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Tolerance Breaks: When Your Weed Stops Working but You Still Need Your Weed

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By OG Strain
The Plug’s Pages Magazine

Let’s talk about tolerance breaks — that thing everyone in cannabis culture swears by, argues about, schedules, reschedules, fails at, and then lies about on the internet.

You’ve heard the advice.

“Take a tolerance break.”

“Just stop for a week.”

“Two weeks and you’ll be blasted again.”

Sounds simple… unless cannabis is your medicine.

Because for a lot of us, not smoking isn’t just inconvenient — it’s unrealistic. Pain doesn’t take tolerance breaks. Anxiety doesn’t check your calendar. Sleep issues don’t politely wait while you “reset.”

And yet… here we are. Smoking. Smoking more. Smoking again. And suddenly realizing:

Why am I high but not high?

That’s tolerance knocking.

Everyone’s Got a Method (And Swears It’s the Best One)

Some people don’t smoke all day. They wait.

Nine o’clock at night.

Like a reward. Like weed Cinderella.

Respect. Seriously.

But if you’re like me, cannabis isn’t just a vibe — it’s medicine. Going cold turkey isn’t always an option. And ironically, when your tolerance gets too high, you’re already kind of going without it anyway… because it’s not working.

So what do you do then?

My Version of a “Tolerance Break” (Without the Break)

I don’t really take planned tolerance breaks.

What I do instead is rotate my relationship with cannabis.

When concentrates stop hitting the way they should, I switch to flower only. Just flower. Simple. Back to basics. And for a while? It works beautifully.

Then one day flower starts acting funny. Smells amazing. Tastes great. Does absolutely nothing.

I never have to fully abandon my medicine. I just change the delivery system.

Is it a tolerance break?

Not really.

Is it effective?

Absolutely.

The Accidental Mini-Breaks Nobody Talks About

Now, I’ll be honest — there are times where I barely smoke for a day or two. Not because I planned it. Not because I was being disciplined.

It just… happens.

I’m lazy.

It’s cold.

I don’t feel like going outside.

I’m busy.

Life happens.

I wouldn’t call that a tolerance break.

I’d call it life interfering with my smoke schedule.

So Are Tolerance Breaks Necessary?

Here’s the truth nobody likes to admit:

Tolerance breaks work — for some people.

Rotating products works — for others.

Doing absolutely nothing different and just complaining online works — for no one.

The real goal isn’t suffering.

The goal is getting relief again.

And there’s more than one way to get there.

Now I’m Curious…

Do you take tolerance breaks?

Do you schedule them?

White-knuckle through them?

Switch methods like I do?

Or ignore the whole concept and just hope for the best?

What’s your method?

What works for you?

And how do you survive when your medicine decides to stop doing its job?

Because in cannabis culture, one thing is universal:

We’re all just trying to feel better… without giving up the thing that helps us feel better 🌱

— OG Strain

The Plug’s Pages Magazine

Health & Wellness

Scromiting: The Real Story Behind Cannabis Vomiting — What You Should Know

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By Seymour Buds — The Plug’s Pages Magazine

You’ve probably seen the dramatic TikToks and viral captions: “scromiting” — a mash‑up of screaming and vomiting — described as some terrifying side effect of modern cannabis. For some, this experience was so severe it changed their relationship with weed forever. But what if the real cause isn’t just THC, and what if the fear that followed was built on misunderstanding as much as fact?

Let’s separate what’s real from what’s rumor, look at what science says, and show how you can protect your health if you love cannabis but fear getting sick.

What in the World Is Scromiting?

“Scromiting” is not a medical term — but the condition people are describing is real. The clinical name for the pattern of intense nausea, cyclic vomiting, and abdominal pain tied to repeated cannabis use is Cannabinoid Hyperemesis Syndrome (CHS). CHS has now been officially recognized in the World Health Organization’s International Classification of Diseases, giving researchers and doctors a diagnostic code to track and study it properly.  

In some cases, visits to emergency rooms have increased fivefold in recent years due to these symptoms, especially among heavy users.  

