Cannabis News
What is Psychoactive Listening? – The Study of Cannabis and Music
Published
2 months agoon
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admin
Psychoactive Listening – A Study on Weed and Music
I’ll never forget the first time I truly “heard” Pink Floyd’s “Time.” Sure, I’d listened to it dozens of times before, but this was different. I had just taken a few hits from a joint when those haunting clock chimes began. As the song progressed, I found myself noticing things I’d somehow missed in all my previous listens – the intricate layers of percussion, the subtle interplay between the guitars, the way the bass line weaved through it all like a musical serpent. It wasn’t just hearing the music; it was experiencing it on a completely different level.
Ask any cannabis enthusiast about their relationship with music while high, and you’ll likely get a knowing smile followed by something along the lines of, “Everything just sounds better.” It’s not just about enhanced audio perception – there’s a profound sense of immersion that transforms familiar songs into entirely new experiences. The music doesn’t just play; it envelops you, pulls you in, and takes you on a journey through every note and rhythm.
For decades, this phenomenon has been widely acknowledged in cannabis culture, passed down through shared experiences and countless smoke sessions. However, the scientific community has largely overlooked this fascinating relationship between cannabis and musical perception. The lack of formal research has left us with plenty of anecdotal evidence but few concrete answers about what’s actually happening in our brains when we combine cannabis and music.
That’s finally changing. A groundbreaking new study is examining how cannabis affects our enjoyment and perception of music in real-world settings. Rather than relying on sterile laboratory conditions, researchers are meeting cannabis users where they naturally consume – in social settings where music is an integral part of the experience.
So pack a bowl, queue up your favorite stoner playlist, and join me as we explore the science behind what I like to call “psychoactive listening.” It’s time to understand why that bassline hits different when you’re high, and what that might mean for our understanding of consciousness, perception, and the therapeutic potential of cannabis.
Psychoactive listening isn’t just about hearing music while high – it’s about how cannabis fundamentally alters our relationship with sound. When researchers at Toronto Metropolitan University’s SMART Lab began exploring this phenomenon, they were investigating something cannabis users have known intuitively for generations: marijuana doesn’t just make music sound better; it transforms how we process and experience it entirely.
The study, currently underway at Club Lit, a cannabis consumption lounge in Toronto, takes a refreshingly practical approach to research. Instead of isolating participants in sterile laboratory conditions, researchers Chi Yhun Lo and Lena Darakjian chose to meet cannabis users in their natural habitat. As Lo explains, “Background music is always going to be a common part of most social experiences… What we’re really interested in is pairing cannabis with these specific music experiences.”
This real-world approach might seem unconventional, but it’s precisely what makes the study so valuable. “Having a sterile environment is the ultimate confound,” Lo argues, “because there’s really such little stimulation happening, and it’s so far removed from the real world.” By studying cannabis users in their natural environment, researchers can observe authentic interactions between marijuana, music, and social dynamics.
The methodology is elegantly simple: patrons at Club Lit can scan QR codes at their tables, accessing surveys about their musical experience while under the influence. The playlists rotate through various genres – from jazz to electronic, rock to reggae – allowing researchers to track how cannabis might influence musical preferences and openness to new styles.
But this isn’t just about understanding why your favorite album hits differently when you’re high. The implications of this research stretch far beyond recreational cannabis use. The team is particularly interested in how their findings might shed light on conditions like musical anhedonia – a condition where individuals cannot derive pleasure from music.
The research could also provide insights into broader aspects of consciousness, sensory processing, and neurodivergent listening patterns. As Lo notes, “There could be a really fascinating intersection that no one has even considered yet. We are really just at the start of the journey, and we hope that there will be some really significant therapeutic opportunities that we can leverage.”
Previous findings from the SMART Lab have already revealed intriguing patterns. Cannabis users reported changes in cognitive processing, including altered attentiveness, absorption, interpretation of lyrics, memory, and critical analysis. Perhaps most interestingly, many participants described an increased openness to new musical experiences while under the influence.
Looking ahead, this field of research could revolutionize our understanding of how psychoactive substances affect sensory processing and emotional responses to art. It might also lead to new therapeutic applications, potentially helping individuals with various forms of anhedonia or sensory processing disorders.
