Just Another Basic Pot Primer

Screen Shot 2016-07-26 at 12.23.24 PM

It occurs to me that our collective knowledge of cannabis might be a little out of date, stashed somewhere in the attic with the 8-track tapes and lava lamp. Don’t be embarrassed; until recently, I too was a clueless caveman about the modern ways of weed. I still consider myself a caveman, but at least someone showed me how to rub two Thai sticks together.

So damn your foolish pride! Ask questions! Being cool is no longer a priority.

My goal is to educate rather than agitate, so I’ll just skip over how newspaper tycoon William Randolph Hearst (you know, Citizen Kane?) conspired with chemical and pharmaceutical bigwigs to take industrial hemp out of the picture in the 1930s, despite the fact that we’d been growing it here since Jamestown.

Hearst, who was also a timber baron, peppered the public with sensational stories about the “Dangers of Marihuana” to protect his timber interests, while opening the door for fledgling chemical corporations like DuPont (who had just patented nylon) to replace hundreds of years of practical hemp and cannabis applications in construction, clothing, and medicine, with plastics, prescription pills, and relentless tree-falling.

Like most things, it was simply a matter of financial convenience for a cadre of wealthy dudes to screw the peasantry and erase an incredibly versatile crop from our memory banks. Find a copy of Jack Herer’s book, The Emperor Wears No Clothes, for further study.

But let’s table that discussion for now.

If your last experience with buying cannabis took place in a dorm room, then be advised that things have changed dramatically. First and foremost, legal cannabis means selection, something that didn’t really exist in the underground economy. The shop I work in typically has between 30 and 40 strains of pot available, each unique in some way thanks to an extremely flexible genetic makeup.

The two primary types of cannabis are sativa (great for day smoking and getting your ass motivated and on task), and indica (great for oblivion seekers, insomniacs, and chronic pain sufferers). And there are a near-infinite number of specialized hybrids between the two extremes of sleepy and switched-on to customize your head.

The first order of business is to find an honest budtender, who isn’t working on commission, to be your ganja guide, and let them know what state you’re trying to achieve.

Don’t go chasing the numbers. Yes, some strains of cannabis can contain close to 30 percent tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the psychoactive element that produces the euphoria and relaxation sought by stoners since the dawn of time. Generally speaking, the high-THC strains result in a heavier, more robust high, but this equation isn’t universally true.

Smell the weed and look at the weed. Chances are, if you react favorably to the aroma and appearance of a certain strain, then you will enjoy its effects. Trust your instincts. If taste and smell are important components to your experience, then by all means, have your budtender track down something that excites the senses.

If you’re in emotional and physical pain, and not as concerned with getting baked out of your gourd, then ask about strains that are high in cannabidiol (CBD), another active ingredient, known for its medicinal properties, such as pain relief, anti-inflammation, and drowsiness.

Then again, there’s nothing wrong with telling the budtender that your day has sucked rope, and that you’re looking forward to vegging on the couch with pizza and Netflix. Hell, you deserve it for staying halfway sane in the face of all this nonstop fuckery.

To be continued, needless to say.

Five People You Meet in a Weed Dispensary

Screen Shot 2016-07-13 at 8.40.49 PM

I am painfully aware of the ubiquity of lists, having toiled for more than 20 years in the increasingly “advertorial” jungle that is local publishing. The so-called “Listicle” has bloomed from amusing and flexible format filler, to the official coin of the realm. What better way to thoroughly explore a subject than by reducing it to a few hundred playful and pithy words, ranked in order of vapidity?

So anyway, here’s my list.

I’m going on six months at the cannabis dispensary, and the rotating cast of characters would make Federico Fellini shake his head in wistful wonder. Werner Herzog, on the other hand, would laugh coldly and say, “What do you expect, you idiot? Your kind is weak and stupid.”

  1. Sir Lawrence Oblivier: A man born OUTSIDE OF TIME!

SLO: Time is it?

Me: 1:22 pm.

SLO: What’s your Happy Hour deal?

Me: It’s OG Kush for $43.75 a quarter. But that’s only during Happy Hour, between 9-11 am, and again from 4-6 pm.

SLO: Time is it?

Me: 1:23 pm.

SLO: When’s Happy Hour?

Me: Daily between 9-11 am, and again from 4-6 pm.

SLO: Huh. *15 minute pause* Did it used to be different?

Me: No.

SLO: Time is it, now?

CURTAIN

  1. The Complicated Diagnoses: Science can’t help me!

Male patient was recently struck in or around the head with a baseball bat, and requires a potent strain with mystical healing properties—for $6, if possible.

The female patient needs something to “chill my shit down” and make it easier to sleep. But the patient doesn’t wish to be asleep, too soon, so the strain should have some lift and last a while. Patient was diagnosed with Planet Sickness (“You can’t even mention Planet Sickness, or everyone will think you’re nuts!”), and vibrates at near-dangerous levels. It is therefore of the utmost importance that she falls asleep at the same time every night. “You’ve heard of this, right? That TV doctor was talking about it!”

Patient became extremely agitated upon discovering that it was not Happy Hour.

The male patient has Crohn’s Disease and is a recovering addict who missed his methadone dose. He requests “something stinky and sticky that will turn my lights out” for no more than $10. He also has a fresh dog bite on his arm, but he’s not too worried about it at the moment.

  1. Wheeler McDealer: Entitlement is his middle name!

Despite my earnest declarations that I’m too far down the company hierarchy to make any sort of impromptu bargains, WM will wheedle and whine relentlessly for any kind of bonus perk, including the inspired idea that he ought to receive a free joint on his first visit or birthday. Swayed by this sound logic, I try the same approach at Taco Bell—and am forcibly removed from the premises.

  1. Tall Taylor: He’s partied with everybody!

With long hair turning grey and a wispy beard that sweeps down passed his ankh, this hippie vagabond could be anywhere from 30 to 110 years old. Our selection of strains, he scoffs, is nothing but “Christmas Tree weed that’s total bullshit and most likely controlled by the tobacco industry.”

Apparently things used to be different, back in the day, when he could crash at Bob Marley’s house as long as he wanted, hanging out with Jerry Garcia and Bob Dylan. They’d stay up for days writing perfect music that the world will never hear, smoking mighty spliffs of purple ganja dripping in hash oil. And then they’d all join hands and walk into the sea.

  1. Soccer Mom Rookie: The new fish is lost at sea!

I’ve never been to one of these places, can you believe it? My mom told me marijuana would lead to harder drugs, isn’t that funny? She’s dead now, poor thing. Do they still call it marijuana, or is it cannabis now? My nephew Billy told me I should get something with a lot of THC for my anxiety. Am I saying that right? THC? What does it do? I still need to work tomorrow, so I can’t get all zonked out. Do you have any pot that won’t make me really hungry? I didn’t get a chance to go to the store and there’s nothing in the fridge. Do you guys just order pizza all the time? What about rolling papers? I don’t know how to roll a doobie and I don’t like all that nasty smoke in the house and neither do my dogs. The point is, I really need to relax…