increase youth consumption, addiction rates and, in some exceptional cases, launch society into a downward spiral of apocalyptic decline. But the reality is, none of this seems to be happening.

RELATED: What’s The Difference Between Marijuana Legalization And Decriminalization?

Some anti-legalization folks say it is still too early to tell what kinds of blights to society are coming on the heels of legalization, but in places where weed has been legal for several years, all seems relatively good in the neighborhood. Even former Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper, a man who once opposed the legalization of marijuana, admits that your children are probably safe from legal weed. “We haven’t seen a big spike in consumption,” he said during an interview in 2018 with Rolling Stone. “The only increase in consumption is among senior citizens.

No One Understands How High Edibles Will Make Them
Photo by NordWood Themes via Unsplash

“Certainly the worst things that we had great fear about — spikes in consumption, kids, people driving while high — we haven’t seen any of that,” he continued. “We were very worried that by legalizing, we were making this more somehow more psychologically available to kids. We haven’t seen that. If anything, we’ve seen less drug dealers.”

If there is one area where society has had some difficulty adapting to a space where cannabis products are legal and readily available it’s that many people still do not have a grip on how to properly use edibles. A recent study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine shows that marijuana-infused candies and food are sending more people in Denver to the emergency room. The majority of these cases involved symptoms ranging from rapid heartbeat to psychotic episodes.

RELATED: Nobody Understands How High Edibles Will Make Them

There is also some evidence that more children are accidentally ingesting marijuana edibles. In Colorado, out of the 265 marijuana-related calls to poison control in 2018, around a third of them involved children under the age of nine.

But it is important to understand that these statistics did not involve people who subscribed to the concept of “responsible use.” Consuming cannabis according to the recommended dosage (5 mg or less for beginners) and keeping cannabis products out of the reach of children (all warnings printed on the packaging) could have totally prevented these unsavory occurrences. Legalization is not the culprit, only stupidity and carelessness. Of course, as we have learned with alcohol, stupidity and carelessness must be factored in. Taking personal responsibility goes a long way.

How Alcohol And Weed Affect Young Adult Brains

It is becoming a known fact that alcohol causes brain damage while cannabis does not, and there are studies to back up these claims.

In the past, prohibitionists loved to say that cannabis would cause brain damage, but new studies now show that alcohol does, while cannabis does not. The latest study of this kind revealed that alcohol impacts cortical thickness among young people, which was not the case with those who used cannabis.

The brain’s cortical thickness is a metric used to measure how thick the layers are in the cerebral cortex. Cortical thickness gives an idea of a person’s cognitive abilities; it can give doctors and scientists an idea if there is any disease such as Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s, and it can also determine if there is some type of brain damage.

teens are trying marijuana before alcohol and tobacco
Photo by rawpixel.com

For the study, researchers analyzed the association between cannabis and alcohol exposure in the brains of young adults. They took a sample size using 436 twins, all of whom were 24 years of age. They then assessed the frequency, quality, density, and level of intoxication occurred after consuming both alcohol and marijuana, and after that they gathered data to check if marijuana use had an effect on cortical thickness which was measured through magnetic resonance imaging.

The researchers selected cannabis and alcohol-consuming twins for subjects so that they could assess what the impacts were, if any, of two different substances on them. “Greater alcohol, but not cannabis, misuse was associated with reduced thickness of prefrontal and frontal medial cortices, as well as the temporal lobe, intraparietal sulcus, insula, parietal operculum, precuneus, and parietal medial areas,” writes the study.

“No significant associations between cannabis use and thickness were observed. The lack of cannabis-specific effects is consistent with literature reviews, large sample studies, and evidence that observed cannabis effects may be accounted for by comorbid alcohol,” says the researchers.

“This study provides novel evidence that alcohol-related reductions in cortical thickness of control/salience brain networks likely represent the effects of alcohol exposure and premorbid characteristics of the genetic predisposition to misuse alcohol. The dual effects of these two alcohol-related causal influences have important and complementary implications regarding public health and prevention efforts to curb youth drinking.”

Consistent With Previous Studies

It is becoming a known fact that alcohol causes brain damage while cannabis does not, and there are studies to back up these claims. A study from 2017 conducted by researchers from Oregon Health & Science University together with the University of Colorado analyzed neuroimaging data taken from adults aged 18 through 55, as well as adolescents aged 14 through 18. The investigators determined that there was a link between alcohol consumption and changes observed in terms of brain structure but they found no causation among those who consumed cannabis.