For now, the researchers continue gathering data, aiming to involve 1,000 participants in their study. As we await their findings, one thing is clear: what many of us have experienced anecdotally – that special relationship between cannabis and music – is finally getting the scientific attention it deserves.
As someone who’s spent countless hours both making and listening to music while under the influence of cannabis, I’ve developed my own theories about why marijuana seems to enhance our musical experience. Sure, it’s not peer-reviewed science, but after decades of firsthand research (if you catch my drift), I think I’ve stumbled upon some interesting insights worth sharing.
At its most basic level, I believe cannabis fundamentally alters our baseline consciousness. Now, before you roll your eyes at what sounds like typical stoner philosophy, hear me out. When we’re sober, our brain processes reality through a particular filter – one that’s been fine-tuned through years of evolution to help us survive. This filter prioritizes certain information while downplaying others, helping us navigate our daily lives efficiently.
But throw some THC into the mix, and something fascinating happens. That default filter shifts ever so slightly, creating what I like to call a “perspective drift.” The external world hasn’t changed – the same soundwaves are still hitting your eardrums – but the way your brain processes and interprets this information has been altered.
Think of it like this: Imagine you’ve lived in the same house for years. You know every corner, every creak in the floorboards. Then one day, you look at your living room from a different angle, maybe lying upside down on your couch, and suddenly you notice details you’ve never seen before. The room hasn’t changed, but your perspective has, revealing aspects that were always there but previously filtered out by your brain’s autopilot mode.
I believe something similar happens with music when you’re high. Cannabis temporarily disrupts your brain’s usual filtering system, allowing you to experience familiar songs as if hearing them for the first time from this slightly shifted perspective. Suddenly, that bassline that was always there but never caught your attention becomes impossible to ignore. The subtle harmonies in the background vocals jump to the forefront. The intricate patterns in the drum fills reveal themselves like hidden treasures.
Of course, this is all just educated stonerthink based on personal experience. There could be (and likely are) complex neurochemical processes at play that explain why cannabis affects our audio processing in such unique ways. Maybe THC temporarily enhances our ability to process multiple audio streams simultaneously. Perhaps it affects our sense of time, allowing us to perceive micro-changes in rhythm and tone that we typically miss. Without more scientific research, we can only speculate.
But that’s part of what makes this field so exciting. We’re finally starting to bridge the gap between anecdotal experience and scientific understanding. The research being done at Club Lit might validate some of these “stoner theories” or reveal entirely new mechanisms we haven’t even considered.
Until then, I’ll keep exploring these sonic landscapes through my slightly altered consciousness, confident that while I might not fully understand the “why” behind cannabis-enhanced music appreciation, the experience itself is undeniably real.
Well folks, there you have it – that age-old stoner wisdom about music sounding better when you’re high isn’t just cannabis folklore anymore. Science is finally catching up to what we’ve known all along, and while researchers are still untangling the neural mechanics behind it all, one thing’s crystal clear: cannabis fundamentally changes how we experience music.
So the next time someone gives you grief about smoking up and listening to Pink Floyd’s “Dark Side of the Moon” for the thousandth time, you can proudly inform them that you’re not being lazy – you’re engaging in “psychoactive listening.” You’re not just getting high; you’re conducting a personal exploration into altered states of musical perception. Sounds much more sophisticated, doesn’t it?
Maybe there’s something deeper happening during these sessions. Perhaps when we’re high, we’re able to pierce through the veil of our usual perceptions and connect more intimately with the artist’s intent. Those subtle emotional undertones in the vocals, the passionate nuances in the guitar solos, the intricate interplay between instruments – maybe we’re not just hearing them more clearly, but feeling them more deeply too.
Or maybe we’re all just really high and everything sounds amazing. Either way, science is finally starting to validate what cannabis users have been saying all along. So pack that bowl, put on your favorite album, and get ready for some serious psychoactive listening. After all, it’s not just recreation anymore – it’s research.
