What Its Like To Smoke Pot Every Day For 50 Years

Discussion in 'Marijuana News' started by The Grasscity Post, Apr 30, 2015.

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    Catherine Hiller, 68, is a stoner. She's a mother of three boys, author of six books, and has been lighting up for nearly half a century. She's never hidden her habit-except from her kids when they were younger, and maybe some neighbors. And in her new memoir, Just Say Yes, she's coming out to the entire world about her her years of high adventures.
     
    “A lot of readers have contacted me and told me how grateful they are that I've come out,” she says. “Some of these people are younger than I am and may have jobs or political ambitions so they can't come out. They're really grateful for someone who can. They tell me I'm their hero.”
     
    We can debate legalization and the scientific effects of marijuana on the human body, but we won't. This is Hiller's story - she has a lot of things to say. And no, she was not high during this interview.
     
    Catherine Hiller, 68, is a stoner. She's a mother of three boys, author of six books, and has been lighting up for nearly half a century. She's never hidden her habit-except from her kids when they were younger, and maybe some neighbors. And in her new memoir, Just Say Yes, she's coming out to the entire world about her her years of high adventures.
     
    “A lot of readers have contacted me and told me how grateful they are that I've come out,” she says. “Some of these people are younger than I am and may have jobs or political ambitions so they can't come out. They're really grateful for someone who can. They tell me I'm their hero.”
     
    We can debate legalization and the scientific effects of marijuana on the human body, but we won't. This is Hiller's story - she has a lot of things to say. And no, she was not high during this interview.
     
    What's your smoking habit like now?
     
    “I smoke every day, sometimes more than once. It's extremely relaxing and there's a mild euphoric feeling. If I took longer smoking breaks, it'd be more dramatic but like everything else, you get used to it. It smoothes out my edges-I'm more relaxed, goofier, probably lazier-which is why I don't do it before an important call or an interview. I would never be high for those.”
     
    You stopped smoking during your pregnancies-did you experience any withdrawal symptoms?
     
    “I didn't take any risks during pregnancy-if there had been anything wrong with the baby, I would've been mortified. Even though there was no evidence that smoking would hurt the fetus-I had been reading around-all the research wasn't in and a baby was far too important to take any gambles with.
     
    Now, did I feel withdrawal? No. When I take a little break these days-as I did recently on a trip to Ireland-I don't feel any physical craving, but the first night or two, it was more difficult to get to sleep. The other thing it affects is inter-ocular pressure. Whenever I quit smoking for a couple of days, by the third or fourth day my eyes start really hurting. This lasts for another five or six days and then it goes away. But that always happens.”
     
    Big question (sorta): Have you ever smoked with your kids?
     
    “Sure, lots of times. I'm not a person who hides things. I'm pretty open about my life. They could hardly miss what I was doing while they were living here. My oldest one didn't start until college, and I suppose when he came back, I might've offered him some. But with my younger sons, they were smoking a little bit earlier. When they were close to 18 and I knew they were smoking around their friends, I offered them a joint from time to time. We'd smoke together and it was fun. Do you remember your first glass of wine with your parents? Many people don't. It's not a huge deal to have a drink with your parents, and I think of smoking weed more or less like that. It was just sharing something pleasant with my boys.
     
    Actually, when the children were young, and there were all these D.A.R.E. programs going on, I was very careful. I didn't want them raising their hands telling their teachers that I smoked pot. My youngest is honest to a fault, and I could've imagined him saying, “Yes! My mom smokes!” I hid my smoking habits from in in particular.“
     
    Where do you usually smoke? The bedroom? Outside? What do you like to use? Joints? Bongs?
     
    "Ha! Not the bed. First of all, I don't want the smoke in the bedroom and my husband is an athlete, and he doesn't want to inhale secondhand smoke. He wants to keep his lungs really clean. In the warmer weather I like to keep it out of the house-I want it to smell clean. I'll be out on the back porch usually. In the winter, I'll put my hand up the fireplace chimney to help it go up and away. Any place in my house in fine. I smoke joints. I was recently given a vaporizing pen, and that was very sweet. Oh, another place I like to smoke in is my kayak.”
     
    Wait, stop. A kayak?
     