“Alcohol use severity is associated with widespread lower gray matter volume and white matter integrity in adults, and with lower gray matter volume in adolescents,” the study concludes. On the other hand: “No associations were observed between structural measures and past 30-day cannabis use in adults or adolescents.”

RELATED: Study: Marijuana Rewires Young Brains To Boost Cocaine Enjoyment

Additionally, the researchers made it clear that their findings were consistent with older studies, “suggesting that regionally specific differences between cannabis users and non-users are often inconsistent across studies and that some of the observed associations may actually be related to comorbid alcohol use.”

Vaping THC Can Be Riskier For Teens Than Smoking It, Study Shows
Photo by Eliott Reyna via Unsplash

There are more studies, too. One from 2015 conducted by researchers at the University of Colorado and the University of Louisville in Kentucky analyzed the brain morphology of adolescent and adult subjects who were daily cannabis users and compared them to non-users. They specifically looked for changes among their nucleus accumbens, hippocampus, amygdala, and cerebellum.

The researchers said they found “no statistically significant differences… between daily users and nonusers on volume or shape in the regions of interest”. This was observed after they checked for their alcohol consumption.

RELATED: Study: Young Marijuana Users Develop Brain Protein Linked With Stress And Anxiety

“The results indicate that, when carefully controlling for alcohol use, gender, age, and other variables, there is no association between marijuana use and standard volumetric or shape measurements of subcortical structures,” wrote researchers.

Cannabis Actually Protects The Brain

Cannabis use doesn’t just not cause any impact on the brain; it actually protects it, says many studies.

One study from 2017 conducted by researchers from the University of Bonn and the Hebrew University revealed that consuming regular doses of low THC can help prevent the brain from slowing down, which is normally caused by aging. The animal study involved testing mice of various ages: 2 months, a year, and 18 years old every day, while administering them with THC for a month. They were then tested based on their capability to recognize objects familiar to them, and to navigate water mazes.

The results, which were also similarly observed in human trials, revealed that younger mice performed superbly when they were sober though they tended to show struggles when they were on THC. Meanwhile, the older mice struggled with their tasks but this was expected since they had older brains. What was interesting was that they found that the older mice saw a boost in performance when they were given THC infusions, leading their performance to be as better as the mice who weren’t given any THC at all.

“Together, these results reveal a profound, long-lasting improvement of cognitive performance resulting from a low dose of THC treatment in mature and old animals,” study co-author Andras Bilkei-Gorzo told The Guardian.

“If we can rejuvenate the brain so that everybody gets five to ten more years without needing extra care then that is more than we could have imagined.”

So there. Even more studies proving the benefits of cannabis for the brain. So put down that bottle, and get using!

This article was created in partnership with Cannabis.net 

Surprisingly, Our Consumption Of This Dropped Last Year

0

2020 might have been the year when we collectively drank the most booze. Despite this, the wine industry experienced a decline in sales.

Against all odds, wine consumption dropped by a significant margin last year. Despite the fact that the COVID-19 pandemic has pushed happy hour earlier in the day, new reports show that wine consumption dropped to its lowest level since 2002.

The International Organization of Vine and Wine (OIV) named 2020 “a year of resilience.” In a new report they reveal that the global consumption of wine dropped by 3%, about 6.2 billion gallons of it. Wine production was also slightly below average when compared to 2019.

Food & Wine reports that while COVID-19 is partly to blame for these developments, according to OIV, “The full or partial closure of the [hospitality industry] has caused a fall in sales in value, and to a lesser extent in volume, only partially compensated by the increase in wine sales via e-commerce and large retailers.”

Photo by Hermes Rivera via Unsplash

They added that, “Premium wine suffered the most from the closure of restaurants and tasting rooms, while large producers that owned the off-premise channel with large partner wholesalers performed well.” OIV also mentions the imposition of new trade barriers, like Brexit, which have also influenced wine sales.

RELATED: Women Are Overwhelmingly The Main Buyers Of This Cannabis Product

Still, despite these results, predictions of wine sales were expected to be worse considering how heavily COVID-19 impacted the hospitality industry. While sales dropped in restaurants and bars, this was compensated in significant amounts by supermarkets and liquor stores.

