Most of my west coast friends and I'm sure most of Canada in general have by now heard of God Bud (not to be confused with God's Gift or Godfather OG), and its various crosses and phenos (Godberry, God Kush, God's Green Crack, Grape God etc).
I've been a huge fan of the heavy indica leaning God lineages because its thought calming tendencies help my insomnia in a way that lineages like Bubba fail to.
Bubbas seem great for pain patients but they do basically nothing to get me out of my head so I just end up couchlocked in bed and really high but still able to distract myself with reddit snd stuff.
Which MOMs carry your shining example of the lineage? Calling all favorites. Got pics? What other non-God strains have you found that can absolutely "turn off" your head and, in short order, the lights? I've heard good things about TFPK for that.
Re: Calling all "Gods"
2The short: God's Green Crack is my favorite God strain and my go to sleep fun times strains right now are Black Diamond, Bubba Kush, Pink Kush. The Green Ace has some nice stuff. I don't use them for that purpose so much as for pain relief, though; I just sleep.
So, for those who might want a read, this is what I do.
I used to suffer extensively from "I cannot turn my head off" insomnia. I have successfully addressed it; unfortunately the answer is not quick or easy or even possible for some people because a very significant part of my insomnia solution was getting out of the mornings-afternoon full time job I had at the time. I now ONLY sleep if I am physically, mentally feeling tired. I do not spend any time in my bed or even bedroom just lounging or relaxing (in fact, I do not even have sex where I sleep...). I reserve that part of my house for me sleeping.
Once I switched to being a freelancer and sleeping only when tired, I discovered my natural rhythm is not 24 hours at all and I determined how it is necessary to occasionally oversleep or not sleep enough to keep myself at least somewhere in the gamut of humanity.
It starts to get a bit weirder and harder from here.
So next, I quit my coffee habit and stayed off caffeine until I was no longer dependent. I use it exclusively for days where I have to skimp my sleep or if I just want a small cup. I also quit drinking alcohol until I was no longer dependent and I will now have no more than four drinks in a day, hard max, even if it's a free open bar, preventing myself from ever getting drunk again. Now I'm working on a small cup of wine which I will sip for a while through the evening. Weed is my vice and so I broke the only things that had a risk of being–nope that's not true I still eat way too much. Digesting food overnight has an influence, I've heard, but I sleep great now so whatever!
That's when I moved on to the critical step of mastering my chatty overnight brain: meditation. First, when I cannot sleep, I just meditate and at least get some relaxation that way. Secondly, I reserve at least fifteen minutes a day for me to sit and meditate. You HAVE to exercise your brain to defeat its negative tenancies. You are in complete control of its potential, however, many people are never told these aspects of reality. They are as follows: your brain is a muscle and you can train it to do whatever you want. Depression and anxiety inner head voices can and do lie to you. Meditation isn't about clearing your mind, it's about exercising your mind so long term it is better at doing what you want it to do.
So now, even though it's against all my natural instincts, I'm going to tell you EXACTLY what I do now, and why I do these things.
First, I sit or lay down so my spine is rigid and either my feet are crossed, on the floor, or I'm just lying comfortably on my back.
I begin by setting my intention. This is a fancy way of saying in my brain, I decide the reason why I am meditating. In this case, it would be, "I am gaining control over my chatty mind." In my mind, I state that as a fact, using the present tense "I am doing this". I then pick a word or a phrase that encapsulates it. This might be rest, peace, tranquility, ommmm, whatever floats your boat.
Before you begin regularly practising mindfulness, it may be challenging to identify specific thoughts and when they start going off in your mind. While I can immediately switch into that mode now, I would recommend to a newcomer to do a simple centering exercise. This is mine.
I observe each individual thing I can hear, sorting them out into the individual sound. You're not done until you can notice this clock ticking differently from that clock, from the refrigerator to the furnace. Sort, acknowledge, name them and then this is the important part, let that sound go with the same mantra you're addressing in the meditation. So in this case you may wish the clock peace out. Once you move through all of the sounds move on.
