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Marijuana Amotivational Syndrome?

 

Is there any truth to the stereotype of the lazy, half-witted, burnt out marijuana smoker?

Amotivational Syndrome...The facts

Amotivational syndrome, a collection of observable consequences of heavy marijuana use that includes apathy, lethargy, reduced concentration, lowered intelligence and a lack of desire to partake in meaningful activities of upwards mobility; has never been clinically proven as factual or real.

No Clinical Causal Link

Problematically, the difficulties inherent in proving a casual link between marijuana usage and such a wide collection of behavioral changes prohibits a clinically demonstrable relationship, and some marijuana users, even heavy smokers, do not seem to display the characteristic traits of the amotivational syndrome.

Governmental propoganda?

A fact not last to marijuana advocates who argue of governmental propaganda and the propagation of myth, something that government have in the past been guilty of, and some would argue remain guilty of to this day. This is unfortunate, as there are enough legitimate risks of marijuana usage to give weight to arguments against its use, without resorting to half truths and myth.

Some Real Statistics About the Harms of Marijuana

But although amotivational syndrome cannot be proven as a casual result of marijuana usage, there are certain statistics that do illustrate the correlation between marijuana use and lowered academic and professional success and accomplishments.

  • Marijuana users are less likely to finish high school
  • They get lower grades in high school and in college than do non smokers
  • They perform lower on tests of intellectual capacity
  • They self report a decreased ability to excel professionally
  • Heavy marijuana users self report that their marijuana habit decreases their ability to perform complex work tasks well, to learn new tasks professionally and that their marijuana usage has hampered their upwards professional climb.

Marijuana and Developmental Delays in Teens

Marijuana usage is conclusively and casually linked to a reduction in ability to consolidate new memories for about 24 hours after you smoke; which for heavy or daily marijuana smokers means all the time. Essentially, marijuana can decrease your ability to learn.

Psychologists argue that when a teen starts smoking marijuana heavily, they lose the ability to consolidate the emotional and social learning necessary for a real transition out of adolescence and into adulthood. Marijuana blunts the emotional response to external stimuli, and as such when under the influence of marijuana, teens do not appropriately experience complex emotional and developmental challenges, and do not learn healthy was to navigate the emotional and psychosocial landscape of adulthood.

The earlier teens start smoking, the greater the deficit in learned social behaviors, and the greater the eventual harms.

So there is no direct evidence linking marijuana usage to amotivational syndrome, but marijuana does cause decreased academic, professional and general life performance. It does lessen the ability to learn, and when younger teens smoke marijuana heavily, they do not effectively develop emotionally and do not learn effective and appropriate ways to deal with emotional and social challenges in life.

Does it Make You Lazy?

And although marijuana cannot be conclusively linked to amotivational syndrome, most marijuana smokers will concede that under the influence of regular intoxication they are not as likely to accomplish worthwhile goals, and are more likely to focus on transient and meaningless pleasures of stimulation.

Far less likely to crack the books, and far more likely to play video games.

Far less likely to look for a new job and far more likely to watch a movie.

Scientists may not be able to prove a casual link, but marijuana smokers know that while high, they just aren’t as motivated to accomplish in life.

Does it exist? Learn about marijuana amotivational syndrome; the truth, the facts and the hearsay.
Page last modified January 29, 2008

Load of crap

Posted by Anonymous User
"Scientists may not be able to prove a casual link, but marijuana smokers know that while high, they just aren’t as motivated to accomplish in life."

Sure, while I'm high I don't want to do anything but sit on my couch and listen to tunes. The part you left out is that responsible smokers don't drive around, they don't do it when they wake up in the morning, they don't do it before going to work, and they're certainly not addicted to it.

I am a business professional who is doing quite well. I make a great salary and I do a great job at what I do. It's 11PM at the moment and I am working late to make sure our customer is happy in the morning. Amotivational my ass.

Anyone who reads this, dream big, work hard for your dreams, and they will come, that's a promise. Don't let ignorant fools tell you what is what, find out for yourselves, and if you're wrong, grow from it and move on.

That is all.

load

Posted by Anonymous User
Wow. I wonder how much more you could be without it.

To Load of Crap

Posted by Anonymous User
This might be your experience but not necessarily other peoples. Sure there are people like you that might use this drug responsibly but there are many others whose lives have been ruined by heavy use of marijuana and who started there destructive cycle on the beliefs that some in our society have perpetuated: That marijuana is an innocuous substance.

amotivational syndrome

Posted by Anonymous User
I find a puff helps me concentrate and gets me going... you might drink a cup of coffee to get you going... tell me, what's the burnout rate on caffeine?

but to be honest, when i self medicate, I hardly notice the buzz, who knows how much people smoke and what they smoke and why. I've found that people in general are just not motivated.... I don't think cannabis is to blame.

load...

Posted by Anonymous User
I smoke, I'm lazy and have a lot of trouble being on time...
The same sentence could have been said the same a year ago when I didnt smoke.

I cant blame it on any of the problems I have. Need to quit non the less :D Would be dumb if I didnt.

To the first commenter, the last part of your paragraph was worth more than the article :) Same for second...

Myth of Marijuana Amotivational Syndrome

Posted by Anonymous User
Under the guise of objectivity, the operator of this site propagates disingenuous information including inter alia, the myth of 'marijuana amotivational syndrome.'