INSPIRATION:
https://www.marijuanamoment.net/scientists-explore-how-marijuana-affects
-enjoyment-of-music-through-new-study-at-cannabis-lounge/
MUSIC SOUNDS BETTER WHEN HIGH, YES OR NO? READ ON…
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Scientists Now Think That One Compound in the Cannabis Plant Can Replace All Opiates
Cannabis News
Scientists Now Think That One Compound in the Cannabis Plant Can Replace All Opiates
Published
11 hours agoon
April 3, 2025By
admin
Which Cannabis Compound Do Scientists Think Can Replace Opiates?
…And Why This Is Important
Opiates are a type of pharmaceutical drug that’s been made from the opium poppy plant. While it’s somewhat a ‘natural’ substance that’s been extracted from the fibers and sap of the opium poppy plant, these are extremely dangerous sedatives that act on the central nervous system. However, there are completely synthetic opioids as well, which are manufactured entirely in laboratories.
Famous examples of well-known and widely-used opiates today include heroin, codeine, and morphine. They all work similarly, binding to the brain’s opioid receptors and users feel a drastic reduction in pain. It also causes users to feel euphoric, drowsy, or sleepy. Common side effects include constipation and nausea.
Because opiates are powerful for dulling one’s pain perceptions, they have become commonly prescribed by doctors and hospitals for pain relief. That said, opiates have become one of the world’s most addictive, dangerous, and fatal drugs – and you can get prescribed it right by your very own physician. Repeated use of opiates can easily lead to dependence and addiction, and eventually consuming high doses can drastically slow down breathing, and cause brain damage, or even death.
Since doctors still keep prescribing opioids, this has resulted in the deadly Opioid Epidemic, which has killed thousands of people. It’s a worrisome public health crisis, most especially because of fentanyl, an illegally manufactured opioid which is said to be 50 times more potent than heroin.
Could The Answer To The Opioid Epidemic Lie In Cannabis…Terpenes?
The past few years have shown that cannabis legalization is critical for surviving the opioid epidemic, and reducing overall opioid consumption.
The results of a recent research paper, which builds on past studies conducted by Dr. John Streicher, who is a member of the Comprehensive Center for Pain and Addiction, reveals fascinating findings. According to Streicher, cannabis terpenes were found to provide relief in inflammation models as well as on neuropathic pain caused by chemotherapy.
For the study, Streicher and his research team analyzed 4 kinds of terpenes that are found in mid to high levels in Cannabis sativa plants: linalool, geraniol, beta-caryophyllene, and alpha-humulene. They discovered that each terpene produced significant pain relief among mice subjects with fibromyalgia and post-operative pain, and among the terpenes, geraniol was found to be the most powerful.
“Our research is showing that terpenes are not a good option for reducing acute pain resulting from an injury, such as stubbing your toe or touching a hot stove; however, we are seeing significant reductions in pain when terpenes are used for chronic or pathological pain,” he said. “This study was the first to investigate the impact of terpenes in preclinical models of fibromyalgia and post-operative pain and expand the scope of potential pain-relieving treatments using terpenes,” Streicher said.
Cannabis terpenes are the compounds responsible for the aromatic profile of each strain; they are located in the plant trichomes. Not only do they contribute to each strain’s unique flavor and odor, but they also have valuable therapeutic and medicinal benefits. There are around 150 kinds of terpenes known today, though in the entire plant world, there are known to be some 20,000 terpenes.
Understanding the therapeutic benefits of terpenes is incredibly valuable also because they don’t contain THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), the compound in marijuana that gets you high.
“With fibromyalgia, there isn’t much of an understanding of what the pain state is, and there are not a lot of great options for treating it,” explains Streicher. “Our findings show that terpenes may be a viable treatment option for fibromyalgia pain, which could potentially have a large impact and make a difference for an under-treated population.”
Other Studies
This is not the first time that cannabis terpenes have been found to demonstrate excellent pain-relieving properties. It must be noted that just like what Streicher says, terpenes seem to do better with chronic pain management, instead of acute pain management.
Another study from 2024, which was published in The Journal of the Association for the Study of Pain, was conducted by researchers at the University of Arizona and the National Institutes of Health. The investigators analyzed the analgesic properties of different terpenes including geraniol, humulene, linalool, pinene, and caryophyllene among mice subjects with chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy.