Yet despite the fearsome reputation the term has garnered online, scientists still don’t fully understand why CHS happens. The most widely studied theory involves complex changes in how the body’s endocannabinoid system controls nausea after years of intense stimulation.  

Wait — What About Contaminants? Could That Be the Culprit?

Now here’s where things get interesting.

Medical evidence does not support a conclusion that pesticide contamination is the primary cause of CHS. Published research has found that CHS can occur even when closed‑loop lab‑creators use cannabis with no detectable pesticides, and synthetic cannabinoids can also trigger similar symptoms, making contamination an unlikely direct cause of CHS alone.  

Studies have repeatedly found chemical contaminants, fungal toxins, and mycotoxins in seized or illegally distributed cannabis. For example, a recent analysis of illicit samples in Arizona and California found that 16% contained dangerous mycotoxins, fungal byproducts linked to gastrointestinal distress and other health risks.  

Other research shows that pesticide residues and fungal contaminants can pose significant health risks. These include nausea, vomiting, respiratory irritation, and infections — particularly when cannabis is inhaled, which delivers contaminants directly into the lungs.  

Moreover, formal safety standards for contaminants in cannabis vary widely between markets and are often non‑existent — meaning some products slip through without adequate testing.  

So while pesticides alone are not established as the cause of CHS, contaminated cannabis — especially from illicit or improperly tested sources — may increase risk for adverse reactions in some users.

The Emotional Toll: Fear, Avoidance, and Unanswered Questions

For many people who have suffered CHS episodes — or watched loved ones endure them — the experience can be traumatic. After days or weeks of recurrent vomiting and pain, it’s easy to assume that all cannabis is dangerous and that THC itself is to blame. Social media posts and health headlines often reinforce that fear without nuance or context.  

This can lead to anxiety around cannabis use, avoidance, and even complete abstinence — particularly for those who once enjoyed cannabis for pain relief, relaxation, or recreational enjoyment.

So If You’ve Been Scared to Try Again… What Now?

Here’s the responsible, evidence‑based take:

  1. CHS is a documented medical phenomenon.
    Yes, symptoms exist, and CHS can be serious. It can require aggressive medical support and cessation of cannabis to recover.  
  2. The causes aren’t fully known, and science continues to study how chronic exposure interacts with our bodies over time.  
  3. Contaminants — fungal toxins, pesticides, heavy metals — are real safety issues in cannabis products from unregulated or illicit markets. Testing standards vary, and harmful compounds have been found in seized and poorly regulated products.  
  4. Legal, lab‑tested cannabis from regulated dispensaries is safer.
    Licensed products are screened for many contaminants — reducing, though not eliminating, risk from residual chemicals or fungal toxins.
  5. If you’ve had CHS, your symptoms may be specific to your body and history, not necessarily a broad indictment of cannabis itself.

People recovering from CHS or worried about recurrence should work with medical professionals and always start with transparency about what products they used. Whether you decide to try cannabis again under safe, tested conditions is a personal decision — one best made with awareness and care.

Conclusion: Knowledge Beats Fear

Cannabis isn’t a mythical cure or a guaranteed cure‑all — and it’s not inherently deadly, either. Like any substance, it carries risks, especially when used heavily or when products are untested.

“Scromiting” is a dramatic term born online, rooted in real symptoms but surrounded by misunderstanding, misinformation, and sometimes fear‑driven narratives.

The smartest path forward for cannabis lovers isn’t panic — it’s informed choice:
    •    Know your source
    •    Demand lab testing
    •    Understand contaminants
    •    Recognize your own body’s response

If you’ve ever been afraid to partake again because of a bad episode, this is not an invitation to jump back in blindly — but it is an invitation to be hopeful, educated, and empowered.

Cannabis can be enjoyed responsibly — and the more we improve safety standards, demand transparency, and advance scientific research, the safer it will be for everyone.

Seymour Buds is a cannabis industry writer who separates hype from reality. His work appears regularly in The Plug’s Pages Magazine — bringing fact‑checked insight with just the right amount of personality.

