Johnny Stack was 14 the first time he tried weed. He went to a party, where he inhaled it through a vape. For most of high school, Johnny had everything going for him. He was a popular teen with a group of great friends. He was active in his church and enjoyed playing sports. He was also a straight-A student with a 4.2 GPA. He even earned a perfect score of 800 on the math section of the SAT in his junior year.
But by senior year Johnny’s parents started noticing changes in their son’s personality. Johnny had been using weed heavily for at least three years. His parents found concentrated forms of cannabis called shatter, wax, and dab in his room. He started getting D’s, and he couldn’t keep up in math class.
Johnny became paranoid. He stopped giving presentations at school, convinced that everyone was talking about him. “He was buying burner phones at Target,” says Laura, Johnny’s mother. “He stopped trusting his iPhone, because he felt like people were spying on him through it.”
After he left for college, Johnny started having suicidal thoughts. “He texted me that he felt like killing himself,” Laura says. “He said he had been dabbing (inhaling concentrated forms of cannabis through vapes and other devices) nonstop with his roommate for two weeks.” He was admitted to a psychiatric hospital, which is a hospital for people with severe mental health disorders.
Johnny eventually was diagnosed with severe THC use. THC stands for tetrahydrocannabinol. It is the compound in cannabis that makes people feel high. Research has found that teens who use cannabis are two to four times more likely to develop mental health disorders like depression and suicidal thinking than teens who don’t use the drug.
When Johnny learned that his cannabis use was possibly responsible for his mental health issues, he tried to quit. He enrolled in a different college. But soon he started smoking again to deal with the loneliness of a new school. A few months into the semester, he called his mom. “They bugged my room,” he said. Johnny was convinced that the FBI was listening to him. He went back to the hospital.