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Grass Roots (58,866 Denver residents voted to legalize pot among them, these moms)
Denver Post ^ | Dec. 27, 2005

Posted on 12/27/2005 9:16:00 AM PST by Wolfie

Grass Roots

58,866 Denver residents voted to legalize pot among them, these moms

They car pool in Crestmoor, read bedtime stories in Washington Park, and when they're away from the kids, these Denver moms sometimes retrieve the hidden baggie, pack a pipe or roll a joint, and smoke a little weed.

"It slows me down," says a Washington Park 40-something mother of a 10-year-old daughter. "It's a nice, relaxing, low-key thing."

One Denver psychologist, the 46-year-old mother of a young child, smokes because it helps her find "that space that is so about me and not about being a parent."

"It helps you stop thinking," says a 37-year-old Crestmoor mother of two, a mildly conservative Republican who, like most of the women interviewed, smokes once or twice a week. "I either can't sleep at night because I'm restless, or I can't get in the mood with my husband because my mind is spinning."

Her favorite pot-delivery method? Homemade brownies.

It wasn't just the stereotypical pot smoker - the 22-year-old skateboarding slacker who measures his days in bong hits, or the hippie sucking back joints from the back of her 1968 VW Bus - who was among the 58,866 Denver residents the city's election commission says voted in November to pass the Alcohol-Marijuana Equalization Initiative.

These marijuana-loving mamas helped make Denver the first city to legalize small amounts of pot for private adult use. Under state and federal law, however, possession of marijuana remains illegal, and that is why the women were unwilling to have their names printed.

Pundits galore characterized the yes vote on the initiative as merely symbolic. But it didn't lack meaning to these moms. Marijuana, they say, should be legalized, and the vote is an important first step.

Among other things, the vote "shows just how many pot smokers there are in this city," says a 37-year-old Park Hill publicist, the mother of two young children.

The moms trumpet pot as a safe, healthy alternative to alcohol. Marijuana critics say they're fooling themselves.

"They are sending those kids a message that it's OK to get high, and they intend to send that message," says Dr. Mary Holley, the director of Mothers Against Meth-Amphetamine, in Alabama. The physician works to organize mothers against all illegal drugs. "That's an extremely destructive message." Through their habits, the moms tell their kids that "if he has a problem, he can just go out and get high."

Pot is not harmless, says Christian Hopfer, a psychiatry professor at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center.

Smoking pot can cause lung cancer, he says, and lead to addiction. (About 8 percent of people who try it become addicted.) Some studies show it can precipitate mental illness, although the incidence is rare. And it does affect judgment and motor skills, he says.

"You could have trouble driving" while stoned. "You're not going to be sharp as you would be otherwise."

But Hopfer is not surprised by pot-smoking among moms.

"Marijuana use is widely distributed throughout the population," he says. "It's not just limited to certain classes."

The moms say they smoked grass more frequently when they were younger. Now, most of them puff away occasionally at a party or at home on a Saturday night.

Many people are capable of smoking pot the same way many drink booze - in small doses, in certain settings and not to excess, says Hopfer.

But just as alcohol breeds desperate alcoholics, those who smoke pot range from sporadic users to addicts. With both substances, Hopfer says, some users are capable of indulging without unraveling their lives.

The Park Hill publicist says she gets "very introspective and very thoughtful" when she smokes from her pipe.

"You smoke some weed, you are laughing," she says. "It brings me back to the times when I was so much more carefree. I'd much rather do that than sit in a smoky bar and drink liquor with my friends."

The Washington Park mother says she doesn't know anybody in her age bracket with children who doesn't smoke pot. In fact, she says, "I know very few people who don't" smoke marijuana, including chief executives and lawyers.

The Park Hill mother says she sometimes goes to parties "with moms and pot brownies. There are babysitters for the kids. It's OK to laugh and carry on with your girlfriends."

At the parties the Crestmoor mother attends, full of middle-aged professional parents, a pot contingent usually thrives somewhere in the house, if not all over the place.

