Distinguishing between cannabis-induced false fearlessness (avoidance) and authentic fearlessness (clear perception), a critical distinction in therapeutic use.
Dipa Ma embodied genuine fearlessness—the capacity to meet reality, including pain and uncertainty, without contraction. Cannabis often produces a counterfeit version: numbness masquerading as peace, dissociation disguised as transcendence. True fearlessness, in her tradition, arises from direct perception of impermanence and interconnectedness. Applied to cannabis therapeutics, this distinction becomes crucial. Does the plant help a patient face trauma or avoid it? Does it enable clearer body-sensing during illness or merely suppress signals? Across traditions, Ayurveda warns that excess cannabis can create tamasic (dull, heavy) states that block healing, while TCM notes how it can scatter the shen (spirit) rather than ground it. Genuine therapeutic use would employ cannabis to support the nervous system's capacity to feel fear without being overwhelmed by it—a practice of titration and conscious presence. This transforms cannabis from a sedative into a tool for cultivating authentic resilience.
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