> It used to be thought that couples mostly smoked after sex, but Eisenberg said his findings show the opposite is true for “all races, ages, education levels, income groups and religions, every health status, whether they were married or single and whether or not they had kids.”
Wait... what? They used to think that people had sex and then smoked marijuana, and are surprised to find that people smoke marijuana and then have sex?
> “I think if you asked a man or a woman, 20 more times to have sex over a year, that would seem like a lot,” Eisenberg said.
Presented without comment, except to say: 20 (more) times per year means once every two-and-a-half weeks.
An obvious interpretation of this data is that some people are risk-takers and others are risk-averse; the risk-takers are collectively more inclined to do drugs and more inclined to have sex.
(Something like an extrovert/introvert divide would also work.)
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[ 4.0 ms ] story [ 36.8 ms ] threadWait... what? They used to think that people had sex and then smoked marijuana, and are surprised to find that people smoke marijuana and then have sex?
> “I think if you asked a man or a woman, 20 more times to have sex over a year, that would seem like a lot,” Eisenberg said.
Presented without comment, except to say: 20 (more) times per year means once every two-and-a-half weeks.
Well, supposedly single people have less sex than married people, and you know the stereotype about married couples....
So alternatively, people who are promiscuous may also tend to smoke more weed?
(Something like an extrovert/introvert divide would also work.)