According to the researchers, all the terpenes delivered analgesic effects that were equivalent to around 10 mg/kg of morphine. It was also interesting to note that administering both morphine and terpenes together at low doses resulted in ‘enhanced’ pain-killing effects.
“Together these studies identify cannabis terpenes as potential therapeutics for chronic neuropathic pain,” said the investigators.
There have also been other studies that have found that combining cannabis with opioids can indeed provide long-lasting pain relief. It comes with the added benefit of reducing opioid doses needed for effective pain control. This phenomenon is called opioid-sparing. These types of protocols can be beneficial for patients who suffer from severe, chronic pain caused by cancer, arthritis, joint problems, fibromyalgia, diabetes, post-surgical pain, migraines, nerve damage, and so much more.
Conclusion
Learning more about the pain-killing properties of terpenes is extremely valuable for the medical community, patients, and even society as a whole. We can all do with less opioid addictions because it has torn families apart, and caused the deaths of thousands of people.
Terpenes, or cannabis in general, offer a natural and safe alternative that can be complementary to other pharmaceutical treatments designed to reduce pain.
SWAPPNG OPIOIDS FOR CANNABIS, READ ON…

Cannabis and the Authoritarian State
Cannabis has been legal for longer than it has been illegal. Let that sink in for a minute. For thousands of years, humans cultivated and consumed cannabis freely across civilizations and continents. It wasn’t until the early 1900s that we witnessed a massive push to drive hemp and cannabis into the black market, primarily due to industrial competition from petrochemicals, pharmaceuticals, and other industrial applications.
What makes cannabis so threatening to powerful interests? For starters, hemp and cannabis are highly versatile crops with over 50,000 different uses, from medicine to textiles to fuel. Even more remarkable is how this plant is hardwired to work with the human body through our endocannabinoid system—a biological network we didn’t even discover until the 1990s.
Perhaps most threatening of all is that cannabis is insanely easy to grow. This means that if the plant helps you with a particular physical ailment, you have the ability to grow your own medicine indefinitely. No insurance premiums, no wait lists, no pharmaceutical middlemen—just you cultivating your own healing directly from the earth.
Authoritarians do not like this, not one bit. When people can meet their own needs independently, power structures lose their grip. When citizens can think differently without permission, control systems begin to fail. So today, we’re going to look at the interesting relationship between authoritarianism and cannabis, and how this humble plant plays a key role in keeping you free.
We’ve already established the versatility of cannabis, but there’s another element that those old D.A.R.E. PSAs inadvertently reveal about what authoritarians think about cannabis. I’m talking, of course, about “behavior.” You see, in an authoritarian system, you and I are but cogs in the machine. We’re the expendables who should be proud to work ourselves to death for our “fearless leaders.”
This is precisely why certain ideas, philosophies, religions, movements, books, and substances are typically banned in authoritarian regimes. Take North Korea as an example: everything from the type of television citizens watch to the music they hear is a tightly spun spell designed to keep the populace in check. While they don’t have explicit laws against hemp (they actually grow it industrially), smoking psychoactive cannabis is strictly forbidden.
Contrast this with places like Malaysia, where you can get up to 5 years for possessing just 20 grams of cannabis, and even face the death penalty depending on the situation. These authoritarians don’t play around when it comes to cannabis because they know it affects the behavior of their populace in ways they can’t control.
The question becomes: what behavior do they fear so much that cannabis produces within the individual?
The answer is a critical mind. People who consume cannabis often begin to question their own belief systems. Most regular users undergo some transformation in their values and perspectives. Cannabis has a unique way of helping people see beyond cultural programming and think outside established paradigms. It can make the familiar strange and the strange familiar—a psychological state that’s antithetical to authoritarian control.
This independent thinking runs counter to the narrative of authoritarians who wish to maintain a tight grip on social consciousness. If even 10% of a population begins to pivot in their behavior within a regime, it can have massive ripple effects. Just look at cannabis in the US—it went from being demonized to being embraced by the majority in less than 80 years, despite massive propaganda efforts.
