The largest review of medicinal cannabis to date found it doesn’t effectively treat anxiety, depression, or PTSD—despite millions using it for those reasons. Researchers warn it could even make mental health worse, raising risks like psychosis and addiction while delaying proven treatments. Some limited benefits were seen for conditions like insomnia and autism, but the evidence is weak. The findings are fueling calls for stricter oversight as cannabis use continues to rise.
I wasn’t really talking about people will full on cannabis disorder, but even then I can’t imagine it making dependency any worse. Just obviously don’t be high on weed or take any other substance while tripping, and put time into creating the right set and setting for yourself. (And avoid if you have any history with schizophrenia or delusions)
One of the main reasons it’s so non-addictive is that the experience surfaces unpredictable, intense, mixed emotions, which can feel beautifully overwhelming but also definitely not something you’d go to for escape or want on a regular basis. Some people in the studies even had bad or terrifying trips that still somehow help their depression afterwards. Nobody trips on the regular, only maybe microdoses (which imo is a waste of time unless you’re starting low to work your way up)
Another reason is that unlike weed or alcohol, our neurochemistry makes it physically impossible to take psilocybin too often. Your tolerance spikes to 100% after just one dose and takes several days to a couple weeks to return to baseline. Meaning once you start tripping, any additional shroom will do absolutely nothing, and even 24 hours later will do next to nothing