Everything you can feel. Your socks, your blanket, that itch, your hair against the pillow, observe it, note what it is, and let it go. I usually go from bottom to top, doing a slow body scan as I observe all of the things I am feeling, make little adjustments for my comfort if needed, and wish them peace and let them go. Move on.
Everything you can smell. Not a lot. This is going to really center you now in your head, it's drawn you from the external stimuli to something minimal. From there you move on to the last sense you can note in this state, which is taste, which will generally have no more than one or two notes you might recognize at this point, and it's all inside of your head, not very distracting at all. This focusing will have brought you from outside to in, and then you're ready to begin.
Set your breathing as "box" breathing. This means it is the same amount of time you breathe in, hold, breathe out, hold. Depending how strong your lungs are this might be 4, 4, 4, 4, 8, 8, 8, 8, whatever, the most important thing is you set it to a rhythm you can comfortably maintain and then time your mantra to that.
At this point, as someone new to meditation, it is this easy. You simply repeat the mantra you picked and if you notice yourself and your thoughts drifting off course, this is what you do: you observe that you went off course and then bring yourself gently back. Don't get mad or frustrated. The only way you can learn mindfulness IS by this repeated process of noticing when you go off into another thought and then, just like you have done with all of the sensory experiences, let that thought go in peace.
If a thought keeps coming back, you might challenge it and ask, "Where did you come from?" and by questioning the thought, understand that it's not your thought at all, but something you're bringing back from your job, your day, a movie, and then, just like you identified and let go of the feelings your body is registering, you can identify and release the thought.
Now I am a very visual person, so if a thought keeps coming back in this state of repeating my mantra, this is exactly what I do.
I imagine the center of the earth. I imagine myself dropping an anchor there and connect that anchor up to my feet, and then all the way through my body up to the top of my head, running along my spine. This "grounds" me. I then imagine the same anchor running all the way up through me to the center of the galaxy. I then imagine a laser light pulse that follows the connection down that passageway and into my brain where it zaps the thought and sucks it up into the center of the galaxy.
Another visualization I use, this one when I'm not in a meditative trance, to isolate and test a thought is the "balloon" method. Basically, I imagine taking that thought and it's written on a balloon, and I blow up the balloon in my mind and if it becomes a big solid boulder with more and more details the bigger it gets, it's a true thing I'm stressing about and it's something I need to make an actionable plan to fix. If there's nothing more to it than those words in my mind, the balloon is just a balloon and it gets bigger and bigger, stretching out humorously large until it's not even the size of my house but the same ridiculous galactic sized bubble that's been stretched so big that you could never even read it, there's nothing inside of it, and it's so big I could never even see it from where I am now. Anything factual will have more depth the more you explore it, even if it's uncomfortable. Any flights of fancy will dissipate if you try ekk more out of them, they're just hanging out there to nag you.
Now the reality? It's taken me since 2013 to get this skill to a point where I can reliably be laying down and if a thought pops up into my head unbidden, I can grab it, blast it with some light, and let it go. Four years, ya'll. Four years. At first I didn't practice regularly; then I hit a point where for about a year, two years, I practiced every day for LONG meditation sessions the average sitter may not have time or desire to hack through. I've written this in the hopes it might help someone longterm, because a lot of great spiritualist teachers combobulate such information with mystical vocabulary and religion, making it inaccessible to the average human. Or just put a price tag on it.
It is your body and you are the boss of it!
