It seems humanity, as a race, has attached stigma to illness, especially when the illness is not well understood. This can easily be traced back to the Bible and leprosy, seen at the time as a judgment from God, as was the Plague of Middle Age Europe, and most recent (and personal) disease to be stigmatized as God's judgment, HIV. Cancer patients, prior to the disease being understood, were often feared, as were patients with Polio, Tuberculosis, and the aforementioned HIV. The common thread through all of this is that, on top of the illness itself, patients had to deal with fear, stares, social shunning, uncomfortable silences, and all the other social nuances we as humans use to separate ourselves from those less fortunate, in order to guard our illusion of safety from the misfortune of others.

This is merely a sample of diseases approved for medical cannabis use that leave physical signs. Many of us also have invisible illnesses, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, Chronic Pain, Crohn's Disease or Peripheral Neuropathy. Additionally, advances in treatment have restored the veneer of health to Hepatitis C and HIV sufferers, without alleviating the underlying symptoms, not to mention the side effects of the treatment itself. Even our loved ones and close associates, unable to truly understand the experience, unintentionally offer slights that wound and take away some of our pride and our justification to access treatment, or even to complain. It would seem as patients, we have a dual experience of exclusion from normality, beyond our diagnosis alone: suffer the unintentional slights offered to those with invisible disabilities, and/or suffer the looks, and worse, the pity of those who can see the signs of illness. What we don't seem to have the chance to do, is take care of ourselves without the added burden of judgments, assessments and proclamations of those who, through no fault of their own, are in no position to understand the plight of the patient.

Enter the New Mexico Department of Health and the Lynn and Erin Compassionate Caregiver Act. At least, someone has heard us, understood our pain and given us legal access to an otherwise benign plant that has medicinal properties that rival some of the best of Western Medicine. At last, we can stop behaving like criminals, and have an easy, open and up front purchase of medication, at least now that it's legal in the State, or can we?

At first, it looked as if the State were going to get directly involved in production and distribution of medical cannabis. The flaw in this thinking became somewhat obvious, that the State of New Mexico would become a “drug dealer," dispensing drugs with no more medical use than LSD or heroin, though the Federal Government's own research to date seems to disprove this “fact”. I thoroughly believe State employees need to be kept safe from prosecution while doing the their job as we wait for the Federal Government to come around. The fact remains that necessary compromises and the best efforts of all involved have left us with the medical equivalent of "Don't Ask-Don't Tell" for patients. What have we in fact won if we are still made to feel and act like criminals? (There is currently a Bill in the House of Congress, HR 2835, The Medical Marijuana Patient Protection Act to turn Medical Marijuana access control to the States. Keep your fingers crossed.)

NewMexiCann Natural Medicine hopes to become one of those businesses that allows a patient a modicum of normalcy in accessing legal medication. With luck, there will be more providers and New Mexicans can finally access medication in the open, without fear or shame.

Until then, we would like you to become a clearinghouse for information, assistance and patient community building in New Mexico. We hope you like our site and make use of it freely. Comment, complain, disagree and otherwise express yourself in our message board. Access our reference and link pages, and of course, comment on anything you read here in our monthly update.

Joseph J. Keenan, BS, MA
Communications Director
NewMexiCann Natural Medicine

5 comments

# One of the first in NM on 11/24/09 at 09:19
Interestingly enough, your statement "we are still made to feel and act like criminals" should be reflective of how YOU feel Mr. Keenan, not me as a qualified patient.

I haven't felt like a criminal in any way at all since NM legalized medical use. Others may have but that sense is gone from what I's seeing. Personally, I'm not after a "dispensary" to go pick out medication. I don't like going to Walgreens, so why do I want to waste time going in anywhere when I can go "drive thru", get it and go; cheaply, quickly and NEVER feeling like a criminal. I like that my medication is cheap and VERY high quality, this seems to be the goal of the initial provider. I'm more interested in high-quality and consistent supply of my medication than I am any sort of "social activism" agenda from qualified providers. I'd much rather see qualified producers be concerned with the quality and supply of my medication, not taking innuendo-filled potshots at each other.
# medicineman [Member] Email on 12/04/09 at 16:59
I am glad their system works for you and I'm happy you're happy. We should all be made happier as different modes of delivery, comfortable to each individual, become available. Thanks for taking the time to read and post your opinion.
# Bedrock Bob on 01/13/10 at 23:54
Mr. Keenan,

You write well and you are representing the cause. Bravo! I truly believe that people need to PUSH for change. It has been a long time coming and there is plenty of space for activism and opinion where marijuana laws are concerned.

Thank you for the time that you devote to the cause. There will be many people who will be inspired in the days to come. The laws have always been unjust. When people no longer fear being thrown in the dungeon for growing a few plants, or being a criminal for smoking a joint, they will feel free to express themselves. The people DO want sensible drug policy. The people DO want the violence in Mexico to cease.

Marijuana reform symbolizes the ability of the American people to TAKE BACK freedoms that have been denied us. It is the opportunity to divert a billion dolllar a year contribution to terrorism in Mexico and turn it in to a billion dollar a year industry for American entrepreneours. Not only is it what the majority wants and demands, but it is the only just thing that our overlords can do to keep peace in the masses!

Everything is working in our favor. Any efforts to keep this in the media and get more people involved will be richly rewarded... Let us strike while the iron is hot!

Bob
# theflash on 02/26/10 at 11:36
I agree wholeheartedly with One of the First, save for the inexpensive part. I do not want to see this develop like in California, I've waited too long, 40+ years for a legal treatment that worked for my PTSD sleep disorders and anxiety.

I'm now seeing a commercialization and unhealthy competition...ads to help find a doctor,etc. Please, this must be treated as a serious medicine or the public perception will continue to be doubtful, at best.

I am already aware of a career drug dealer who was shot in a robbery attempt and given a PTSD diagnosis, along with a medical marijuana card.

We must work very hard to insure honesty, integrity and proffesionalism in our dealings...no political agendas....do that on your own time and not within the confines of the medical community.
# medicineman [Member] Email on 03/02/10 at 21:12
Just an item to ponder, there would not be a medical cannabis program in New Mexico if it were not for someone's political agenda. Thanks for reading and taking the time to comment.

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Cannablog serves the community of licensed medical cannabis patients in New Mexico. While we offer our perspectives on the medical marijuana movement in New Mexico and elsewhere, we'd very much like to hear from you, too!

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