Many of the moms have not disclosed their grass-inhaling secrets to their kids. The kids are too young, they say, and might not absorb the main message the moms want to send when they do get around to some frank talking: that smoking marijuana is for adults. Young brains, the moms say, can't handle marijuana. Like sex and alcohol, the decision about whether to take a toke should be reserved for people with proper seasoning: old enough to vote, finished with high school, stepping into adulthood.

A 36-year-old, laid-off information technology professional wants her 12-year-old daughter to wait until she's 25 to even think about smoking pot.

But that hasn't stopped the north Denver mom from inhaling in front of the girl. She first got stoned around her daughter when the girl was 9 at the Burning Man festival in the Nevada desert, an annual bacchanal that attracts thousands of artists, oddballs and thrill-seekers.

"I don't really care because it's her decision," says the woman's daughter, sitting on a couch, knitting, in her home.

The girl says she has no interest in trying the drug herself, in part because, "I'm not supposed to."

Her mom says she has been routinely smoking pot since she turned 19. Her own father, she says, gave her an ounce of pot for Christmas; he had quit smoking the stuff and thought she would like it.

"I think it was a bad decision on his part," she says.

Still, she loves her weed. Pot, she says, is "a part of who I am. It's fun. It's a way to connect. It's like having a beer with someone. It's less harmful than alcohol, it's not fattening, it's ultimately cheaper. Alcohol is so bad for your body."

If her daughter ever chooses to try a mind-altering drug, the mom hopes she elects marijuana over alcohol, a sentiment echoed by the other moms.

"I'd much rather have her smoke pot than drink because she'll be much less likely to get into bad situations," says the Crestmoor mother, who does a lot of smoking with her husband while in their outdoor hot tub.

As the pot-smoking moms' kids get older, how - and when - do the moms plan to broach the subject of their weaknesses for weed?

"That's going to be a hard one," says the psychologist. "I hope what I'll do is not lie, but talk about safety and age. I'm sorry that I started (smoking) so early (she took her first puff in seventh grade). I think I missed some important developmental stages."

The Washington Park mother also believes she started too young, at age 13.

"You need to have wisdom," she says. "It's like you shouldn't be out there having sex when you are 13."

The psychologist says she'll probably wait until her daughter reaches a not-yet-determined age to break the joint-puffing news. Once she's at the appropriate age, the psychologist says she'll either wait until her daughter asks her about it or her daughter starts showing signs she may be interested in trying the drug herself.

None of the moms is too bothered by the specter of the police. While they all understand that smoking grass remains illegal in Denver, they also agree that the vote on Initiative 100 illustrates Denver's laissez-faire attitude toward weed.

"Now that it's passed," says the Crestmoor mom, "I'm more comfortable talking about it because so many people voted for it."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: Colorado
KEYWORDS: bongbrigade; denver; libertarians; likeyouknowman; losers; medicalmarijuana; potheads; stonermoms; wodlist
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1 posted on 12/27/2005 9:16:02 AM PST by Wolfie
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To: Wolfie

Steam escaping from WODie ears 3...2...1...


2 posted on 12/27/2005 9:17:52 AM PST by Freedom_no_exceptions (No actual, intended, or imminent victim = no crime. No exceptions.)
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To: Freedom_no_exceptions

Put the word "man" at the end of every sentence.


3 posted on 12/27/2005 9:19:50 AM PST by massgopguy (massgopguy)
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To: Wolfie

"among them, these moms."

Who the hell cares?


4 posted on 12/27/2005 9:20:03 AM PST by NapkinUser ("Our troops have become the enemy." -Representative John P. Murtha, modern day Benedict Arnold.)
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To: Wolfie
I'm really getting sick of this "but think of the children!" crap preventing me from doing things in a responsible way that some idiot's kid is not going to do in a responsible way.

Parents -- keep your kids out of trouble. Don't take away my freedom because you're scared your kids are going to be stupid.
5 posted on 12/27/2005 9:23:08 AM PST by mc6809e
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To: Wolfie
One Denver psychologist, the 46-year-old mother of a young child, smokes because it helps her find "that space that is so about me and not about being a parent."