If you have made it this far, I will share you another secret about intention setting. I know a guy who used to use that to set his attention for this: "I will wake up refreshed at x time, having slept exactly as much as I need." This was my first introduction to the concept of the law of attraction because it worked for him and none of us knew why. He always seemed refreshed even if he only got like 2.5 hours of sleep. Yet he had command of his mind; he told it that it would be so, believed it would be so, and so it was. I tested this mantra for a little while but it didn't resonate with me so I let it go and kept on with what felt right for me. I'm sure we all know that person who almost never seems to get sick, and I've come to believe it's because they tell themselves they aren't going to get sick. I know I've talked myself down from throwing up... the placebo effect alone is proof that the scientific community knows your brain can alter your reality. It's so powerful that the placebo effect actually functions even when you know you're receiving placebo, because you've been told it's been known to help other people. It's so weird that placebo pills differ in effect depending on what color they are because people have expectations about what makes a "good pill"!
The reality is, I started meditation and mindfulness practices because I desperately wanted to shut my brain up, I felt like I was at its mercy, I remember crying at night because thoughts kept rushing through me. I understand now that we make our inner worlds based on what we expect them to be and with a bunch of hard work doing a hokey ancient practice which doesn't need to be bubble wrapped in liturgical language, you too can make your inner world quieter at least, even if you don't deviate off and try learn the secrets to enlightenment (WIP). Does it feel dumb? Oh yeah. Totally. I'm very grateful past me learned to meditate though, because it's a lot quieter in here these days.
Now I no longer feel like I am crazy, just going there.
I wish you the best of sleep.
So, for those who might want a read, this is what I do.
I used to suffer extensively from "I cannot turn my head off" insomnia. I have successfully addressed it; unfortunately the answer is not quick or easy or even possible for some people because a very significant part of my insomnia solution was getting out of the mornings-afternoon full time job I had at the time. I now ONLY sleep if I am physically, mentally feeling tired. I do not spend any time in my bed or even bedroom just lounging or relaxing (in fact, I do not even have sex where I sleep...). I reserve that part of my house for me sleeping.
Once I switched to being a freelancer and sleeping only when tired, I discovered my natural rhythm is not 24 hours at all and I determined how it is necessary to occasionally oversleep or not sleep enough to keep myself at least somewhere in the gamut of humanity.
It starts to get a bit weirder and harder from here.
So next, I quit my coffee habit and stayed off caffeine until I was no longer dependent. I use it exclusively for days where I have to skimp my sleep or if I just want a small cup. I also quit drinking alcohol until I was no longer dependent and I will now have no more than four drinks in a day, hard max, even if it's a free open bar, preventing myself from ever getting drunk again. Now I'm working on a small cup of wine which I will sip for a while through the evening. Weed is my vice and so I broke the only things that had a risk of being–nope that's not true I still eat way too much. Digesting food overnight has an influence, I've heard, but I sleep great now so whatever!
That's when I moved on to the critical step of mastering my chatty overnight brain: meditation. First, when I cannot sleep, I just meditate and at least get some relaxation that way. Secondly, I reserve at least fifteen minutes a day for me to sit and meditate. You HAVE to exercise your brain to defeat its negative tenancies. You are in complete control of its potential, however, many people are never told these aspects of reality. They are as follows: your brain is a muscle and you can train it to do whatever you want. Depression and anxiety inner head voices can and do lie to you. Meditation isn't about clearing your mind, it's about exercising your mind so long term it is better at doing what you want it to do.
So now, even though it's against all my natural instincts, I'm going to tell you EXACTLY what I do now, and why I do these things.
First, I sit or lay down so my spine is rigid and either my feet are crossed, on the floor, or I'm just lying comfortably on my back.
I begin by setting my intention. This is a fancy way of saying in my brain, I decide the reason why I am meditating. In this case, it would be, "I am gaining control over my chatty mind." In my mind, I state that as a fact, using the present tense "I am doing this". I then pick a word or a phrase that encapsulates it. This might be rest, peace, tranquility, ommmm, whatever floats your boat.
Before you begin regularly practising mindfulness, it may be challenging to identify specific thoughts and when they start going off in your mind. While I can immediately switch into that mode now, I would recommend to a newcomer to do a simple centering exercise. This is mine.
