Your cart is currently empty!
“Do you use marijuana to avoid dealing with your problems or to cope with your feelings?”
– The 12 Questions of Marijuana Anonymous, For The Newcomer, MA pamphlet
Feelings have always been difficult for me. I grew up an emotional child, in a household where feelings were unacceptable, so I learned to suppress my feelings on the outside. I grew a constant poker face and a monotone voice. You couldn’t tell what I was thinking or feeling anymore. Inside though, I remained that emotional, anxious, and angry little kid.
Eventually I found marijuana, and it felt like the magical fix. I could laugh at things, let worry and anger disappear, and look at the world with wonder. I was creative and relaxed. I couldn’t believe I waited so long to become a pothead. Flash forward eleven years and the magic was gone; pot was a tool of avoidance. I always had a feeling, thought, or emotion I couldn’t face. If I was sad, anxious, or angry, I smoked; eventually I was smoking from the minute I woke up to the minute I fell asleep. This left me numb, vacant, and emotionally unavailable to so many precious moments for which I should have been present. Life was literally passing me by.
With recovery, I have the self-respect and dignity to face my feelings. I meditate, and pray to my Higher Power daily. I call fellows. I read the MA literature regularly. I attend several MA meetings a week, and have taken service commitments. I’m doing the Steps and I’m staying clean and sober, one day at a time. I could not have done this on my own. I needed this fellowship. I needed voices of shared experience, hands to reach out to, and ears to listen. I needed a group of loving marijuana addicts to remind me that I’m going to be OK, no matter what feelings are brewing inside.
Final thought: Today, I’ve found there are better ways.
Living Every Day with Hope – Copyright © 2025 Marijuana Anonymous World Services. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced by any means without the written permission of the publisher. Marijuana Anonymous groups have been granted limited permission to quote Living Every Day with Hope.
Where Marijuana Anonymous members spark creativity by sharing experience, strength, and hope.
Written by, an Anonymous Trusted Servant The Seventh Tradition is about more than “just” money. It’s about unity, responsibility, and protecting MA’s integrity. By declining outside contributions, we remain free from outside influence. That means it’s up to us to keep our fellowship strong. This Tradition is vital to MA’s growth. It deepens our spiritual…
“MA is a Higher-Power-help program — not a self-help one.” Published in A New Leaf – July 2025
Written by, Kathy C. Webster’s Dictionary defines commitment as:“An act of doing or performing something; a promise or pledge to do something.” I describe commitment as a simple extension of oneself in service to others, done in the name of gratitude. We can have no speakers without listeners, no takers without givers. Being of service…
Written by, Geoff F. Recently, it came to my attention that a new MA meeting has been started at the Gay & Lesbian Community Center in West Hollywood. I knew one day such a meeting would start, for if we believe even Master’s and Johnson’s conservative statistics, 10% of all marijuana addicts are gay. I…
Written by, Carol M. First, the good news. The second yard sale we had (this time at my house) on the weekend of April 13 and 14 [1991], was a rousing financial success. We brought in $788.10 through our own contributions (this time from the shirts off our backs, not to mention the junk from…
Written by, Anonymous I am done. I’m done wasting every single moment of every day getting high. You will not steal any more time away from me. For the last eight years of my life, you were my best friend, my partner, my home. You were my safety. You were everything to me, but you…
Copyright © 1989–2025 Marijuana Anonymous World Services—All Rights Reserved
—Marijuana Anonymous World Services, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation, does not endorse or accept contributions from any outside enterprise—