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- From: aptekar@kauri.vuw.ac.nz (I. Aptekar)
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: Amotivational Syndrome
- Date: 4 Oct 1993 08:30:22 GMT
- Message-ID: <28omuu$2of@st-james.comp.vuw.ac.nz>
-
- Copied from p.229-230 of 'Drugs and Behavior' by William A. McKim.
-
- Amotivational Syndrome
-
- It has sometimes been observed that when a young person starts smoking
- marijuana there are systematic changes in that person's lifestyle,
- ambitions, motivation, and possibly personality. These changes have
- been collectively referred to as the _amotivational syndrome_, whose
- symptoms are:
-
- "... apathy, loss of effectiveness, and diminished capacity or
- willingness to carry out complex, long-term plans, endure frustration,
- concentrate for long periods, follow routines, or successfully master
- new material. Verbal facility is often impaired both in speaking and
- writing. Some individuals exhibit greater introversion, become totally
- involved with the present at the expense of future goals and
- demonstrate a strong tendency toward regressive, childlike, magical
- thinking[1]."
-
- There is no doubt that many young individuals have changed from clean,
- aggressive, upwardly mobile achievers into the sort of person just
- described at about the same time as they started smoking marijuana.
- What is not clear, however, is a causal relationship between the loss
- of middle class motivations and cannabis. Which comes first, the
- marijuana or the loss of motivations? This is not easy to answer. In
- fact, there may be no clearcut answer. To begin with, all we know
- about the amotivational syndrome is a result of a few case histories.
- These data cannot answer questions about: a) how common the syndrome
- is; b) whether the marijuana actually caused the change in behavior;
- or c) if the change is caused by marijuana, if it is best described as
- a change in all motivations, specific motivations, or something other
- than motivation, like ability or personality.
-
- It does not appear as though the amotivational syndrome is all that
- common among marijuana smokers. In one survey[2] a sample of almost
- 2000 college students was studied. There was no difference in grade
- point average and achievement between marijuana users and nonusers,
- but the users had more difficulty deciding on career goals, and a
- smaller number were seeking advanced professional degrees. On the
- other hand, other studies have shown lower school averages and higher
- dropout rates among users than nonusers. In any case these differences
- are not great. If there is such a thing as amotivational syndrome, its
- affects appear to be restricted to a few individuals, probably the
- small percentage who become heavy users.
-
- Laboratory studies provide additional information on the causal
- relationship between motivation and marijuana. The Mendelson[3]
- experiment, where hospitalised volunteers worked on an operant task to
- earn money and marijuana for 26 days, found that the dose of marijuana
- smoked did not influence the amount of work done by either the
- casual-user group or the heavy-user group; all remained motivated to
- earn and take home a significant amount of money in addition to the
- work they did for the marijuana. It seems clear that marijuana does
- not cause a loss of motivation.
-
- While marijuana does not specifically diminish motivation, it is clear
- that cannabis affects attention and memory, and these are intellectual
- capacities usually considered necessary for success in educational
- institutions. We know that a significant tolerance develops to these
- effects and they can be suppressed voluntarily at low doses, but
- consistent smoking of high doses of marijuana must impede a successful
- academic career. In fact, achievement motivation must be high indeed
- in any individual who combines high levels of cannabis use with a
- successful academic career.
-
- Since most reports of the amotivational syndrome originated in the
- sixties in North America, what they seem to describe is a tendency for
- college students to 'drop out' and assume a lifestyle that rejects
- traditional achievement motivations of their parents' generation. In
- an effort to understand this rejection it was very easy to believe
- that it was pharmacological and to dismiss it as 'amotivational
- syndrome.'
-
- [1] McGlothin, W.H., & West, L.J. (1968). The marihuana problem: An
- overview. _American Journal of Psychiatry_, vol. 125, 370-378.
-
- [2] Brill, N.Q., & Christie, R.L. (1974).Marihuana and psychosocial
- adjustment. _Archives of General Psychiatry_, 31, 713-719.
-
- [3] Mendelson, H.H., Kuehnle, J.C., Greenberg, I., & Mello, N.K.
- (1976). The effects of marihuana use on human operant behavior:
- Individual data. In M.C. Broude & S. Szara (eds.), _Pharmacology of
- marihuana_, vol. 2(pp. 643-653). New York: Academic Press.
-
- =============================================================================
-
- Message-ID: <052305Z17091993@anon.penet.fi>
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- From: an13187@anon.penet.fi (H-Man)
- Date: Fri, 17 Sep 1993 05:13:33 UTC
- Subject: Weil: Amotivational Syndrome
-
- Hey all! I just read THE NATURAL MIND by Andrew Weil. Although it dealt
- with ACID and MARIJUANA too much for my tastes, I typed up some EXCERPTS
- that I thought you'd like.
-
- |--########>-- H-Man --<########--|
-
- p. 60:
-
- When I was a freshman at Harvard, long before many people thought of smoking
- marihuana, there was plenty of amotivation. It took such forms as sleeping
- till dinner time and then playing Monopoly all night instead of working and
- was indistinguishable from amotivation now associated with heavy marihuana
- use. Heavy marihuana use is a convenient symptom for an amotivated person
- to add to his list: it is fun, can be done with other people, angers
- grownups, and so on. If it is not too late to find a rural college where
- marihuana is still unknown, I would predict that the amotivated people there
- would become the heavy marihuana smokers once the drug appeared on campus.
- If marihuana were the cause of amotivation, one would expect that
- amotivation could be cured by taking away the marihuana, but this is not the
- case. Therefore, it markes more sense to see amotivation as a cause of
- heavy marihuana smoking rather than the reverse.
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