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A weed grows in Boston

What's a suburban soccer mom who was once fervently anti-drug doing running a business growing and selling pot?
By VALERIE VANDE PANNE  |  December 4, 2009

0912_cover_main

Even though it's a crisp November day, the flower boxes of Mary Jones's neat little bungalow are overflowing with brightly colored blooms. The bubbly mother of three has her utility vehicle parked in the driveway. Her hair is perfectly coiffed, her blond highlights glimmer in the late-fall sun. She looks like she could be a real-estate broker, and seeing the rock on her manicured finger, I imagine for a moment that her husband is a doctor or a lawyer. Mary would, in fact, be the ideal soccer mom, except that one of her now-grown sons played football, and rather than working in real estate, she grows and sells marijuana.

She's Boston's own real-life Nancy Botwin, the protagonist of the Showtime dramedy Weeds.

Mary is no small-time peddler simply adding to her income with a $20-bag here or there. She has dozens of plants, which she methodically harvests every eight to 10 days, scattered throughout the house. She sells her crop to a mature, recreational-using clientele.

Nor, however, is she a ruthless street dealer. Instead, she has a bit of a Robin Hood streak — she gives away her product to those in chronic pain or with severely debilitating disease who can't otherwise afford it (even paying for delivery out of her own pocket). In doing so, Mary has signed on to an underground, global anti-pharmaceutical revolution that is gaining traction in this country, one which believes that the natural pain relief of marijuana is substantially more effective and less addictive than FDA-approved painkillers like OxyContin, to which the government, doctors, and Big Pharma typically steer sufferers.

I was first introduced to Mary at a party in Central Square, by a mutual friend. In order for Mary to trust me with her story, our friend had to vouch for me as someone known to be fair and discreet. I then had to agree to keep her identity secret (Mary Jones, as you may have already guessed, is not her real name, and all of the other names in this story have been changed to protect her and their anonymity). Sounds like a simple assignment, right? Not so much. Before meeting with her, for example, the photographer who accompanied me and I had to agree to be blindfolded during the very long drive to Mary's house. (This can be a nerve-racking thing, exponentially more so when you are being blindfolded by a drug dealer you just met.)

I didn't know where we were going, or what to expect when we got there. I had all kinds of questions running through my mind. Would there be guns, angry pit bulls, and large threatening thugs? What if something . . . happened?

But the question that really intrigued me was this: how did a petite, middle-aged, suburban housewife, who only a decade earlier was a fervent anti-smoker, end up as a thriving supplier in the Boston-area marijuana network and a global advocate of using cannabis to treat pain?

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GROWTH INDUSTRY: Mary Jones, who suffered a crippling leg injury more than 15 years ago, turned away from prescription drugs and to marijuana to handle her debilitating pain. She then went from suburban mom to lucrative pot dealer, who grows — and sells — her own.

In the beginning
"I couldn't go anywhere without my pills," explains Mary, fortysomething, remembering a time in her life nearly 15 years ago. "I was at my son's reading group and nodding out."