For authoritarians, psychoactive cannabis isn’t primarily a threat to public health and wellbeing—it’s a threat to the health and wellbeing of authoritarianism itself. When people start thinking differently, they start living differently. When they start living differently, they start demanding different. And that’s the beginning of the end for any system built on unquestioning obedience.
Beyond the threat to thought control, there’s another reason why drugs in general remain illegal: the state can use prohibition as a weapon against the populace. This isn’t conspiracy theory—it’s documented history.
Take Nixon’s war on drugs. His domestic policy chief, John Ehrlichman, later admitted: “We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities.” Nixon essentially placed cannabis on the Controlled Substances Act because he needed an excuse to shut down anti-war protests and target Black communities.
Since hippies and anti-war protesters were smoking “freedom grass,” making it illegal would circumvent their freedom of speech and freedom of assembly, and more importantly—turn free citizens into state property. It’s a win-win if you’re an authoritarian looking to silence dissent.
Then there’s the whole “boogeyman” complex that prohibition creates. We’re told “drug dealers” are roaming the streets preying on innocents, giving them “marihuanas” so they can do vile things. What the government conveniently leaves out is how the banks these “dealers” use to launder their money remain untouched. They don’t mention the shadier dealings of law enforcement either—like running guns into Mexico (eventually leading to the death of one of their own), or spraying poison on crops, killing and hospitalizing people because, you know…”Drugs are bad!”
Authoritarians cannot let go of the value that keeping the most widely used illicit substance in the world illegal provides them. This explains why the US hasn’t federally legalized cannabis despite nearly 80% of Americans supporting some form of legalization. It’s not because they don’t have enough research or that they’re genuinely concerned about public health—it’s because prohibition gives them all the privileges of violating constitutional rights while siphoning money into their coffers.
Drug prohibition creates a perpetual enemy that can never be defeated, allowing endless justification for surveillance, militarized police, asset forfeiture, and expansion of state power. What authoritarian could resist such a convenient tool?
Cannabis is a plant. You can’t make nature illegal—it’s counter to the human experience. When governments attempt to criminalize a naturally occurring organism that humans have cultivated and used for thousands of years, they reveal the absurdity of their position and the limits of their authority.
While the United States isn’t a full-on authoritarian state (yet), the truth is that many authoritarian elements have played out over the years. You only need to look as far as the war on drugs to see how the state utilizes prohibition as a weapon to their advantage. From no-knock raids to civil asset forfeiture to mass incarceration, drug laws have erected a parallel legal system where constitutional protections often don’t apply.
The fundamental truth is that cannabis is not only versatile and medicinal, it gives you back your autonomy in multiple ways. It helps you think for yourself. It allows you to grow your own medicine. It connects you with a plant that humans have used ceremonially, medicinally, and industrially throughout our history. And this autonomy is something authoritarians cannot stand—free individuals who know how to think beyond the narratives they’re fed.
Cannabis doesn’t just get you high—it offers a perspective from which the absurdities of prohibition become glaringly obvious. Perhaps this is why, as state after state legalizes, we’re witnessing the slow but steady unraveling of one of the most enduring authoritarian policies in American history.
So if you count yourself among those who value freedom of thought and bodily autonomy, who believe that nature doesn’t require government permission, and who understand that true liberty includes the right to explore your own consciousness—well, maybe it’s time to toke one up for freedom!
LEGALIZING CANNABIS IS NOT ENOUGH, READ ON..
Cannabis News
Stop Using Bat Poop to Fertilize Your Weed Plants Immediately, Here is Why…
Published
2 days agoon
April 1, 2025By
admin
Don’t Fertilize Your Weed with Bat Poop
Fertilization is a critical step for growing healthy marijuana plants.
They help provide essential nutrients for marijuana in various stages of growth, while promoting plant growth. There are dozens of different fertilizers to choose from in the market; growers can choose based on budget, nutrients needed, location, season, and much more. But not all fertilizers are made equally – of course, some are of better quality than others.
That said, there are some rather unusual fertilizers that can be used on plants. These may include, but are not limited to: coffee, milk, grass clippings, banana peels, fish tank water, potato water, and even urine! Yes, it does sound strange, but to gardening enthusiasts, there is nutritional value to be found in each of these things, which can make them suitable fertilizers depending on the circumstances.