A closer look at the results show that the U.S. was the leading buyer of wine in the world, consuming about 33 million hectoliters, continuing the trend that they’d set in past years. Sparkling wine (excluding Prosecco) experienced a sharp decline in consumption while boxed wine experienced a rise.

RELATED: Marijuana Is Replacing Alcohol During The Pandemic And May Have Long Term Benefits

Boxed wine might not be the fanciest of wines, but it is definitely a type of container capable of holding large quantities of wine for a much cheaper price. While wine sales were down in restaurants and bars, it’s clear that at home, we were still drinking a lot, perhaps more than in years past.

Cannabis Companies Begin To Embrace Sustainability

The preference of eco-conscious cannabis consumers to buy environmentally-friendly products has motivated many businesses to clean up their act.

Earth Day 2021 is upon us, and cannabis companies across the industry are mobilizing to take “sustainability” from buzzword to business practice. Earth Day was founded in 1970 by Senator Gaylord Nelson as a national teach-in on the environment to raise awareness about issues like pollution and pesticide use.

While the cannabis industry has long been associated with the word “green”, the environmental impacts of production, packaging, distribution and materials sourcing for products like vape pens are often anything but.

Today’s consumers have grown up with the annual tradition of Earth Day and the heightened environmental awareness it promotes. Studies show sustainability is a factor driving customers’ buying decisions. Recent research by IBM revealed that nearly six in 10 consumers surveyed are willing to change their shopping habits to reduce environmental impact, and nearly eight in 10 indicated sustainability is important to them. Many will be looking for cannabis products that align with their cleaner, greener values.

A diverse group of North America’s leading cannabis cultivation and manufacturing experts formed the Sustainable Cannabis Coalition (SCC) earlier this year. The SCC will work proactively with industry cultivation and manufacturing peers and vendors to promote proven sustainability best practices that can be implemented at scale across the cannabis market. The SCC will be a resource providing foundational best practices to further promote the economic benefits of sustainability as the industry continues to grow.

The SCC founders include Cohn Reznick, Anderson Porter Design, Valiant, Wholly H2O, Cloud Farming, Argus Controls, Gro iQ, Trulieve (OTC: TCNNF), Byers Scientific, 365 Cannabis, GMP Collective, Omega Equipment, and Supply, Simplifya, PathogenDx, Grow Generation (NASDAQ: GRWG), and Outlaw Technology. These industry leaders are foremost experts in data-driven business strategy, facility design, facility construction, water use, pathogen detection, energy consumption, waste disposal, economic and social impact, vertical farming, ERP and seed to sale systems, lighting, air emissions, extraction, packaging and data-driven monitoring and optimization of environmental control systems.

Photo by Ethan Miller/Staff/Getty Images

Brands Tackling Sustainability

Eco-conscious cannabis consumers make up a large percentage of the marijuana-consuming population and their preference for buying environmentally-friendly products has motivated many businesses to clean up their act. Other companies have made sustainable practices a cornerstone of their business model. Nugg Club, a cannabis subscription box company, employs a model that is 90% more efficient than on-demand delivery services, resulting in over 250,000 pounds of carbon emissions saved each year. On top of that, Nugg Club’s boxes are 100% recyclable, made out of 80% recycled materials, and printed with nontoxic soy-based ink.

RELATED: States Pushing Cannabis Operations To Be More Earth Friendly

If you want to make sure that the contents of your subscription boxes have a similarly small carbon footprint, several companies have stepped up their sustainability game to meet the rising demand for greener products. California-based Summerland, which sells premium hand-made bongs and pipes, makes its smokeware in small batches made from pure clay. Stone Road grows its biodynamically-grown cannabis on an off-grid, family-run farm using only solar power and artesian water sourced from directly under the farm. All Stone Road products come in 99% recyclable packaging made from 100% post-consumer recycled goods. This year the company will start using rice protein isolate to create packing material, sourcing fully recycled glass jars and reclaimed ocean plastic to make their child-resistant lids.