I observe each individual thing I can hear, sorting them out into the individual sound. You're not done until you can notice this clock ticking differently from that clock, from the refrigerator to the furnace. Sort, acknowledge, name them and then this is the important part, let that sound go with the same mantra you're addressing in the meditation. So in this case you may wish the clock peace out. Once you move through all of the sounds move on.
Everything you can feel. Your socks, your blanket, that itch, your hair against the pillow, observe it, note what it is, and let it go. I usually go from bottom to top, doing a slow body scan as I observe all of the things I am feeling, make little adjustments for my comfort if needed, and wish them peace and let them go. Move on.
Everything you can smell. Not a lot. This is going to really center you now in your head, it's drawn you from the external stimuli to something minimal. From there you move on to the last sense you can note in this state, which is taste, which will generally have no more than one or two notes you might recognize at this point, and it's all inside of your head, not very distracting at all. This focusing will have brought you from outside to in, and then you're ready to begin.
Set your breathing as "box" breathing. This means it is the same amount of time you breathe in, hold, breathe out, hold. Depending how strong your lungs are this might be 4, 4, 4, 4, 8, 8, 8, 8, whatever, the most important thing is you set it to a rhythm you can comfortably maintain and then time your mantra to that.
At this point, as someone new to meditation, it is this easy. You simply repeat the mantra you picked and if you notice yourself and your thoughts drifting off course, this is what you do: you observe that you went off course and then bring yourself gently back. Don't get mad or frustrated. The only way you can learn mindfulness IS by this repeated process of noticing when you go off into another thought and then, just like you have done with all of the sensory experiences, let that thought go in peace.
If a thought keeps coming back, you might challenge it and ask, "Where did you come from?" and by questioning the thought, understand that it's not your thought at all, but something you're bringing back from your job, your day, a movie, and then, just like you identified and let go of the feelings your body is registering, you can identify and release the thought.
Now I am a very visual person, so if a thought keeps coming back in this state of repeating my mantra, this is exactly what I do.
I imagine the center of the earth. I imagine myself dropping an anchor there and connect that anchor up to my feet, and then all the way through my body up to the top of my head, running along my spine. This "grounds" me. I then imagine the same anchor running all the way up through me to the center of the galaxy. I then imagine a laser light pulse that follows the connection down that passageway and into my brain where it zaps the thought and sucks it up into the center of the galaxy.
Another visualization I use, this one when I'm not in a meditative trance, to isolate and test a thought is the "balloon" method. Basically, I imagine taking that thought and it's written on a balloon, and I blow up the balloon in my mind and if it becomes a big solid boulder with more and more details the bigger it gets, it's a true thing I'm stressing about and it's something I need to make an actionable plan to fix. If there's nothing more to it than those words in my mind, the balloon is just a balloon and it gets bigger and bigger, stretching out humorously large until it's not even the size of my house but the same ridiculous galactic sized bubble that's been stretched so big that you could never even read it, there's nothing inside of it, and it's so big I could never even see it from where I am now. Anything factual will have more depth the more you explore it, even if it's uncomfortable. Any flights of fancy will dissipate if you try ekk more out of them, they're just hanging out there to nag you.
Now the reality? It's taken me since 2013 to get this skill to a point where I can reliably be laying down and if a thought pops up into my head unbidden, I can grab it, blast it with some light, and let it go. Four years, ya'll. Four years. At first I didn't practice regularly; then I hit a point where for about a year, two years, I practiced every day for LONG meditation sessions the average sitter may not have time or desire to hack through. I've written this in the hopes it might help someone longterm, because a lot of great spiritualist teachers combobulate such information with mystical vocabulary and religion, making it inaccessible to the average human. Or just put a price tag on it.
It is your body and you are the boss of it!
