A Phenomenology of Marijuana Use Among Graduate Students

Article

A Phenomenology of Marijuana Use Among Graduate Students

DOI: 10.1080/20797222.2016.1164997
Author(s): Emily Garner American School of Professional Psychology,

Abstract

Guided by a hermeneutic-phenomenological methodology, this study focused on gaining an in- depth understanding of the use of marijuana by graduate students, a population which does not fit the usual profile of marijuana users addressed in the field literature, by exploring the experience of being a graduate student who uses marijuana. Semi-structured individual interviews were conducted with seven marijuana users attending a graduate programme of study, with elaboration and clarification of their initial description of their respective experiences dialogically prompted by means of open-ended questions. Five interrelated themes emerged from the analysis of the transcribed interviews, with the central finding indicating that the experience of being a graduate student who uses marijuana involves a process of ongoing negotiation between, on the one hand, messages from society and academia, and, on the other, an inner sense of self and well-being.

Get new issue alerts for Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology