Ganja Theories – Does Your Weed Have a Vibe?

I once went to a Holocaust museum that had all sorts of horrific events on walls – highlighting the evil of humanity. One of the most impressive presentations during this exhibition was a real railroad car that was used during World War II to take prisoners to concentration camps like Auschwitz.

When I entered the room, a chill ran down my spine. I could feel the fear and concern and immediately felt myself in the victim of the terrible event in a way that I had never experienced before.

The mood of the past was entangled with the physical object in which I was standing. It was a surreal experience.

We often feel “vibes” and say things like “This person gave me a strange atmosphere” or “This house has a strange atmosphere”.

This made me think about other things that might have vibrations and as I was investigating my own life I finally started thinking about cannabis.

I’ve smoked weed from many different sources – from home growers to buying cartel weed on the street, and if I can say one thing – weed has an atmosphere too!

Low vibration weeds

First, let’s talk about “low vibrational weed” or as some call it “brick weed”! Brickweed is mostly grown and sold by Mexican cartels. It’s mass-produced and can be purchased for around $ 90 per kilo. In some places you can get it even cheaper.

Cartels notoriously don’t care what they put in the grass, they don’t cure it, they just grow it to maturity, hang it to dry, and spray it with chemicals to kill the smell. Then they pack it in square bricks and ship it out for export and sale.

If you have ever had the displeasure about smoking this type of weed you will notice certain effects;

  1. lethargy

  2. headache

  3. Short long service life

  4. Piss bad taste

  5. A feeling of dirt

I remember when drug warriors tried to convince consumers that “by buying weed, they are indirectly killing people” because cartels would use the funds to buy weapons that would then kill the police trying to make the trade to stop.

While it takes a bit of a chore to get consumers to stop buying, there is the element of “vibes” when it comes to this weed. Smoking a plant that had no “love” and was grown for commercial purposes only is the same as eating processed foods that are factory-raised.

The energetic signature of the environment in which it was grown affects the plant.

Take music for example;

Artificial sound treatment can produce various effects on plants. First, improve seed germination and plant growth. Sound promotes plant growth by regulating the plant growth hormones indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and gibberellin (Bochu et al., 2004; Ghosh et al., 2016) (SOURCE)

If a plant can be influenced by the vibrations of music – thereby making it grow, how much do the emotional fields of the people who cultivate the plants affect it?

This is of course not a scientific position (yet), but from a purely subjective point of view – cartel grass seems to have very little vibrational activity.

Maybe it’s the pesticides, maybe the lack of proper curing, maybe it’s the mold – but if you compare the high from brick weed to someone growing your own, there is a marked difference in the way it feels.

Commercial weed vs. home grown

The best weed I ever smoked was weed that I grew. I once cut out a small but very potent plant that knocked my socks off. I took two small punches and was high for 4 hours.

My friend, who also tried my weed, said, “This is not weed, these are drugs!” Compliments on the high he was feeling.

Although the plant was grown under compact fluorescent lights in a small grow box I built, I spent days and nights watching it and making sure whatever I could do to help it was being done.

After a while of growth, the end result was “OMG THIS IS FANTASTIC!” The mood of this grass was light, it was energetic, it had substance.

We would have long philosophical debates about existence and other things. While we could just cut it down to “the genetics,” I have a theory that my intentions behind growing the plant somehow influenced it as well.

The reason I say this is because I can feel the difference when I smoke commercial weed. Of course it’s all subjective and scientifically proving it would be very difficult, but that’s why I wrote about it as “ganja theories”.

This series of blogs is all about thinking about crazy things and seeing if we can make sense of them – intellectual thought experiments.

Commercial grass is certainly much better than brick and has a higher vibration, but depending on whether the grass was grown by a local grower who takes care of their crops – or an industrial farm trying to maximize profits – you will Taste the difference.

Maybe I’m just high and writing about some nonsense, but I wanted to expand this question to a wider public – my fellow campaigners!

The sticky end result

Personally, after more than 20 years of smoking, I have had the opportunity to smoke thousands of different strains from different sources.

If you consider that water can change its structure through intention, as outlined in the study by Masuru Emoto in the 1990s, which was then tested in a double-blind study in 2006, this shows that the intention influences the material plane.

Since cannabis uses a lot of water, could this “capture” the intent of the environment and change the structure of the water in the cannabis plant?

This is the basis of this discussion of the ganja theory. Just as I could feel the eerie atmosphere of a Holocaust wagon – could the setting and intent behind a harvest change the atmosphere of grass?

Perhaps in the world of growing cannabis, intent really does count!

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