There is no such thing. Rather, as any person with a modicum of life's experience has observed, chronic and heavy use of any CNS depressant, soporific or hypnotic substance will likely interfere with the user's ability to undertake and conmplete tasks. There is nothing inherent in cannabis that justifies the propagation of the myth of an 'amotivational syndrome' unique to the herb.

The webmaster's remarks are particularly distressing because they omit any reference whatseover to valid scientific studies published in respected peer-review journals contradicting the (unattributed) contentions made by the webmaster. An intellectually honest person would refer to all such studies, their methodologies, conclusions and criticisms thereof by colleagues of the researchers, rather than presenting only those conclusions derived from (unidentified) studies purporting to support the author's claims.

The masking of propaganda as "objective" information is destructive to legitimate efforts to assist the recovery of individuals afflicted by the deleterious sequelae of addictions and dependencies upon mood-altering substances. This is particularly true with regard to marijuana, the most widely used illicit mood-altering substance in America. Once the credibility of an information disseminator is inevitably undermined by the latter's propagation of transparent misrepresentations, its ability to assist those afflicted with destructive drug dependencies is greatly compromised.

It appears that this site is intended to facilitate and promote the operations of certain addiction counseling and treatment providers with a direct economic interest in the acceptance by the public of the claims made by the webmaster; at the least, such business enterprises are obvious sponsors of the site. It is considered unethical in the scientific community for an author to mask or conceal such affiliations, biases and interests.

While there are many "truths" recited here, unfortunately they often are presented as "half-truths;" that is, only part of the story is related. That technique is the essence of propaganda.

Accordingly, this site cannot reasonably be deemed to be an objective and accurate purveyor of information concerning marijuana or another drug, despite the presumably altruistic motives of the webmaster.

Thanks for your critique

Posted by admin
Hi,

If you were looking for scientific websites about the subject, you will find plenty of sources supporting the views expressed here. In visiting ChooseHelp.com you have come to a "front-line" site for people with acute addiction problems. So anyways, here are 2 links to get you started, from Wikipedia and the American Academy of Family Physicians:

- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_issues_and_the_effects_of_cannabis#Neurological_effects

- http://www.aafp.org/afp/991201ap/2583.html

I am a webmaster for ChooseHelp.com, and I value your input. There is nothing to conceal on this site, in fact 1000s of individuals come here every week to find the help they desperately need. In our "About Us" section we clearly state our motives and funding sources.

Personally, my interest lies with those that suffer from the effects of ANY addiction, no matter what the causes or substance for that matter. Some addictions are of a strictly chemical nature, others aren't.

Without knowing your personal motives behind posting your response (clearly something drove you to this site, and it doesn't seem to be the need for addiction treatment) I can assure you the requests for help we receive from people smoking marijuana are real. Addicts to marijuana are not simply imagining their dependency, and their "syndromes", amotivational or not, are not mere propaganda but experienced realities.

All the best to you,

Martin

It is not true for everyone, but it is for ME.

Posted by Anonymous User
Well, good for you. You can function and smoke marijuana. You have a good job, and blah blah blah.

I am here. Looking up this "syndrome" because I believe I have it.

I am a heavy marijuana user, and have been for several years. While some have kept their use recreational, I have not. I have let myself become addicted, YES ADDICTED to it.

If you use it rarely, you'll be fine. If your like me, and are depressed to start with, and smoke it to escape your problems- it is probably not a good idea to even start, it only feeds a vicious cycle. I have wasted years just sitting on my ass.

Overall, I have gained weight, and am so depressed, I can barely function. I feel suicidal, and although I am too chicken to actually pull the plug, it still is a horrible feeling. My house is a mess, I have no motivation to do ANYTHING. I am a drug addict, and all I do is weed.

Today I have decided that a large part of my problem is from marijuana- so here goes, I quit.

A warning, fun every once in a while is fine, but daily smoking, while it seems fun, and fine- is not. Give it 10 years, and you will see.

LAWLZ

Posted by Anonymous User
My name is Kaitlyn, and I've been smoking, roughly, 6 grams a day for two years. When I get high, I become motivated. I don't sit on my couch and play video games. I'll do my homework, exercise, clean the house, etc. I understand SOME people do become lethargic and unmotivated, but not EVERYONE is the same. I recently quit smoking marijuana, and I've actually been less motivated.

what i have found

Posted by Anonymous User
i believe i have it too...me and my wife have been smoking daily (let me make this clear...we smoke pot never before 9pm daily, but thats just it...we smoke a joint every night at 9pm)...i make alot of money in my day job, and am responsible, dont drink anymore (i just turned 41), quit smoking cigarettes....but the weed has made me lazy over the years...i used to be ripped from going to the gym, now i have a gym membership i rarely use...our house is dusty due to the fact we dont clean, we smoke pot, sit on the couch, watch sports with the sound down and blast tunes every night....i decided finally after about 10 years of steady smoking we are going to quit once our stash runs out(and we only have about a month left)...other than this unfortunate side effect, i havent had any other troubles with pot...(i used to get in a ton of trouble while using alcohol like bar fights, dui's, etc....) but with weed, its just the laziness i am sick of.. we stopped taking walks, going to the movies, bowling, we stopped everything except smoking pot...i wouldnt go so far to say its addictive, because i have had the same job 13 years and never miss work, never go to work stoned, never smoke before 9pm, dont feel like when i quit smoking cigarettes (which was overwhelming beyond belief),,,you get the idea....but instead of a schedule of working, smoking, eating, and falling asleep, i want to try a schedule of working, going to the gym, cleaning, going to sleep....lets see how it goes....
---metalbuoy
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