This was originally posted on my blog, Approximately 8,000 Words:
My friend Michael Watts of Michael’s Rant recently asked me to write something for his blog about the use of cannabis (marijuana) and the upcoming vote in California over Proposition 19. Without naming names, I am aware that he recently witnessed the effect this drug had on a loved one of his with a chronic pain condition. As a basically healthy person who does not partake, I think he was surprised at how effective it was in alleviating his friend’s discomfort. Since I am fairly outspoken about the effectiveness of cannabis on my Fibromyalgia, I am happy to write a bit more about it here.
Writing about this is a bit of a daunting task however — I have spent much of my adult life educating myself about the drug war in general and cannabis in particular, since it is both illegal where I live and the most effective, sustainable treatment I have found for my illness. It’s hard to know where to begin, assuming I am writing for a novice. Do I talk about the potential health benefits it has for people with scores of illnesses? The ways in which its risks have been inflated out of proportion by the agents of the drug war? Should I give examples of how other countries have fared in the wake of decriminalization? Complain about the hypocrisy of the Obama Administration‘s continued use of the Justice Department and the DEA to oppose state-level marijuana laws?
I will start, instead, by talking a little about how it has helped me and why I wish I could legally make use of it. My condition, Fibromyalgia, is poorly understood but causes intense, chronic pain as well as related issues like difficulty sleeping. At one time — when I had a shiny, private health plan — I took as many as 6 different pharmaceutical drugs multiple times a day. Each one had its own side effects which, when mingled with my already debilitating condition, made my life even worse. I had prescriptions to help me deal with the side effects of other prescriptions! Worst of all, people with Fibromyalgia seem to develop a rapid tolerance to many pharmaceuticals — especially painkillers — so eventually I’d be feeling just the side effects and not the benefits at all.
By contrast, cannabis creates minimal tolerance, and what tolerance it does create goes away quickly after a break. Though I am rarely completely pain free, a few tokes can on many days make the difference between productiveness or a day spent laying in bed in pain. While I can’t pretend that I do not enjoy the more recreational side effects — certainly they are far more pleasant than the ones I suffer from pharmaceuticals — with regular use in moderation I find that I am not ‘too stoned’ to function. Though I don’t have concrete scientific evidence to back it up, I believe that my body is using cannabis to supplement for the painkilling effects of its own endogenous cannabinoids, and therefore there is less available to create the euphoric “high” that purely recreational users experience.
- Which brings us to the topic of recreational vs. medicinal use. Many people, especially those against legalization, argue that the medical marijuana issue is a false one, designed to draw attention away from the real goal of legalization. I agree — I believe that everyone should have the right to decide what substances to put in their bodies without fear of arrest, especially when it comes to a substance that is arguably safer than alcohol. While it certainly has negative potential just like any mind-altering substance, I have seen cannabis bring people closer together, open minds to new ideas, and aid in the creation of beautiful art. The truth is that I believe almost everyone is potentially a medical user, whether for chronic health conditions or everyday aches and pains — let’s not forget to point out that once upon a time cannabis was part of every doctor’s pharamacopia and could be easily obtained in tincture from neighborhood drugstores.
Proposition 19 builds on the publicity created by California’s successful (though federally persecuted) medical marijuana program by actively legalizing possession and sale under certain conditions. Since I can’t afford to move to California, I don’t think I’ll ever benefit from it directly except on my rare visits to the state. However I applaud this proposition as a step in the right direction, as a first step in reclaiming our society from the harmful effects of the drug war. If Proposition 19 passes, I believe the people of California will see an economic benefit, a reduction in crime and the percentage of the state population in prison, and a less stressed police force who will be freed from pursuing harmless drug users instead of real criminals.
There are many sources for information on the drug war and cannabis on the Internet — some of them linked above in this article — but I wanted to close by pointing readers to Firedoglake‘s Just Say Now, a new transpartisan alliance dedicated to supporting efforts toward saner drug policies throughout the United States.
I hope this brief introduction has offered some new ideas or information; I am happy to answer questions in my comments.



19 Comments




Thanks, Kit, glad to hear from you.
Good to see you here and thanks for the post. I know how much medicinal has meant for your health and really hope we soon see the day ghat you can get your needed medicine without legal danger Kit!
Thanks for stopping by, Kit! Don’t be a stranger!
Thanks, Kit, this is a great post.
Hope things go our way Tuesday. Call, folks, call!
great post kit — recommended
Thanks for your comments and for the ‘recommendation,’ folks. I am sure I will post here again!
I have something called AS, also a progressively degenerative, chronic, painful, debilitating and incuriable condition, on top of which I’ve more recently gotten the fibromyalgia diagnosis to explain other weird pains I endure that are not, the doc thinks, AS related.. Pretty daunting, but your experience is so exactly like mine I can hardly express how validating it is to read your words. Thanks for corroborating my experience of chronic pain and pain meds, and how effective smoking marijuana can be to ease the frightening symptoms of these poorly understood conditions. My partner, Norman B, who’s kindly allowing me to post this comment to you, has glaucoma and has been quietly advised by his doctor to keep smoking pot. It is surely not harming him, and in fact the doctor reports that it is demonstrably slowing the progress of Norman’s disease. Here in Massachusetts, we’re having a meeting for Medical Use Stakeholders at the Boston Library on Nov 13.
