26 Comments

  1. Failed a repeat year at uni/college, after failing the first time. Had quit weed 5 months ago, just started smoking a joint a day for the last two days. I'll stop again in a day but there won't be next time I used to deal with life. In two days, I realised how much weed used to derail me, and quitting was the best thing for me. I honestly lived a better life.

  2. First : cudos to the channel team
    – good conten, well-delivered.
    …Enjoyed.
    Second: joke on video naming
    – "coping without alco-, nico- and weed" (meaning 'how to be coping without such, right? )
    EASY: caffeine, ketamine and food! 🫣🙏

  3. Hello everybody,
    If you resonate with this message, please feel free to read on. I would like to share from my own experience, that often times, I got caught up in how I was being conditioned as in I would notice that I would go for weed or nicotine as a habit when this situation came up or I needed it to relax or simply bringing my attention to this “belief” that I need it. I think all humans have at least two, I guess, “primal” urges where one is breath and the other is eat, probably some others i’m not addressing. I got to a point where it became almost a primal urge. Like it came even before breakfast. When I smoked, I didn’t even enjoy smoking it, I was trying to get as high as possible, taking as few breaths in between as I can, until the next time that I would sober up which was pretty quick. That meant more weed got burnt up quicker, more money, more energy, more time. So going back to my first point, I got caught up in how I was being conditioned. And then came the conflict in how I wanted to change which was obviously not in alignment with what was actually happening and what I was used to and what was in my “comfort zone”. The real solution for me was to realize that I was being conditioned. Living is “conditioning” in a way because when the same routine occurs over and over again we are conditioned to think that there is a certain way we should live. When that way changes, for example, when we get lazy and don’t brush our teeth before going to bed, we may feel threatened in some form. We may feel motivated to continue living the way we are conditioned. Or we may feel motivated to explore more ways that life has to offer. Lol, we may even get conditioned to not brush our teeth for the next week or so. Point is, there isn’t a way to escape to conditioning. In other words, focus on the present. Only in the present, lies all the opportunities, all the possibilities, all the changes that we’ve been waiting for. When we get stuck in our minds, we also get stuck in the past. Because what else is knowledge that you acquire from word of mouth or reading or experience but something that has already been said, known, or experienced. It absolutely does NOT define the current present moment. We are powerful and we can live the way that we want to, only if we recognize our power which always lies in the present. Wisdom, knowledge, thought patterns, behavioral patterns; they can all become conditioning. This is one of the reasons, I don’t trust in religion or modern technology or modern education. Doesn’t mean I don’t use it and live in this delusional world everyday though. I simply try to live as aware, meaningfully, and peacefully as I can. Anyways hope you’ve enjoyed my rambling. If you want a real teacher check out Jiddu Krishnamurti. “Belief has no place where truth is concerned.”- Jiddu Krishnamurti

  4. Quit weed since 16th of September. Me and my family went on holiday to a place I knew I couldn’t get any smoke. Best thing I done.feeling financially better allready 🙏

  5. I have eight years of sobriety. Sober from alcohol. I have a higher power , a faith 🙏 in the lord. I have handed my life and will over . It works for me. People can go to a 12 step program , and get sober by listening and sharing with addicts who are working the 12 steps to remain sober. That works too.

  6. Hey Man, I have been floating across your content for years. Today is the day I push myself the hardest. Is there any chance for that $27 access with a bottle and community support?

  7. I've been struggling with food addiction,alcohol and smoking nicotine for 10 years, lost 26 kgs as a result of quitting the first, been sober for 8 weeks, but cigarettes are the toughest so far to quit, gosh its so hard guys, i cant believe some have actually stopped smoking

  8. smoked weed for several years in a row. I didn't particularly enjoy it anymore and then I left my country to the north of Sweden, where I lived for 3 months without using it. Now I'm back and I still have the urge to smoke, but I just can’t let it happen

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