If you have made it this far, I will share you another secret about intention setting. I know a guy who used to use that to set his attention for this: "I will wake up refreshed at x time, having slept exactly as much as I need." This was my first introduction to the concept of the law of attraction because it worked for him and none of us knew why. He always seemed refreshed even if he only got like 2.5 hours of sleep. Yet he had command of his mind; he told it that it would be so, believed it would be so, and so it was. I tested this mantra for a little while but it didn't resonate with me so I let it go and kept on with what felt right for me. I'm sure we all know that person who almost never seems to get sick, and I've come to believe it's because they tell themselves they aren't going to get sick. I know I've talked myself down from throwing up... the placebo effect alone is proof that the scientific community knows your brain can alter your reality. It's so powerful that the placebo effect actually functions even when you know you're receiving placebo, because you've been told it's been known to help other people. It's so weird that placebo pills differ in effect depending on what color they are because people have expectations about what makes a "good pill"!
The reality is, I started meditation and mindfulness practices because I desperately wanted to shut my brain up, I felt like I was at its mercy, I remember crying at night because thoughts kept rushing through me. I understand now that we make our inner worlds based on what we expect them to be and with a bunch of hard work doing a hokey ancient practice which doesn't need to be bubble wrapped in liturgical language, you too can make your inner world quieter at least, even if you don't deviate off and try learn the secrets to enlightenment (WIP). Does it feel dumb? Oh yeah. Totally. I'm very grateful past me learned to meditate though, because it's a lot quieter in here these days.

I wish you the best of sleep.
Re: Calling all "Gods"
3Odd that you use GGC to sleep, it's an hybrid and has strong sativa effects for me, definitely not a sleepy strain in my book.
Re: Calling all "Gods"
4Oh, I don't. It's just my favorite "God" strain.
It's not a sleep strain at all. I usually angle for a Pink, Purple or Black Something if I really need a sleep strain.

Re: Calling all "Gods"
5grabbed it awhile ago ,but CW had some nice White God... sold out currently, I still got some in my reserve..lol
https://www.cheapweed.ca/shop/white-god/
https://www.cheapweed.ca/shop/white-god/
Re: Calling all "Gods"
7I had this recently, best God grow I have tried in a while, puts me into a healing coma for hours and hours.
Re: Calling all "Gods"
8I am totally saving this. Thank you so, so much. You are a life saverKeyll wrote: Wed Nov 28, 2018 10:28 pm The short: God's Green Crack is my favorite God strain and my go to sleep fun times strains right now are Black Diamond, Bubba Kush, Pink Kush. The Green Ace has some nice stuff. I don't use them for that purpose so much as for pain relief, though; I just sleep.
So, for those who might want a read, this is what I do.
I used to suffer extensively from "I cannot turn my head off" insomnia. I have successfully addressed it; unfortunately the answer is not quick or easy or even possible for some people because a very significant part of my insomnia solution was getting out of the mornings-afternoon full time job I had at the time. I now ONLY sleep if I am physically, mentally feeling tired. I do not spend any time in my bed or even bedroom just lounging or relaxing (in fact, I do not even have sex where I sleep...). I reserve that part of my house for me sleeping.
Once I switched to being a freelancer and sleeping only when tired, I discovered my natural rhythm is not 24 hours at all and I determined how it is necessary to occasionally oversleep or not sleep enough to keep myself at least somewhere in the gamut of humanity.
It starts to get a bit weirder and harder from here.
So next, I quit my coffee habit and stayed off caffeine until I was no longer dependent. I use it exclusively for days where I have to skimp my sleep or if I just want a small cup. I also quit drinking alcohol until I was no longer dependent and I will now have no more than four drinks in a day, hard max, even if it's a free open bar, preventing myself from ever getting drunk again. Now I'm working on a small cup of wine which I will sip for a while through the evening. Weed is my vice and so I broke the only things that had a risk of being–nope that's not true I still eat way too much. Digesting food overnight has an influence, I've heard, but I sleep great now so whatever!
