Many senior citizens are settling into a THC-infused retirement
When it comes to cannabis, the progression to acceptance has been a long one. Baby Boomers, children of the Silent Generation, were warned of the effects of marijuana use from histrionic movies like 1936’s Reefer Madness and 1949’s Wild Weed. These films focused on addiction and mental health crises if you dared smoke the “green stuff.” But now that cannabis use is legal and normalized throughout much of the country, many adults are now settling into a THC-infused retirement.
Mechanic Ricardo Simmons, 67, had his first experience with weed on a basketball court in Detroit. An older teenager fired up a joint attempting to pass it along to Simmons, who didn’t know what it was at first.
Cannabis has long been labeled as a gateway drug. But a couple of years later Simmons would smoke occasionally with his friends after discovering it wasn’t that bad after all. “It wasn’t heroin,” he says.
After research pointed to health benefits of cannabis and voters in states like Ohio began legalizing it for medicinal use, stigma of the plant dissipated.
Rebekka Page, owner of CB Squared Smoke and Vape Shop on Detroit’s west side, is a medical marijuna grower for her senior clients. A cancer survivor with a background in nursing, Page believes cannabis helped improve her symptoms.
Over the past three years, Page, 44, noticed an increase in retirement-age cannabis users. She cultivates 72 plants for five of her patients, who she says like the “lift THC gives them,’” which helps their chronic pain and sleep issues. A 2020 study in JAMA Internal Medicine found that cannabis use in the past year by U.S. adults 65 years and older increased sharply from 0.4% in 2006 and 2007 to 2.9% in 2015 and 2016.
According to a 2018 study published in the peer-reviewed Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine, most U.S. adults age 50 or older who had used cannabis in the past year (75%) said they felt there was a slight risk or no risk to toking once or twice a week.
A 74-year-old retired business owner who called himself an advocate of the cannabis product Rick Simpson Oil, which some claim has the potential to help treat cancer, says he used to hear pot referred to as the “Devil’s Weed.”
Joe “Top Dog” Price, a 71-year-old client of CB Squared, says he was told marijuna will make you lazy and mess with your mind when he was younger. While Price doesn’t think teenagers should smoke weed, he says he doesn’t care how people react to him smoking. “I’m 71!” he says.
In the ’60s, Simmons grew up with hippies, hanging out at the Eastown Theatre, where acts like Pink Floyd and Fleetwood Mac performed. Simmons recalls sitting on the floor watching rock concerts with friends.
As cannabis becomes legal in more states, more people are being open about their use, including senior-citizen social media influencers — like the Dabbing Granny, who shares her green adventures with her 1.2 million Instagram followers, helping new users find their way.
Cannabis activist Arlene Williams, 84, has traveled the world advocating for drug reform, while also seeking out the best remedies in cannabis wellness.
Growing up in Detroit, Williams says her parents whispered among themselves about “wacky cigarettes” and the scandal of actor Robert Mitchum being arrested for cannabis possession. Williams knew there was a stigma around using marajuana, but once she was out of her parents home, married at age 17, she suggested to her husband she wanted to try some.
Williams says many elders feel free to inhale, digest, and consume cannabis openly without shame in their golden years.
Toke on, aging ones.
Source: Cleve Scene.