For Sale Stick
Trippy

Buzz- The first time I smoked some Shiskaberry yesterday it really didn’t stone me. Today it has whipped me
:) A few hits on the way to school were a few too many, it hit and I became unmotivated. This evening a friend
and I finished off two bowls and it was quite the experience. Fair amount of visual distortion, lots of laughs
which lead to tears and falling on floor. Totally a fun indica. I place it a little below the NL x shiva in power
level, but still above average. I'd put the Shisk in the social indica category, with the nlxshiva toward the
unsociable side. I did have to pull myself from the couch also.Trippystickforsale
trippy stick los angeles
Haze is a late sativa from America, widely agreed by experts to be the best pot in the world. Very popular in
the 70's, it nearly became extinct in recent years as growers switched to easier varieties. We managed to
salvage a few viable seeds from the last crop grown in America and we have used them to produce some
remarkable hybrids. Haze is known for an extreme, almost psychedelic spaciness. The fragrance is complex
and deep with a dry flowery perfume over a base of dark leathery animal tones. When used in a hybrid it adds
fascinating notes of depth and complexity to the taste, as well as a unique addition to the high. While not for
everyone, the most jaded connoisseur will often find haze irresistible.The Seed Bank catalog, 1988brothers-grimm-marijana
marijuana seeds legal
or time to seem to pass more slowly; it is common for
events to fit more smoothly into this slowed time: "Events and thoughts flow more smoothly; the succession of
events in time is smoother than usual" (12%, 16%, 38%, 20%, 11%). This begins to occur at Moderate levels
(8%, 30%, 31%, 13%, 1%). The Therapy and Growth group has to be more intoxicated to experience this
increased smoothness of flow (p <.05, overall).
The converse common effect, "Events and thoughts follow each other
jerkily; there are sudden changes from one thing to another" (13%, 23%,
35%, 19%,5%) occurs at significantly higher (p <.001) levels of
intoxication (6%, 13%, 34%, 19%, 7%), as illustrated in Figure 9-3.
Meditators experience jerkiness in the flow of time less often than
ordinary users (p <.05) or than the Therapy and Growth group (p <.05).
Users of Psychedelics need to be more intoxicated to experience this
jerkiness (p < .05).
Here-and-Now-ness
(4 of 9)4/15/2004 7:06:17 AM
On Being Stoned - Chapter 9
Figure 9-3. FLOW OF
EVENTS IN TIME
Note.—For guide to interpreting
the
"How Stoned" graph, see note on
Figure 6-1.
Two time phenomena may be alterations in the perception of time per se
or possibly consequences of some of the changes described above. A
characteristic effect is "I give little or no thought to the future; I'm
completely in the here-and-now," and a related very common effect is "I do
things with much less thought to possible consequences of my actions...";
both are dealt with fully in Chapter 15.
Déjà Vu
"While something is happening, I get the funny feeling that this sequence
has happened before, in exactly the same way. Even though I logically
know that it couldn't have happened before, it feels strange, as if it's
repeating exactly (this is called a déjà vu experience and should not be
confused with a false memory)" is a common experience (21%, 23%, 37%,
16%, 3%), which occurs at the middle level of intoxication (4%, 16%,
27%, 20%, 7%). While this is a phenomenon of memory by conservative
standards, it would certainly influence a user's view of the nature of time.
Some users, for example, interpret déjà vu as evidence for reincarnation.
Similarly ostensible precognition (see page 100), while occurring rarely, could also strongly influence a user's
view of the nature of time.
In terms of a human experience, and particularly a marijuana user's experience, the common physical view
of time as an impersonal abstraction flowing along at a constant rate, with only the present being real, is
inadequate, for some people may experience: (I) the past and future as being as real as the present at times; (2)
the rate of time flow changing radically; (3) time stopping (archetypal time); and (4) events fitting smoothly or
jerkily into the flow of time.
Note also that all memory effects (Chapter 14) are relevant to time effects, but they will not be discussed
here.
LEVELS OF INTOXICATION FOR TIME PHENOMENA
Figure 9-4 presen