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Health & Wellness

How Cannabis Is Helping Cancer Patients — Beyond the Hype

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By Seymour Buds
The Plug’s Pages Magazine

When most folks think of cannabis and cancer, they imagine pain relief and munchies-boosted appetites — and sure, those are real benefits we’ll get to — but there’s more happening in the lab than just relief. Emerging science is pointing not only to symptom control but to mechanisms where certain cannabis compounds might slow tumor growth and even encourage cancer cells to self-destruct — albeit in early research. Let’s break down what’s real, what’s promising, and why this matters for patients and caregivers alike.

🧠 Cannabis and the Endocannabinoid System — The Body’s Balancing Act

Cannabis interacts with the endocannabinoid system (ECS), a widespread regulatory network in the human body that helps keep things like pain, appetite, inflammation, and nausea in check. Cannabinoids like THC and CBD bind with ECS receptors (CB1 and CB2), influencing how cells behave — both healthy and diseased. This interaction explains many of cannabis’s therapeutic effects.  

🌡️ Battle Against Chemotherapy Side Effects — Backed by Science

For many cancer patients, chemotherapy isn’t just about shrinking tumors — it’s a gauntlet of nausea, vomiting, pain, loss of appetite, anxiety, and fatigue. Here’s where cannabis and cannabinoids are showing consistent clinical benefit:

✅ 1. Nausea and Vomiting (CINV)

THC-based drugs like dronabinol and nabilone are FDA-approved specifically for chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting when other drugs fail. Clinical trials showed they work as well — and sometimes better — than older antiemetic drugs.  

Even whole-plant cannabis formulations (like THC/CBD sprays) have shown reduced nausea in small trials by engaging the ECS pathways that control emesis.  

Real talk: If chemo makes you feel like life is a perpetual roller coaster with no seatbelt — cannabis may be a seatbelt worth discussing with your oncologist.

✅ 2. Pain Management

Cannabis’s pain-modulating effects come from cannabinoid interactions with pain pathways. Studies indicate that vaporized cannabis can improve pain control when combined with opioids better than opioids alone — especially for nerve pain caused by cancer or chemo.  

Patients also report better overall symptom control, including reduced need for higher doses of stronger pain meds.  

✅ 3. Appetite and Weight Support

Losing appetite and weight — known as cachexia — is a devastating part of advanced cancer. THC and other cannabinoids can increase appetite, counteracting this wasting effect and helping patients maintain strength during treatment.  

⚗️ Can Cannabis Directly Affect Cancer Cells? What Early Research Says

Now we get to the exciting — but cautious — part.

🔬 Lab Studies Show Anti-Tumor Potential

Preclinical research (studies in cells and animals) shows that cannabinoids may:
    •    Inhibit cancer cell growth
    •    Induce apoptosis (programmed cell death)
    •    Block cell proliferation and tumor spread

One review of the science notes that cannabinoids can regulate pathways linked to cancer progression, including cell cycle control and tumor growth suppression.  

And specific cannabis extracts, like CBD-rich formulations such as PHEC-66, have triggered cancer cell death in melanoma cell studies.  

🧪 But Here’s the Reality Check

Despite promising lab data, there’s no large clinical evidence yet proving that cannabis cures cancer or significantly reduces tumor size in humans. Most human research has focused on symptom relief, not direct anti-cancer effects.  

So while the science base is enormous and growing, the jump from petri dish to patient bedside still needs more rigorous clinical trials.

🧬 New Frontiers — Cannabis With Chemotherapy? A Growing Trend

Even more intriguing are studies looking at cannabis as an adjunct, meaning it’s used with conventional chemo.

Some preclinical papers suggest cannabinoids could enhance chemotherapy’s effectiveness — making cancer drugs work better — and simultaneously ease side effects.  

This is big because it means we’re not pitting cannabis against standard treatment — we’re exploring synergy.

🧠 What Patients Report — Real-World Evidence

Survey data from cancer patients paints a picture of relief:
    •    75% of users reported cannabis helped with pain and nausea
    •    Many used it while in active treatment
    •    Some felt it improved sleep, appetite, and overall quality of life  

Patient experience matters — especially when it aligns with biological plausibility and emerging scientific evidence.

