Category Archives: Video

Weathering the “Drama” of a Paranoid Marijuana Experience

When the show you’re watching on television seems custom built to reflect your life, and the walls of reality start to feel paper thin, that’s when you know it was really good weed!

Check out the latest installment of MPMC’s Paranoid Marijuana Video Diary series.

Bryan Basamanowicz featured at SuccessfulStoners.Com

Looks like we’ve got a new syndication partner for the Marijuana Paranoia Video Diary series.

Check out MPMC’s latest newsletter for details.

Some Weirdo Smoking Weed and Intentionally Trying To Get Paranoid

Another installment from the Marijuana Paranoia Video Diary Series! Enjoy!

Big Oil Executives on LSD and a Vision for a Sustainable Counter-Culture

Marijuana Paranoia Video Diary #21

Marijuana Makes You More Creative… No It Doesn’t

Marijuana Paranoia Video Diary #19— Topics discussed: Weed and Creativity, Would mass-murdering dictators have been more “chill” under the sway of ganja? And more!

Weed Made Me Schizophrenic! But Only For a Second

Hey everybody– this is the 18th installment of the Marijuana Paranoia Video Diary series. It’s perhaps one of the most insightful and entertaining installments to date. 20 minutes is a long time. Watch for two to three minutes at least and see if something grabs you.

Stay well,

B

To Stone or Not to Stone– 17 Year-Old Seeks Advice

In the latest paranoid marijuana video diary from MPMC Services, Paranoia Management Coach, Bryan Basamanowicz, responds to a 17 year-old New Yorker who feels pot has all but destroyed his personality.

Amsterdam Anxieties — Marijuana Paranoia Video Diary #15

In the latest video entry from Vancouver’s Marijuana Paranoia Management Service (MPMC), paranoia management coach, Bryan Basamanowicz, gives advice to a woman who’s two months away from a trip to Amsterdam and has recently been having trouble with “The Fear” Read the rest of this entry

The Three Components to the Paranoid High– Paranoid Marijuana Video Diary #14

While the videos (featured below) are meant to be light and amusing, the principles being discussed are significant.

In my quest to fully understand MIPA (Marijuana Induced Paranoia/Anxiety) a phenomenon that has dissuaded millions of individuals from considering cannabis as a medicinal or recreational option, I’ve begun to note the emergence of two distinct categories of MIPA-vulnerabilities.

Psychosomatic MIPA–There are those who experience a body-driven form of anxiety, where they become distressed by certain psycho-somatic effects –like a racing heartrate, or trouble breathing– that they associate with cannabis intoxication.

Psychotomimetic MIPA–This second group tends to experience a type of “narrative-based”  psychotomimetic trauma, meaning they experience a temporal reality quite similar to that experienced by a sufferer of schizophrenia or psychosis, often involving a haunting chain of “insane” insights that string together to tell a story. These individuals may feel as if they’re trapped in a movie, or that they’re the intended victim of some nefarious plot put together by strangers off the street. They may feel targeted by law enforcement. Or they may even feel that their closest friends and family are conspiring against them.

While my client work has led me to develop sound techniques to abate both types of MIPA, my personal history and vulnerabilities are largely comprised of the latter psychotomimetic, “narrative-based” version of MIPA. It’s taken me several months of research and experimentation, but I’m now able to experience this intense, dark and somewhat fantastic world without losing my sense of sober identity.

In the videos below, I’m suggesting a rather simple three-part model to explain the critical elements that ignite the Psychotomimetic MIPA experience.

Component 1) Meaning 

A MIPA episode often commences with some kind of critical identification of significance with a phenomenon outside the self. We hear, or see, or remember something that arrives on our mind with a profound sense of significance. Monomorphs (non-paranoid smokers) experience profundity as well, but the key difference here is that the polymorph (paranoaics) are often unable to identify these bursts of meaning as merely symptomatic of cannabis intoxication. High or not, when a polymorph experiences a pointed link between the inner consciousness and the global consciousness, they are apt to become committed to deriving real-world relevance from what they’ve perceived, whereas the monomorph readily identifies the experience as synonymous with the state of being high.

Meaning can take many shapes. In the video I use the example of television. Many among the Psychotomimetic paranoiacs (polymorphs) will report having experienced frightfully urgent messages that seem to manifest straight out of the television set or radio. If you’d like some detailed stories of what this looks like,thought by thought, sensation by sensation, check out the second free excerpt from my book, Handbook for the High-Functioning Paranoiac. The excerpt is called “What Extreme Paranoia Looks Like” and it can be found here.

Component 2) Synchronicity

Synchronicity is coincidence or seemingly fated or uncanny phenomena. In the free resource, Dictionary for the High-Functioning Paranoiac, which is published here on this blog, the concept of “Acceleration” — an effect of a polymorph’s cannabis intoxication – is explained as “perceived concentrations of synchronistic phenomena in relation to the standard passage of time.” In short, when a polymorph gets high, he or she tends to synthesize his observations of the world into a grand mosaic of purpose. Conflict and paranoia arise when synchronistic phenomena tend to point to a dark conclusion or attempt to compel the individual to an action that his grounded mind is not comfortable performing.

Synchronicity and meaning are certainly interrelated, but I think it’s important that we distinguish them in order to provide a sense of how MIPA can make one feel like they’re losing control. Meaning in and of itself does not wield as much compulsive power as synchronicity. In the video above, the music playing seems to accompany my declamations. In my intoxicated state, I perceive a strong sense of meaning between myself, the sharing of my thoughts, and the music that is offering a somewhat random but fitting aesthetic accompaniment.  In the video, I’ve not passed beyond the state of simple meaning into the more compulsory state of synchronicity. Synchronicity is where the voices in your head start to drown out your  own voice and you start to feel a loss of control.

Component 3) Psycho-Sexual Mortality Awareness

Here is the second instillation of the MPVD 14, where I do my best to explain the third component of the paranoid high. Psycho-Sexual Mortality Awareness. More on this to come. This is a confounding concept and I’m still learning about it myself.

How to Get Stoned and See Into the Future – Paranoid Marijuana Video Diary #13

The video below is in response to this facebook (fb.com/makesmeparanoid) message from “Mary” in Illinois. Thanks for writing, Mary!
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Thank you so much! I will try and quickly share my personal story.

I love smoking but sometimes I get really intense and frightening deja vu. I think that the events around me have either happened before, or that they are memories that my mind has blocked and i am now recalling them in real time. Sometimes I think that I am sent this intellectual insight because what i am remembering is the day that I die. Two theories to explain this are that perhaps the afterlife consists of us simply remembering that day over and over and over again or essentially that I am “recalling” these events because I am supposed to change them and save my life, and that this deja vu is intuition from a greater power of sorts through a kind of crack in the space time continuum.

I have finished stories I knew nothing about and have predicted who was going to enter the room. Trying to stop this sensation, i told someone what I was feeling and that I was basically freaking balls. I thought confronting it might make it stop but the feeling didnt subside until i wasnt high anymore.

I have mixed up my strains, method of smoking, and surroundings and the weird feelings still happen. I would love to keep smoking but just wish I could toke peacefully. Thanks

*** To be clear, these are just my high thoughts. I don’t believe in my “theories” or “intuition”. Also, I have NEVER experienced this sober.

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