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Hydrolife Magazine August/September 2017 [USA Edition]

One of the best parts about a budding industry like the marijuana industry is the personalities that emerge. For more than a year in these pages, we’ve worked hard to bring you the latest information, history, how-to methods, and products surrounding cannabis. In this issue, we’re focusing a little more on people, including Jim McAlpine, founder of the 420 Games and Power Plant Fitness. He graces our cover after working with San Francisco-based photographer Mark Rutherford.

One of the best parts about a budding industry like the marijuana industry is the personalities that emerge. For more than a year in these pages, we’ve worked hard to bring you the latest information, history, how-to methods, and products surrounding cannabis. In this issue, we’re focusing a little more on people, including Jim McAlpine, founder of the 420 Games and Power Plant Fitness. He graces our cover after working with San Francisco-based photographer Mark Rutherford.

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cannabinoids is tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), which<br />

is the psychoactive element in marijuana. Not all<br />

cannabinoids have psychoactive properties; others<br />

may have more of a calming effect on the consumer,<br />

such as that of cannabidiol (CBD). The “high” you<br />

feel when you ingest marijuana comes from the<br />

effect of THC on cannabinoid receptor 1, found in<br />

different areas of the brain. These regions include<br />

the basal ganglia, parts of the limbic system—<br />

specifically the amygdala and hippocampus—as<br />

well as cerebellum, reproductive systems, and even<br />

within the eye. The regions of the brain where these<br />

are found are largely responsible for processing<br />

emotion, behavior, and memory. Additionally, as the<br />

limbic system is stimulated, dopamine is released to<br />

what is known as the “pleasure center” of the brain,<br />

called the nucleus accumbens, which stimulates<br />

pleasurable experiences, including sexual arousal<br />

and the high experienced from ingesting marijuana.<br />

Simply put, as soon as you ingest marijuana, your<br />

body starts to process it right away. The THC in<br />

the marijuana consumed triggers the cannabinoid<br />

receptors found throughout the brain and body to<br />

be stimulated, subsequently releasing dopamine<br />

into specific other regions of the brain and body,<br />

which ultimately produces the familiar feeling we<br />

all refer to as being high.<br />

“<br />

WE ARE pre-wired to pursue<br />

pleasurable experiences.”<br />

myhydrolife.com grow. heal. learn. enjoy. 95

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