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  Topics: Lifestyle Features , Deval Patrick, Barack Obama, Politics,  More more >
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Comments
Re: A weed grows in Boston
Well done! "Mary", you are my hero! I wish there were more wonderful people like you and "Joey" out there. Big Pharm and and most doctors wrong. I'd rather see more people on pot than pills any day of the week. I've seen the suffering of the sick that you've talked about and it's no joke. The powers of canibus cannot be denied! Please keep up the good work and fighting the good fight!
By EastCoast82 on 12/02/2009 at 4:50:30
Re: A weed grows in Boston
Great job Mary, ur not alone Rick Simpson has been doing this for his neighbors as well  //hailmaryjane.com/cannabis-cures-cancer-run-from-the-cure-the-rick-simpson-story/  I understand it regulates diabietes too :)
By Sparket on 12/03/2009 at 5:51:29
Re: A weed grows in Boston
Great job Mary, ur not alone Rick Simpson has been doing this for his neighbors as well  //hailmaryjane.com/cannabis-cures-cancer-run-from-the-cure-the-rick-simpson-story/  I understand it regulates diabietes too :)
By Sparket on 12/03/2009 at 5:51:54
Re: A weed grows in Boston
Great job Mary, ur not alone Rick Simpson has been doing this for his neighbors as well  //hailmaryjane.com/cannabis-cures-cancer-run-from-the-cure-the-rick-simpson-story/  I understand it regulates diabietes too :)
By Sparket on 12/03/2009 at 5:53:05
Re: A weed grows in Boston
What a wonderful story! I so agree with her message to Deval and Barrack!  Unfortunately, not all altruistic people like her have entirely happy stories....//ahnupo.notlong.com
By TheOtherBayArea on 12/04/2009 at 5:55:15
Re: A weed grows in Boston
What a wonderful story! I so agree with her message to Deval and Barrack!  Unfortunately, not all altruistic people like her have entirely happy stories....//ahnupo.notlong.com
By TheOtherBayArea on 12/04/2009 at 5:55:27
Re: A weed grows in Boston
What a wonderful story! I so agree with her message to Deval and Barrack!  Unfortunately, not all altruistic people like her have entirely happy stories....//ahnupo.notlong.com
By TheOtherBayArea on 12/04/2009 at 5:56:08
Re:Putter [ Let's see if this will thread properly with 'A weed grows in Boston' in the subject line]
A note for the nice lady, in case she doesn't already know:1.) The butter should be brought up to 210F to activate it if it's not going to be heated later.  It's best to do this when non-psycho-active substances are as out of the butter as they'll be, for which see 2.) below. 2.) A lot of the gross-smelling (according to the reporter) and -tasting, non-psycho-active, stuff can be removed by simmering drug plant material, butter, and water for _many_ hours----as much time and water as you can manage---which dissolves out the more water-soluble stuff into the water.  When done, strain through cheesecloth, chill the mixture; remove the now-solid butter, and wipe it dry if done or repeat the process again for more purification. Of course, if you do a few cycles, each need not be that long---two to four hours will be fine.
With a few cycles, the butter may end up being merely a light green, and taste merely slightly unpleasant, as opposed to the probably-unpleasant-tasting stuff she's making these days, and the truly terrible marijuana butter generally prepared by people who don't much.  Above all, whatever you do, don't let the oil get above water's boiling-point, much less fry it, which is the father of FAIL here.  (Note: She is doing a public service; we're better-off with her doing it the way she does than not at all, and I just want to potentially improve life for the beneficiaries of her acts of love and holiness.)  Thanks to the old 'Dr. Atomic' underground comic books, some of whose data have not been superseded by later research.
 
By IrvingKristol on 12/06/2009 at 1:06:01
Re: Putter above
Sorry I didn't know how to paragraphise properly here; I've not posted in this forum before, and saw no way to preview..  Paragraphs should have started at the beginning, at"1.)", at "2.) A lot", "With a few cycles", "Above all", and "Thanks"---I'll try to reformat below:
<br/><p/>And that subject line should have read "...thread properly without....". <br/><p/>A note for the nice lady, in case she doesn't already know:<br/><p/>
1.) The butter should be brought up to 210F to activate it if it's not going to be heated later.  It's best to do this when non-psycho-active substances are as out of the butter as they'll be, for which see 2.) below. <br/><p/>
2.) A lot of the gross-smelling (according to the reporter) and -tasting, non-psycho-active, stuff can be removed by simmering drug plant material, butter, and water for _many_ hours----as much time and water as you can manage---which dissolves out the more water-soluble stuff into the water.  When done, strain through cheesecloth, chill the mixture; remove the now-solid butter, and wipe it dry if done or repeat the process again for more purification.<br/><p/>
 Of course, if you do a few cycles, each need not be that long---two to four hours will be fine. <br/><p/>
With a few cycles, the butter may end up being merely a light green, and taste merely slightly unpleasant, as opposed to the probably-unpleasant-tasting stuff she's making these days, and the truly terrible marijuana butter generally prepared by people who don't much.  Above all, whatever you do, don't let the oil get above water's boiling-point, much less fry it, which is the father of FAIL here. <br/><p/>
 (Note: She is doing a public service; we're better-off with her doing it the way she does than not at all, and I just want to potentially improve life for the beneficiaries of her acts of love and holiness---apologies if I've got a little snarky above.)  <br/><p/>Thanks to the old 'Dr. Atomic' underground comic books, some of whose data have not been superseded by later research.
  
By IrvingKristol on 12/06/2009 at 1:12:58

ARTICLES BY VALERIE VANDE PANNE
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    Even though it's a crisp November day, the flower boxes of Mary Jones's neat little bungalow are overflowing with brightly colored blooms.

 See all articles by: VALERIE VANDE PANNE

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