Medical Marijuana Stakeholders’ Meeting
Anyone who has a stake in decriminalizing the use of this gentle, effective remedy is welcome to attend.
–Thanks for being brave enough to speak out. Regards from Rachel.
Nice post, Kit. Thank you!
Rachel, thank you – and what a great work it is to organize a stakeholder’s meeting!
This is interesting. But medical marijuana is already legal in California. I am sorry you are not able to live here. But I am not sure exactly what this article has to do with Prop 19.
http://www.sacbee.com/2010/10/31/3146298/prop-19-trailing-by-7-points-in.html
Sacramento Bee claiming Prop 19 trailing by 7 points; allegedly people are getting “cold feet.” Think there’s of host of big money behind this to keep pot illegal. Unclear to me how accurate this poll is, as it’s seemed to me (just from my observation) that there’s real momentum behind passing 19. Tues will tell the story.
Thanks for the post. There’s a whole raft of issues that can be better resolved using marijuana, but BigPharma doesn’t make as much money off of it. Why use a weed when a jacked-up-in-price chemical compound, that could have bad side effects, will do???
I have a couple of friends with fibromyalgia, and for some, it is a very debilitating condition. One friend has tried just about everything in the book – loads of nutritional, vitamin & other alternative approaches – to improve her condition. Most of the things she’s tried seem only to provide temp relief.
My heart goes out to all who have to endure this condition. It’s not easy and can often be beyond devasting. Best to you; thanks for the post. Personal stories are usually the most effective.
Thanks for your first-hand account. Stories like yours need to be front and center as citizens confront BigPharma. Amazingly, if marijuana were patentable (and thus highly profitable), we would see it legalized post-haste.
great post kit — recommended!
Marijuana laws were passed on a wave of science fiction hysteria, racism, and grotesque falsehoods.
They are fundamentally Dishonest, Hypocritical, Bigoted, and Unjust.
Preserving these laws serves to validate & legitimize lying, racism, and injustice as foundations of our law making process.
But we live in a Boozer Nation of cynical, snarky, Greed Monsters for whom “Success” is anything you can get away with.
Heckuva way to run a country..
Kit, I am a 72, almost 73, year old who has used marijuana since the age of 20. I have been, and still am very active both in the physical and the mental aspects of my life.
Almost 2 years ago, I was diagnosed with Colon and Skin Cancer along with Glaucoma. The cancers both were removed along with over a meter of my colon and as you know the glaucoma is incurable. I have and still am using marijuana daily and still am able to totally function. I have found, not by scientific study, but by my own use that my asthma is alleviated by the same marijuana that I use for my glaucoma…
I was also told that there has been scientific evidence that cannabis also reduces or kills certain cancer cells. And that statement came from a Doctor whom I will not name as the statements were totally off the record.
Yes I believe strongly that the laws should be changed, I also believe that it should not be anyones business what I ingest or partake of unless I am a danger to others or causing a public problem.
I wish you well, and only hope that your laws change in the very near future for you and all like you who are now outside the law in trying to find your relief. I live in a country where cannabis is illegal also, but locally they do not bother us with raids or jail if it is not “in your face” consumption or a full on grow for profit site. We also are watching closely the election in CA and OR and WA as they are the bellwether states. Hawaii will be next unless they elect the bunch of fundie buttwipes that are running today.
I’ve been smoking pot for over forty years, for valid medical reasons: It gets me high.
Thanks everyone for your comments. I was at a halloween party late last night so I am only just dragging myself out of bed to see all the great things you said. I’m thrilled to be on the front page of FDL.
I think frankBel above has a great point. While medical marijuana exists in California, and I could almost certainly get a permit if I lived there, I don’t want anyone to risk jailtime for a substance that gives them pleasure, relieves their frustrations, or makes their lives better. Medical Marijuana is a real issue, but it covers up the more genuine issue about the rights of individuals to partake or not as they choose.
Thanks so much for your comments. Although this may bring us into somewhat off-topic territory, have you tried using a vaporizer? Pot has vasodilating substances in it (which aid in breathing for those with asthma) but smoking any substance creates vasoconstrictors. A good vaporizer can be expensive but would remove the smoke from the equation.
There are a lot of reasons people are scared of this proposition, irrationally I think. On another social network where I posted this, a medical pot user is actually arguing against Prop 19 because she’s afraid of some kind of reefer madness-like chaos if it passes and everyone can get the helpful substance she’s been using. I think it’s a sign of how effective decades of gov’t propaganda has been that even someone who uses this drug thinks legalizing it will bring down society.
I was happy to see that the Gmail founder has thrown his money behind prop 19. http://bit.ly/bVvYX2