Weeks? Months? Years? Any other interesting experiences?

  • @Rogmonster@lemmy.world
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    132 years ago

    I dont remember my dreams when I use. It’s the main reason I do. I have terrible nightmares and weed helps me not wake up screaming… But when I stop for a time, it all comes back. It’s terrible that I have to choose between being too tired to function and being able to pass a drug test

    • @ShunkW@lemmy.world
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      112 years ago

      You could talk to a doctor about prazosin. It’s a blood pressure drug that stops dreams for some unknown reason. I have PTSD nightmares and will take it for a week or so when they crop up again. Just something to consider

      • Plus one for prazosin. I have a family member with PTSD nightmares. Prazosin has made them able to actually sleep for the first time in their adult life.

  • @Kyrgizion@lemmy.world
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    102 years ago

    I’m a heavy daily user and have been for two decades, but I regularly have vivid dreams. I’ve also quit a few times, once for three months, but I didn’t really see a lot of difference when it came to dreaming.

  • Seraph
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    72 years ago

    I’m actually quite convinced that you do dream you just don’t remember it anymore. I really only remember waking dreams.

    I have not experienced more vivid dreams when on a break, but I do remember more of them.

  • @PixelAlchemist@lemmy.world
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    72 years ago

    I was a heavy user for years and it helped suppress dreams a lot while I was using. At the time I also had an early morning college course. When I would come back from that class and pass back out, I was able to consistently trigger lucid dreams like clockwork, which was awesome.

    When I quit smoking, I had insane, cinematic dreams for probably about 3 weeks before my normal REM cycle returned.

  • @deezbutts@lemm.ee
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    52 years ago

    Not a super heavy user but when I stopped regular edibles (basically daily for months) I hit the dream wall.

    I didn’t realize I’d stopped having them until they started again. Weird dreams about school, past relationships, etc. Mostly awkward social situations that my brain mashed together, thankfully nothing downright horrid.

  • Tedesche
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    42 years ago

    Not a weed smoker, but I am in mental health. Two things:

    1.) That little factoid is a falsehood. Plenty of marijuana users remember their dreams.

    2.) As indicated at the end of #1, you always dream when you sleep. You just don’t necessarily remember your dreams when you wake up. We don’t know exactly why we dream—there are several theories—but we know it’s an integral part of our sleep. It’s theorized that what we experience as dreams may be our brains encoding our memories of our experiences since the last time we slept into long-term memory and possibly doing a particular type of problem-solving about things weighing heavily on our minds of late.

  • Drusas
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    42 years ago

    I use weed and I remember my dreams every single night.

  • @GregorGizeh@lemmy.zip
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    32 years ago

    Thats textbook my experience. Whenever I do consume frequently I have zero dreams whatsoever, at least I can’t remember even one during that all that time.

    During breaks I suppose it all comes boiling to the surface, at least two to three weeks of weird dreams and general sleep issues like very high internal tension and stress levels, and heavy sweating when I actually fall asleep. During those first days and weeks I have essentially zero appetite either.

    Essentially it depends on for how long you have been consuming, and how frequently. During my early days when I smoked like once a week I didn’t have those issues.

    That being said, while the withdrawal symptoms are unpleasant they are barely worth mentioning compared to other substances. Poor sleep, some general discomfort, lack of appetite. Eventually it sorts itself out

  • @russjr08@outpost.zeuslink.net
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    12 years ago

    I’m not much of a user in this regard, so I can only comment on the abstract of the question here - but over the last couple of months I started some new medication that caused this. I’d never remember dreaming for quite a while, and then all of a sudden I did start to have very vivid dreams.

    They’re not nightmares, thankfully - but certainly the ones that make you wake up and go “What the fuck???”. Recently I had a dream about a game show being started in my house, and the game was very much a “You can’t leave until you meet X goal”.

    Then there have been some dreams that were not necessarily odd, not bad, but not “good” I guess?

    Last week I had a dream where my boss had asked me to start working again on a project that I lead that was dropped midway. When I woke up, since it was still fresh on my mind, I was very close to messaging my boss to see if he wanted to better set the goals and requirements for the project… Until I realized that the conversation about reopening the project never happened. Thankfully I did realize that, or else it would’ve been quite awkward…

    That last one worried me a bit, because I really don’t want to start having dreams that cause me to not be able to keep an accurate accounting of what is real and what isn’t - but thankfully it hasn’t reoccurred.

    I’ve just somewhat woken up, and definitely had another “WTF” dream, though I am unsure of what it actually was about.

  • @sky@codesink.io
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    12 years ago

    I hadn’t considered it might be quitting weed since I started an antidepressant around the same time and had been assuming it was that. It’s been a little over 5 weeks and I’m having awful nightmares every single night. Not interesting, just unpleasant and rooted in my various traumas.

    Not ideal, but all the other positives of sobriety are worth it.

    • @frogfruit@sh.itjust.works
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      32 years ago

      Antidepressants cause vivid dreams for me. Cyclobenzaprine is a serotonergic muscle relaxer that causes the type of vivid nightmares that make me yell in my sleep.

      • @sky@codesink.io
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        12 years ago

        That sounds terrible, I’m sorry! I have to admit I liked not dreaming at all.

  • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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    12 years ago

    You have vivid dreams for a few days. It’s just a matter of your hormones equalizing, so it doesn’t take a really long time.

    Similar timeframe to getting over nicotine withdrawal which is a few days to a week, which is basically the time it takes your brain to alter its calibration.

  • Woovie
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    12 years ago

    I’ve been taking chunks of days off from smoking recently. My dreams’ vividness and frequency of remembrance increase a lot around 12-24 hours after being sober. That will last for a couple of days. I find I can avoid dreamless sleep if I just smoke less. Sometimes I’ll take one fat rip before bed, I’ll have a pretty wild dream vividness if I hadn’t smoked for a couple of days.