That's when I moved on to the critical step of mastering my chatty overnight brain: meditation. First, when I cannot sleep, I just meditate and at least get some relaxation that way. Secondly, I reserve at least fifteen minutes a day for me to sit and meditate. You HAVE to exercise your brain to defeat its negative tenancies. You are in complete control of its potential, however, many people are never told these aspects of reality. They are as follows: your brain is a muscle and you can train it to do whatever you want. Depression and anxiety inner head voices can and do lie to you. Meditation isn't about clearing your mind, it's about exercising your mind so long term it is better at doing what you want it to do.
So now, even though it's against all my natural instincts, I'm going to tell you EXACTLY what I do now, and why I do these things.
First, I sit or lay down so my spine is rigid and either my feet are crossed, on the floor, or I'm just lying comfortably on my back.
I begin by setting my intention. This is a fancy way of saying in my brain, I decide the reason why I am meditating. In this case, it would be, "I am gaining control over my chatty mind." In my mind, I state that as a fact, using the present tense "I am doing this". I then pick a word or a phrase that encapsulates it. This might be rest, peace, tranquility, ommmm, whatever floats your boat.
Before you begin regularly practising mindfulness, it may be challenging to identify specific thoughts and when they start going off in your mind. While I can immediately switch into that mode now, I would recommend to a newcomer to do a simple centering exercise. This is mine.
I observe each individual thing I can hear, sorting them out into the individual sound. You're not done until you can notice this clock ticking differently from that clock, from the refrigerator to the furnace. Sort, acknowledge, name them and then this is the important part, let that sound go with the same mantra you're addressing in the meditation. So in this case you may wish the clock peace out. Once you move through all of the sounds move on.
Everything you can feel. Your socks, your blanket, that itch, your hair against the pillow, observe it, note what it is, and let it go. I usually go from bottom to top, doing a slow body scan as I observe all of the things I am feeling, make little adjustments for my comfort if needed, and wish them peace and let them go. Move on.
Everything you can smell. Not a lot. This is going to really center you now in your head, it's drawn you from the external stimuli to something minimal. From there you move on to the last sense you can note in this state, which is taste, which will generally have no more than one or two notes you might recognize at this point, and it's all inside of your head, not very distracting at all. This focusing will have brought you from outside to in, and then you're ready to begin.
Set your breathing as "box" breathing. This means it is the same amount of time you breathe in, hold, breathe out, hold. Depending how strong your lungs are this might be 4, 4, 4, 4, 8, 8, 8, 8, whatever, the most important thing is you set it to a rhythm you can comfortably maintain and then time your mantra to that.
At this point, as someone new to meditation, it is this easy. You simply repeat the mantra you picked and if you notice yourself and your thoughts drifting off course, this is what you do: you observe that you went off course and then bring yourself gently back. Don't get mad or frustrated. The only way you can learn mindfulness IS by this repeated process of noticing when you go off into another thought and then, just like you have done with all of the sensory experiences, let that thought go in peace.
If a thought keeps coming back, you might challenge it and ask, "Where did you come from?" and by questioning the thought, understand that it's not your thought at all, but something you're bringing back from your job, your day, a movie, and then, just like you identified and let go of the feelings your body is registering, you can identify and release the thought.
Now I am a very visual person, so if a thought keeps coming back in this state of repeating my mantra, this is exactly what I do.
I imagine the center of the earth. I imagine myself dropping an anchor there and connect that anchor up to my feet, and then all the way through my body up to the top of my head, running along my spine. This "grounds" me. I then imagine the same anchor running all the way up through me to the center of the galaxy. I then imagine a laser light pulse that follows the connection down that passageway and into my brain where it zaps the thought and sucks it up into the center of the galaxy.