Yeesh!

No wonder everyone thinks all shrinks are nuts!

6 posted on 12/27/2005 9:28:14 AM PST by Aracelis (40-something psychologist in training, with grown children)
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To: Wolfie

-Many of the moms have not disclosed their grass-inhaling secrets to their kids.-

Gee, it used to be the other way around.


7 posted on 12/27/2005 9:31:08 AM PST by AmericanChef
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To: Wolfie

Fat, high, and stupid is no way to go through life, MOM!


8 posted on 12/27/2005 9:33:16 AM PST by MooseMan
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To: Wolfie

Have a liquor drink, drink a beer, glass of wine, smoke some pot...what's the difference?


9 posted on 12/27/2005 9:36:20 AM PST by eyespysomething (http://members.cox.net/transam57/lights.wmv)
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To: eyespysomething

Oh, and I was serious.


10 posted on 12/27/2005 9:36:45 AM PST by eyespysomething
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To: NapkinUser

Lock them up and throw away the key!


11 posted on 12/27/2005 9:39:41 AM PST by dalereed
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To: Wolfie
?....58,866 Denver residents voted to legalize... (Mexican-laced-heroin) pot... among them, these moms...?

/NAFTA

12 posted on 12/27/2005 9:42:21 AM PST by maestro
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To: Aracelis
One cannot be an effective/ethical psychologist if he or she uses illegal drugs

Why not? I see no connection.

13 posted on 12/27/2005 9:42:31 AM PST by Know your rights (The modern enlightened liberal doesn't care what you believe as long as you don't really believe it.)
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To: Wolfie
About 8 percent of people who try it [marijuana] become addicted.

Versus 15% of those who try the deadly legal drug alcohol.

14 posted on 12/27/2005 9:44:23 AM PST by Know your rights (The modern enlightened liberal doesn't care what you believe as long as you don't really believe it.)
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To: Wolfie

While I support the decriminalization of marijuana, I do think that people who are still using it well into their 40s and in front of their children are pretty pathetic. At a certain point you just need to outgrow that. It sounds like many of these stoner moms have deeper problems with immaturity (like needing "space" where they don't have to be parents) and their drug use is just a symptom of it.


15 posted on 12/27/2005 9:46:51 AM PST by sassbox (Merry Christmas!)
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To: eyespysomething

There is no difference.

The primary reason that marijuana remains illegal is because unlike tobacco or alcohol (ok, not so much alcohol, though most people don't have the expertise to do it) you can produce a private supply very easy on your own premises. That would basically mean, even if someone did try to market it commercially, people could just grow it inside a vegetable market. It would be a hard product to sell legally except in the most densely populated areas (and even then, it's possible to grow the plan inside a non-greenhouse building, if you know what you're doing) and as such, it would be something widely used that gave people enjoyment that the government couldn't adequately (in it's own mind) tax.

That's why marijuana is illegal, it's that simple.


16 posted on 12/27/2005 9:50:13 AM PST by AzaleaCity5691 (The enemy lies in the heart of Gadsden)
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To: AzaleaCity5691

I agree.


17 posted on 12/27/2005 9:52:00 AM PST by eyespysomething
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To: Wolfie

If theses "Moms" need to puff a magic cigarette to escape reality, they have bigger problems than illegal drugs.


18 posted on 12/27/2005 9:53:34 AM PST by DJ MacWoW (If you think you know what's coming next....You don't know Jack.)
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To: PaxMacian; WindMinstrel; philman_36; headsonpikes; cryptical; vikzilla; libertyman; Quick1; ...

ping


19 posted on 12/27/2005 9:54:52 AM PST by Wolfie
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To: Wolfie
the 46-year-old mother of a young child, smokes because it helps her find "that space that is so about me and not about being a parent."

Narcissistic b*tch.

I'm sure that her kid understands...."Mommy can't take care of this right now. She's finding the space that's all about her"

20 posted on 12/27/2005 9:56:28 AM PST by wbill
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