US Cannabis Sales Projected To Hit $28 Billion In 2022
Photo by
Ivan-balvan/Getty Images

Kin Slips sublingual strips’ new packaging uses 75% less plastic than the previous version. It is entirely recyclable and made from Tinplate (the same material from which soup cans are made), which is easy to recycle and sort due to its magnetic nature and existing infrastructure. ALT’s liquid THC drink mixer is packaged in recyclable glass vials with sustainably sourced aluminum lids, while Marley Natural’s line of elevated smoking accessories features sustainably grown black walnut. Greening the cannabis industry will take more than responsible products and packaging, but Earth Day 2021 will see more focus on sustainable practices than ever before as companies increasingly co-prioritize planet and profit, hopefully to the benefit of both.

RELATED: Sustainable Cannabis — How To Find It And Why You Need To Start Caring

Eaze’s private label brand Everyday is an environmentally conscious brand, with recyclable packaging created using wind energy. By partnering with master indoor growers, the Everyday team has curated a range of high-quality flower strains for customers with discerning taste. Everyday starts at $45 for an eighth of flower.

Sana Packaging is working to make sustainable packaging more accessible by reducing the cost of its 100% reclaimed ocean plastic pre-roll tub by 30% and reducing materials used by 25%. The sustainable company also makes packaging from 100% plant-based hemp. The Bureau creates a variety of innovative and sustainable cannabis packaging designs made from biodegradable plastic and paper. Their products are customizable to meet each client’s specific needs and budget.

This article originally appeared on Green Market Report and has been reposted with permission.

Rachael Rapinoe Talks Cannabis, Entrepreneurship And Personal Motivations

Having spent her playing days being prescribed every kind of pill there is, Rachael knows first-hand that the aid given to her did not fix any pain, or set her up for long-term health. 

By Natalia Kesselman and Javier Hasse. Originally published on Benzinga’s El Planteo. 

CBD for athletes is in.  

This has been true for a while in the National Hockey League, the National Football League, and even in Major League Baseball. While it took longer for soccer, the CBD ball has finally reached this field. 

And who better to hoof it right in there than former pro soccer player Rachael Rapinoe?  

The Californian, currently based in Oregon, has been kicking it hard in the cannabis space with her CBD brand, Mendi. 

11 minutes older than her twin Megan (the “pink haired lesbian goddess,” as she describes her), and therefore “more of an OG” Rachael has finally woken soccer’s interest in CBD. Although it is unclear why this sport was one of the few where cannabis and hemp were still not being talked about, that’s precisely what has given Rapinoe a head start. 

“We’re excited to own the soccer market here in the United States with Megan, because it’s completely untapped,” says the player. 

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Rachael Rapinoe she/her (@rrapinoe)


This is what allowed them to “really tell the story of CBD,” both opening the conversation, and making their way gently into the space, without ruffling too many feathers. 

Now offering both a no-THC Base line and a full spectrum <0.3% Core line, Mendi is without a doubt the sports focused CBD brand you’ve got to watch out for. 

Feel Good, Do Good 

“I care about interpersonal growth,” says the entrepreneur, when asked about her passions. 

Rachael believes that loving oneself (which is not easy and takes time) is the secret to growth: once accomplished, it bleeds into the other areas of life. Only when we are truly at peace with ourselves can we help each other evolve because, in the athlete’s words, “our relationship with the world is a direct reflection of the relationship with yourself.” 

RELATED: Soccer Superstar Megan Rapinoe Talks Cannabis, Feminism: ‘Everyone Needs A Seat At The Table’

“I’m all in on equality,” she added, “I’m all in with social justice. But I think you have to even take a step back from these issues and learn how to love yourself, first. And that’s my truth.” 

Of course, CBD plays into all of this: “I believe in feeding your body from top to bottom, in the healthiest, most natural way possible.” 

Soccer Superstar Megan Rapinoe Builds Equality For All Through Cannabis
Photo by Tevarak Phanduang via Unsplash

As someone who grew up with western medicine and spent her playing days being prescribed every kind of pill there is, Rachael knows first-hand that the aid given to her did not fix any pain, or set her up for long-term health. 

“It’s not nutritious for your body,” she states. 

Rapinoe also points out how our bodies are actually built to interact with the cannabis plant through the endocannabinoid system, “and not only that, we have natural endocannabinoids produced to feed those receptors but like everything else, we don’t produce enough of it.” 

That’s basically the role cannabis (CBD, THC and all the other cannabinoids) plays. 

“We need the extra minerals and extra vitamins and extra cannabinoids to feed all of these systems; whereas opioids, and Tylenol and Advil, your body doesn’t produce that stuff, you don’t actually need them .” 