Another visualization I use, this one when I'm not in a meditative trance, to isolate and test a thought is the "balloon" method. Basically, I imagine taking that thought and it's written on a balloon, and I blow up the balloon in my mind and if it becomes a big solid boulder with more and more details the bigger it gets, it's a true thing I'm stressing about and it's something I need to make an actionable plan to fix. If there's nothing more to it than those words in my mind, the balloon is just a balloon and it gets bigger and bigger, stretching out humorously large until it's not even the size of my house but the same ridiculous galactic sized bubble that's been stretched so big that you could never even read it, there's nothing inside of it, and it's so big I could never even see it from where I am now. Anything factual will have more depth the more you explore it, even if it's uncomfortable. Any flights of fancy will dissipate if you try ekk more out of them, they're just hanging out there to nag you.
Now the reality? It's taken me since 2013 to get this skill to a point where I can reliably be laying down and if a thought pops up into my head unbidden, I can grab it, blast it with some light, and let it go. Four years, ya'll. Four years. At first I didn't practice regularly; then I hit a point where for about a year, two years, I practiced every day for LONG meditation sessions the average sitter may not have time or desire to hack through. I've written this in the hopes it might help someone longterm, because a lot of great spiritualist teachers combobulate such information with mystical vocabulary and religion, making it inaccessible to the average human. Or just put a price tag on it.
It is your body and you are the boss of it!
If you have made it this far, I will share you another secret about intention setting. I know a guy who used to use that to set his attention for this: "I will wake up refreshed at x time, having slept exactly as much as I need." This was my first introduction to the concept of the law of attraction because it worked for him and none of us knew why. He always seemed refreshed even if he only got like 2.5 hours of sleep. Yet he had command of his mind; he told it that it would be so, believed it would be so, and so it was. I tested this mantra for a little while but it didn't resonate with me so I let it go and kept on with what felt right for me. I'm sure we all know that person who almost never seems to get sick, and I've come to believe it's because they tell themselves they aren't going to get sick. I know I've talked myself down from throwing up... the placebo effect alone is proof that the scientific community knows your brain can alter your reality. It's so powerful that the placebo effect actually functions even when you know you're receiving placebo, because you've been told it's been known to help other people. It's so weird that placebo pills differ in effect depending on what color they are because people have expectations about what makes a "good pill"!
The reality is, I started meditation and mindfulness practices because I desperately wanted to shut my brain up, I felt like I was at its mercy, I remember crying at night because thoughts kept rushing through me. I understand now that we make our inner worlds based on what we expect them to be and with a bunch of hard work doing a hokey ancient practice which doesn't need to be bubble wrapped in liturgical language, you too can make your inner world quieter at least, even if you don't deviate off and try learn the secrets to enlightenment (WIP). Does it feel dumb? Oh yeah. Totally. I'm very grateful past me learned to meditate though, because it's a lot quieter in here these days.Now I no longer feel like I am crazy, just going there.
I wish you the best of sleep.
Re: Calling all "Gods"
9You're welcome to save it, for sure. I don't have a blog or anything so any wise words I write tend to be on forums like this, inspired by people's posts. I like to think of myself as a life changer or quest giver! You were already alive and even well, you'll just have the tools one human reportedly wielded to attack a specific mental problem now.
Re: Calling all "Gods"
10I just got my godberry yesterday and it’s in the top 5 indicas of 2018 for me! And trust me, I have a TON of indica strains in my collection. Such a heavy buzz, it just makes you lay there drooling like a baby.
And the smell is intoxicating, sweet berry skunk!
Re: Calling all "Gods"
11Excellent! Has anyone had first hand exp with SG's "Blue God" to compare? Maybe I'll just get half a zip of each for science lol.Vdubb wrote: Sat Dec 01, 2018 7:38 pmI just got my godberry yesterday and it’s in the top 5 indicas of 2018 for me! And trust me, I have a TON of indica strains in my collection. Such a heavy buzz, it just makes you lay there drooling like a baby.
And the smell is intoxicating, sweet berry skunk!