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Substance Abuse
withdrawal symptoms from marijuana?
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<blockquote data-quote="Big Bad Kitty" data-source="post: 231319" data-attributes="member: 3647"><p>Withdrawal symptoms from pot are varied, but they are very real. </p><p></p><p>I was a pothead for a long time, and I had trouble sleeping for a long time when I quit. My brother was a pothead for an even longer time, and when he quit, he called me in the middle of the night because he thought he was dying. Thankfully the symptoms did not last very long for either one of us, and I hope that is the case for your son.</p><p></p><p>As was already stated, now is the time to learn some detachment. That of course does not mean you don't care about him, but it means that you are allowing him to fight his battles. Any enabling you do is counter-effective and will hurt him in the long run. Let him have natural consequences as often as you can. It is the only way he will learn.</p><p></p><p>I do hope he settles in and can have a good experience there. Addiction can be a very cruel mistress.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Big Bad Kitty, post: 231319, member: 3647"] Withdrawal symptoms from pot are varied, but they are very real. I was a pothead for a long time, and I had trouble sleeping for a long time when I quit. My brother was a pothead for an even longer time, and when he quit, he called me in the middle of the night because he thought he was dying. Thankfully the symptoms did not last very long for either one of us, and I hope that is the case for your son. As was already stated, now is the time to learn some detachment. That of course does not mean you don't care about him, but it means that you are allowing him to fight his battles. Any enabling you do is counter-effective and will hurt him in the long run. Let him have natural consequences as often as you can. It is the only way he will learn. I do hope he settles in and can have a good experience there. Addiction can be a very cruel mistress. [/QUOTE]
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