Education Is Key To Growth  

Most people who have consumed THC in any manner — especially edibles — have had the unpleasant experience of overdoing it with the dose, at least once. Of course, one of the many perks of weed is that you can’t OD on it, but an excess of THC consumption can render some truly scary moments. Rachael is no stranger to this feeling. 

“I’ve had stories of edibles where I took too much and I thought I was gonna die. Everyone has a story like that, but that is not what defines cannabis. It’s only because I had a lack of education around dosing and I didn’t know how much to take.” 

Based on her own experiences as well as other people’s, Rachael feels education is key for the cannabis industry to mature. However, it’s extremely difficult to properly educate consumers when the space is still highly restricted. Neither does the medical community get enough funding for controlled studies to be able to “accurately study the effects of THC, CBD as well as the other 100+ cannabinoids,” as the player says. 

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Mendi (@themendico)


“We need more studies so we can collate all of the education around cannabis and be able to educate people on which part of the plant -or which plant, hemp or marijuana- works best for them.” 

As for the normalization of cannabis in sports, the relation to the previous is a pretty clear equation: science plus education plus legislation equals more and better products. More innovative and more sophisticated products will allow cannabis to reach every space, including sports, where it is much needed. 

However, for this to work, we need “all hands on deck,” she says. This means the federal government, the FDA, and the science and medical communities will all have to get onboard to truly make a change. It is the only way to get enough information to protect the public and steer them in the right direction for picking what product is best for them. 

“Smoking a blunt is super nostalgic,” she says laughingly. “But I don’t see athletes smoking a joint after a game… You don’t need to do that, there are other ways to consume cannabis more effectively 

“I think that athletes are going to get to a place where they’re going to be taking a protein shake during an interview, that’s infused with cannabinoids. […] That’s where this industry needs to go.” 

Leading By Example 

“My approach is much different than Megan’s. I am not as out and loud and charismatic, I have more of a blue collar mentality. I roll up my sleeves, stay on the quieter side and lead by example,” says the soccer star. 

Mendi is not only influential in the CBD space. The company seeks to advocate for gender equality, both in soccer and in general. 

Megan Rapinoe
Photo by Mike Stobe/Getty Images

For one, the company is almost completely female and LGBT+ led, which is already quite a feat on its own. 

But, in addition, its spokeswomen are two of the most respected professional athletes in their respective sports: Megan Rapinoe in soccer, and Sue Bird in basketball. 

This is why Mendi’s demographic began slightly skewed female. However it’s almost even at this point, says Rachael. “Our brand is gender neutral and our language is gender neutral. 

RELATED: Soccer Superstar Megan Rapinoe Builds Equality For All Through Cannabis

“We just wanted to use the first year to champion equality and properly convey ‘this is who we are, this is what we stand for’, and we were coming to market intentionally investing in women first. But we’re very much on board with supporting male leagues and athletes, especially underserved male leagues.” 

‘Fuel To Our Fire’ 

The wage gap across just about every industry is not news, and neither is gender inequality in sports. Except for maybe tennis, female athletes are wildly underpaid and under invested in. This, of course, really gets these confident women fired up: 

“What makes it infuriating is that people want to make the argument that male sports bring in more revenue than female sports, and you cannot make an argument when male sports have a 100 miles starting point. Their start point is so far ahead of the women’s game because they’ve been invested in for years (…) so of course, you’re not going to see the same results if you’re half-assing your investment”. 

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Mendi (@themendico)

When it comes to Mendi, Rachael’s wish is for them to become leaders in the industry: to disperse their product among all sports, all athletes, and all employees. In doing so, the goal is not only to kick off the ball, but pioneer a whole new landscape. 

The strategy to actually bring significant social progress is to build a platform so big, employing so many people, that the company can corner the market. “But in the right way”, as R.R. puts it; to do good. “To genuinely create a fair, equitable and diverse culture for all people to succeed. 

“We want to continue standing up for issues around equality and equity, in business as well as sports. We really just want to get to a place where there are no boundaries for us, where people can’t tell us to ‘shut up and dribble’. (…) Then we’ll have a strong enough foothold to push other leaders in the industry to do better, and to do more. This is the fuel to our fire.” 

Don't Miss Your Weekly Dose of The Fresh Toast.

Stay informed with exclusive news briefs delivered directly to your inbox every Friday.

We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe anytime.