⚠️ Important Caveats

Before you light up the celebration — or a joint — let’s be honest about the limitations:

❌ Cannabis is not a proven cure for cancer. So far, science hasn’t carried these early lab findings into large human studies.  
❌ Smoking cannabis may carry lung risks. Inhaled smoke contains compounds similar to tobacco smoke that may harm lungs. (More research is needed here.)  
❌ Cannabis compounds interact with other medications. Always talk to an oncologist before adding cannabis. Clinical guidelines still stress caution due to limited data.  

🥦 Conclusion — Straight From Seymour Buds

Cannabis isn’t a magical anti-cancer potion — not yet. But the science supporting symptom relief is strong and growing, and preclinical evidence on anti-tumor effects is compelling enough to justify bigger, better human studies.

That means patients suffering from nausea, pain, appetite loss, anxiety, and sleep problems — all common terrors in the cancer world — may find real benefit from cannabinoids when used responsibly and under medical guidance.

So does cannabis help cancer patients? Yes — especially with chemo side effects and quality of life.
Could cannabinioids someday be part of standard cancer therapy? The science says it’s possible — but still unfolding.

Stay tuned — the plant that’s been with humanity for ages might still have surprises up its sleeve. 🌿

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Health & Wellness

Why Cold-Cure Solvent-Less Rosin Is the Concentrate You Should Be Choosing

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By Seymour Buds

If you’re serious about your dabs, your flavor, and your health — then let’s get one thing straight: cold-cure solvent-less rosin is hands-down one of the cleanest, most flavorful, and most natural ways to consume cannabis concentrates. And honestly? Once you try it, there’s no turning back.

What Makes It Different?

Unlike most cannabis concentrates that use chemical solvents like butane, propane, or CO₂ to extract cannabinoids and terpenes, solvent-less rosin is produced using only heat and pressure — simple as that. No chemicals. No leftover solvents. You’re getting pure cannabis extract the way nature intended.

Health-Conscious and Chemical-Free

One of the biggest reasons cold-cure rosin stands out is what’s not in it. Solvent-based concentrates can — even with strict testing — leave behind trace chemicals if not perfectly purged. Many cannabis fans are switching because they want zero chance of inhaling leftover solvents when they dab. Solvent-less rosin eliminates that worry entirely.

For folks who care about purity — whether for health reasons or just peace of mind — that’s a huge deal.

Full-Spectrum Flavor and a Better High

Because cold-cure rosin doesn’t wash away terpenes or cannabinoids with solvents, it captures the plant’s complete chemical profile — often called the “entourage effect.” That means you’re not just getting THC; you’re getting a full range of cannabinoids and terpenes working together.

Creamy Texture Makes Dabbing Easy

Cold cure isn’t just about flavor — it completely changes the texture of the rosin. Instead of sticky, runny sap, you get a stable, batter-like consistency that’s easy to scoop, easy to dab, and feels great on a nail or e-nail.

That creamy consistency also means a more consistent experience from dab to dab, which is perfect for precise consumption and sharing with friends.

Cleaner Hits, Smoother Sessions

Many seasoned dabbers say cold-cure rosin feels smoother on the lungs and burns cleaner than solvent-based extracts. That’s because you’re vaporizing cannabis compounds — not leftover chemicals or additives.

A Connoisseur’s Choice

Look, we’re not here to tell you that other concentrates don’t have their place. Live resin? Distillate? They all have fans. But if purity + flavor + terpene retention + overall experience matter to you, cold-cure solvent-less rosin checks all the boxes. It’s why many smokers and dabbers consider it the gold standard for artisanal, high-quality concentrates.

In short:
Cold-cure solvent-less rosin gives you pure, chemical-free cannabis extract with the richest flavor and a full-spectrum experience that feels closer to flower than anything else. If you care about what you’re consuming — and how it tastes and feels — this is the concentrate to prioritize.

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