Your cart is currently empty!

“We found that when we denied, blocked, or buried our feelings, we usually behaved compulsively. Compulsive behavior can lead us to other addictions. When we acknowledged and accepted our feelings, we behaved moderately.”
– Life with Hope, second edition, page 35
When I finally stopped smoking marijuana, I no longer had a way to escape from my feelings. I would remember events from my childhood or teenage years, and stuff them away by smoking. It was a very powerful way to get a reprieve from the negativity that would flood my brain on a regular basis. With my brain instead flooded with THC for years, I could not feel who I was. This was deeply disturbing to me but I kept going anyway, believing ignorance was bliss. I had goals and aspirations of becoming a professional filmmaker from an early age. I couldn’t seriously pursue that goal while using, because it held me back from making deep connections with people.
I stopped smoking to follow my passion because it was either my dream or the drug, and all of a sudden I could feel again. This was scary, and in the time I’ve been in recovery I’ve had to process many years of backlogged emotional trauma and experiences. However what I didn’t know, was how rewarding it would be to come to better understand myself and how I got here. I have had time and space to participate in my growth as a person because of the program, the Steps, sponsors, and hearing shares. In recovery, I know that I am safe and my feelings are safe too. I can enjoy and participate in a wide spectrum of experiences and emotions that make my life interesting and dynamic.
Final thought: Today, I like myself and I accept my feelings. With my recovery I am grateful to know myself better, to understand my feelings more clearly, and to be more effective towards achieving my goals with my MA toolbelt.
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, Anonymous Until I went on the MA Campout, I hadn’t realized I’d completely forgotten something very special. How the rhythm of the waves crashing on the beach make me feel alive and a part of something grand. The ocean has a permanence to it. The ocean, like God, has always been there, only…

Written by, Anonymous In reality, there is only one thing you dread: letting yourself fall, taking the step beyond all the securities that exist. And whosoever surrenders himself one single time, whoever has practiced the great act of confidence and entrusted himself to fate, is liberated. He no longer obeys the laws of earth; he…

Written by, Brian K. As the sun played hide and seek with the low level clouds hovering over the Southland, a group of MA members gathered in the parking lot of Venice Beach for District Six’s first scheduled bicycle ride on September 21st. Packing lunches and water bottles, the riders pumped up their tires, strapped…

Written by, Joel I find I must be wary of dragonsBecause some are recognizable,And some are notOnce in my youthA green oneCame alongChameleon-like with charmBreathed his vapors on meAnd smelling their sweetnessI rode with scaley scaley visionsReplacing all of my dreamsWith empty drago smokeI couldn’t seeThat under the tie dye and love beadsA sinister reptile…

Written by, Anonymous The day has come to take an accounting of my life. Have I dreamed of late of the person I want to be, of the changes I would make in my daily habits, in the way I am with others? Have I reviewed my vision of the world I want to live…

Written by, Anonymous I am a marijuana addict because when using pot, it was the most important thing in my life. More important than anyone or anything. It helped to suppress all the inadequacies I felt. It helped me not to feel the pain of not living up to expectations. It enabled me not to…

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—