By Jane West

Editor’s Note: This week cannabis entrepreneur Jane West, founder of Women Grow, joins Leafly as a regular contributor and columnist. One of the industry’s sharpest and most vibrant leaders, West will bring her insights to Leafly twice monthly in her new column, Jane’s Domain.

I became Jane West to prove that I could change my life in a monumental way. I realized that I was the person holding me back from seeking out the bigger and better.

Jane is my nom de plume of pot, adopted because I needed to take a leap out of my former professional career. That I did, head first.

Three years ago I was a corporate event producer, living and raising a family in Denver. In 2013 I created a 420-friendly startup, Edible Events, while keeping my day job. The two parts of my working life remained separate until Feb. 26, 2014, when I appeared in a CNBC documentary on legal marijuana. My boss saw the show — and me — and the next day asked me to make a choice. I could keep my day job, or I could become “Jane West” of Edible Events.

I chose Jane.

That’s not to say this change came without difficulty. I’ve experienced more than my share of doubt, fear, and indecision. At times I’ve struggled with the feeling that I was in way over my head. But as I worked through the struggles, I found that Jane West was stronger, smarter and more powerful than the person I had been. Finding the real Jane allowed me to leave behind the parts of my life that were just adequate in favor of the inspirational and the extraordinary.

As a result, at the age of 40, my past two years have been full of these firsts:

I met Congresswomen Nancy Pelosi and Elizabeth Warren and hosted fundraisers for Colorado Congressman Jared Polis and Congresswoman Dina Titus.

I lobbied in Washington, D.C. (and a year later brought 78 women from 16 states with me).

I was the defendant in a criminal courtroom. Five times.

I got fired from a job for the first time in my life.

My parents permanently moved to the state of Colorado.

My husband changed jobs.

I wrote the foreword to a published book.

I used Twitter, HootSuite, MailChimp, Squarespace, WordPress, Vine, Vimeo, WuFoo, Streak, Zappier, Instagram, Snapchat, Trello, Slack, and Buffer for the first time.

I now know that marijuana is safer than alcohol.

My kids and I watched a story about myself on the NBC Nightly News.

I wrote my first hashtag, and now #byoc is a thing.

I stopped watching TV.

I started sleeping fewer than six hours a night.

I produced a concert at Red Rocks Amphitheatre funded by the cannabis industry showcasing the musicians of the Colorado Symphony Orchestra.

I raised more than $200,000 for not-for-profit organizations.

I missed irreplaceable moments, days and weeks of my kids’ lives.

I stayed in four of New York’s swankiest hotels and spoke at an event on Madison Avenue with New York state Sen. Diane Savino.

I flew to Boston for a private party at a castle.

I ate lunch on the rooftop of the Soho House while people dipped in the pool on a hot August afternoon.

I stopped my five-times-a-week yoga routine.

I appeared on every major news network, with over 2,000 exclusive articles and mentions.

I almost drove off the road when I heard on NPR, “The Colorado Symphony Orchestra combines cannabis and classical music on a high note in Colorado. I’m Neal

Conan and this is Talk of the Nation.”

I celebrated my sons’ fourth and sixth birthdays.

I had an entire chapter of Weed the People, published by Time, written about my events. It was titled “Classically Cannabis”.

I was the “talent” at a four-hour editorial photo shoot.

I celebrated my 38th and 39th birthdays.

I had the best sex in my entire marriage.

I utilized lysergic acid diethylamide.

I celebrated my tenth wedding anniversary.

I smoked a blunt with Snoop Dogg and a few joints with Willie and Annie Nelson.

I have put on more makeup than I have in the past five years combined.

I was way too nice to people who didn’t deserve it.

I didn’t thank my parents enough.

I started wearing heels on weekdays.

I lost a passport, multiple drivers licenses, two pairs of prescription glasses, and two Wi-Fi boxes.

I was in something called a “sizzle reel,” and it wasn’t pretty.

I paid over $500 in parking tickets.

I consumed more cannabis on a weekly basis than ever before in my life.

I wore fake eyelashes. Six times.

I founded an international professional networking organization for the future leaders of the cannabis industry, Women Grow.

The entire time I was completely me.

To continue reading this story, visit our friend’s website (opens in a new window):: Jane's Domain: Please Allow Me to Introduce Myself