For example, grass clippings make excellent mulch and can provide potassium, nitrogen, and phosphorus. Urine is a potent source of nitrogen as well as phosphorus. Banana peels are rich in calcium, which is excellent for promoting root growth while helping supply oxygen to the soil.
But what about bat poop? Also known as guano, bat poop has been said to work as a plant fertilizer because it’s rich in nitrogen, potassium, phosphorus, and other nutrients. Unfortunately, using bat poop as a plant fertilizer can also be dangerous. So if you don’t really know what you are doing, bat poop as a fertilizer can be extremely risky.
Bat Poop Fertilizer Kills 2 NY Men
On December 2024, news of two men hailing from Rochester, New York, dying went viral.
The cause of death was dangerous fungus, in the bat poop that they were using to fertilize their marijuana plants. Both men grew their own marijuana plants for medical consumption, but unfortunately developed histoplasmosis after breathing toxic fungal spores from the guano.
One of the men was aged 59 years old; he bought bat poop online to use as fertilizer for his plants. Meanwhile, the other was a 64-year-old male who found guano in his attic, then decided to use it to fertilize his cannabis plants. They both developed similar symptoms, including chronic coughs, fever, severe weight loss, and respiratory failure. The case was also discussed in the Open Forum Infectious Diseases medical journal.
Is there a safe way to use bat poop as fertilizer? If you ask me, I truly can’t understand why one would use guano as fertilizer when there are so many other proven safe alternatives out there that are simply not as risky. According to the University of Washington, one must always wear a dust mask each time you open a bag containing soil amendments. That’s because a mask will greatly decrease the chances of breathing in fungal spores, which could be potentially dangerous. They also go on to explain that yes, guano is indeed used as fertilizer for its valuable nitrogen content but it still isn’t without its own risks, particularly of developing Histoplasma – the same condition that killed the two men.
Make Your Own Safe Fertilizers At Home
There are many other safe, affordable – and even free – fertilizers you can feed your marijuana plants with. It doesn’t have to cost a fortune nor does it have to be risky to your health.
Check out these easy, low-cost, DIY fertilizers for weed:
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Coffee grounds are abundant in nitrogen, which makes it perfect for the vegetative stage of marijuana plants. They are also a fantastic source of organic materials and green waste, which contain other vital nutrients. When the coffee grounds decompose, they create soil aggregates that improve soil aeration and its water retention capabilities.
Mix around 2 grams of coffee ground for every liter of soil. Measuring its pH levels is also helpful, since you want it to be between 6 to 6.5
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Crushed eggshells are a great way to ensure no eggshells go to waste. It’s rich in calcium plus other minerals that are effective in improving overall plant structure, health, and growth. In fact, so many gardeners and farmers commonly use crushed eggshells to help boost plant growth – and it will work just as well for marijuana plants.
They’re really easy to use, too! Just mix eggshells into the soil, or steep them into water then pour into the soil for a calcium-packed feed.
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Banana tea or water is rich in potassium and magnesium, making it perfect as a feed during the marijuana plant’s flowering stage. You can use banana peels differently: with 3 to 5 banana peels, soak it in water for 2 days. Then you can use the water on your plants, and even leave the banana peels as compost for your garden.
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Wood ash from your fireplace or other sources is a great source of phosphorus and potassium. Simply sprinkle some wood ash over marijuana during the final flower phase. Just use 1 or 2 grams of ash for every liter of substrate. Be careful not to use too much wood ash, or it can make the soil too alkaline.
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Animal manure, such as those from cows, rabbits, or horses, make excellent organic fertilizers. Just be sure that they’re composed properly so that you avoid introducing weed seeds, or pathogens.
These low-cost fertilizers are also natural and effective. There’s no reason for you to turn to bat poop as fertilizer, even if you’re in a bind.
Conclusion
Guano or bat poop is a poor choice of fertilizer if you don’t know what you are doing. It’s risky and potentially dangerous – just not worth it. Instead, fertilize your marijuana plants with these options mentioned.
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