    “I have one near my house because I live fairly close to the water. At the end of the day when I get it in the water, smoking is my reward. I go out there at sunset and practice what I call "serenity kayaking.” It's a nice slow-moving time and a joint is always part of that. People see me-maybe not necessarily smoking-and call out, “Are you as happy as you look?” and I say, ‘Yes, I really am.'“
     
    What do you typically like to do high-you know, besides kayaking?
     
    "Writing is one of the main things. For most of my books, I've started those writing sessions high. It really helps me start out well. I also love to smoke before eating dinner. I'm a fairly good cook and do it every night. I just smoke a little to make the food taste even better! I like more complex foods, and of course, sweet things.”
     
    Where do you get your marijuana?
     
    “I've had the same dealer for 35 years who deals out of the same tiny, scruffy apartment he's been in for even longer than that. We've been good buddies, and everyone who goes there has a key-that's the only way you can get in there. He's very, very careful. He's the most careful person I know, which is why he's been able to maintain his business for so long. He was a colleague of my first husband in a particular entertainment business. Soon he began doing less of the business and more of the dealing.”
     
    How do you feel about the fact that what you're getting comes from an illegal black market?
     
    “Here's the thing: I only used to get something called 'Mexican' because I'm fairly frugal and since I smoke a lot, I don't want it to make a dent in a budget. It's not actually called that, but he'll say, "Oh, you want more Mex?” There was an excerpt from my book in the New York Times about how I buy weed. It gathered a huge number of comments-maybe 650-and a common theme was that I was supporting the Mexican drug cartels and their murders. I didn't think my ounce or two every couple of months was doing that, but it did make me think. I try to be an ethical consumer, and from now on, I might buy more expensive strains that are grown in America and freed from that particular taint.“
     
    Do you have any crazy, weird weed stories?
     
    "I've created a website called MarijuanaMemoir.com and invited people to contribute marijuana stories. There's a hilarious one about a group of kids who enter a hot dog-eating contest when they're stoned…you should check it out. Listen, I've had many experiences in my life stoned, let's just say.”
     
    The science is debatable here, but do you think you're dependent on marijuana?
     
    “I always have some-I don't think there's been a moment in my adult life, except my pregnancies, when I didn't have some around. I guess that's an indication of dependency. I would not like to be without it. Also, I just miss it. It's not like I'll see bugs crawling on the wall or anything. I just think, 'Hmm, it'd be nice to be high now,' just to enhance the pleasures of life, which is why I do it. Not to escape the bad things but to enhance the good things.”
     
    Catherine Hiller is an author of Just Say Yes and editor living in the suburbs of New York City.

     
  2. Fucking Marvelous ....only other way was to be born with an implant of quality hashish in my body
     
  3. Wow I love this! Awesome and I knew that we could prove the haters wrong!  I also run a successful business and it shocks people to know I smoke.  
     
    THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!!!
     
  4. This lady sounds cool as hell. Lol
     
  5. #5 enjoyandlive, May 2, 2015
    Last edited by a moderator: May 2, 2015
    so she was high during the interview :laughing:


    Sent from my intergalactic spaceship hotbox
     
  6. I'm 65 and have been using cannabis since 1969, pretty much constantly. The longest I went, was maybe 12-18months. I'm sure I have some form of dependency, but that doesn't bother me. My wife would probably like me to quit or at least slow down, but it's the only habit I have, other than an occasional rum, so she has never said anything. It bothers me that there is such stereotyping among those that have never tried it. I truly believe in it's medicinal properties, both physical and psychic. It's never interfered with my career, and I've never had a run-in with the law. When people say it's not really medicine, I just tell them, that if it makes one feel better, than as far as I'm concerned, it is medicine.
     
  7. taking one compound from something and synthesizing it is medicine???  I laugh in those peoples direction and send the wake the hell up vibe into their psyche.
     
  8. Awesome. I can only see myslef relaxing with a joint in my hand and my wife by my side in 50 years.
     
  9. Good read, can't wait to see myself when I have 50 years under my belt.  At 6-7 right now(daily that is), still loving life and out of those years never had a sick day for work or school.  It truly makes my life better.
     

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