Is Your Teen Using Cannabis? Understanding Risks & CBT Solutions
In brief: Cannabis is still consumed by nearly 30% of French adolescents, with first use around age 15. Contrary to popular belief, its impact on the adolescent brain is significant: it disrupts the maturation of the prefrontal cortex, responsible for decision-making and emotional control, impairs memory and learning abilities, and unbalances the motivation system by creating progressive apathy. Beyond neurobiological effects, social anxiety, existential boredom, and the search for emotional relief are the main psychological factors that favor the transition from experimentation to regular consumption. Cognitive-behavioral approaches offer effective strategies to identify these vulnerabilities and help adolescents quit without moralizing.
Thomas, 17, was sent to my office by his parents after a summons from the principal. His grades had dropped four points on average in six months. He regularly skips afternoon classes. His eyes are often red. When I ask him if he uses cannabis, he shrugs: "Everyone smokes at school. It's less dangerous than alcohol. And it helps me relax."
As a psychotherapist specializing in cognitive-behavioral therapies, I receive an increasing number of adolescents and parents grappling with the issue of cannabis. The subject is sensitive, polarized between those who normalize it ("it's a natural plant") and those who demonize it ("it's a drug, full stop"). The psychological reality, however, is more nuanced and deserves to be presented without moralizing or complacency. This article reviews what research truly tells us about the impact of cannabis on the adolescent brain, the psychological factors that promote its use, and the therapeutic approaches that work.
Current Situation: Youth Consumption in France
France remains one of the European countries with the highest rates of cannabis consumption among adolescents. According to the latest data from the OFDT (French Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction), approximately 30% of 17-year-olds have experimented with cannabis in their lifetime, and nearly 7% use it regularly (at least 10 times a month). The average age of first use is around 15, but addiction services report initial contact as early as 12-13 years old.
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These figures should neither be dramatized nor trivialized. Occasional experimentation does not systematically lead to regular use or dependence. However, the context of this consumption—the age of onset, frequency, and underlying motivations—largely determines the associated risks. And it is precisely here that psychology has essential things to say.
The Impact of Cannabis on the Adolescent Brain
Prefrontal Maturation at Risk
The human brain does not reach full maturation until around age 25. The last region to complete its development is the prefrontal cortex, the seat of so-called "executive functions": planning, decision-making, impulse control, consequence evaluation, and emotional regulation. The endocannabinoid system—the network of natural receptors to which THC binds—plays a crucial role in this maturation.
Neuroimaging studies show that regular cannabis use during adolescence is associated with a reduction in gray matter volume in the prefrontal cortex, alterations in white matter (the "cables" that connect brain regions), and decreased prefrontal activity during cognitive control tasks. In other words, cannabis disrupts the very construction of the brain circuits that adolescents need to become adults capable of regulating their emotions, planning, and making informed decisions.
Memory Under Pressure
The hippocampus, a central structure for memory and learning, is particularly rich in cannabinoid receptors. Longitudinal studies show that regular adolescent cannabis users perform significantly worse on tests of verbal memory, working memory, and learning compared to their non-using peers. These deficits are partially reversible after cessation, but some persist, especially when consumption began before age 15.
It's no coincidence that Thomas's grades dropped four points: cannabis directly impairs memory encoding and consolidation capacities, making academic learning considerably more difficult. The adolescent doesn't become "lazy" because they smoke; they smoke, and their brain loses memory capacity.
The Motivation Circuit
THC massively stimulates the dopaminergic system, causing a dopamine release far greater than that produced by natural rewards (food, social interactions, achievement). With repeated stimulation, the brain down-regulates its dopaminergic receptors: it produces less dopamine naturally. The result is the "amotivational syndrome," clinically described since the 1970s: the adolescent gradually loses interest in activities that previously motivated them, withdraws into passive pleasures (screens, couch), and develops a form of apathy that others mistakenly interpret as "laziness."
This mechanism is all the more insidious because it creates a vicious cycle: the less motivated the adolescent is, the more they feel "worthless," the more they seek relief in cannabis, the more their motivation decreases, and so on.
Psychological Risk Factors
Not all adolescents who try cannabis become regular users. Psychology has identified several vulnerability factors that increase the risk of sliding into problematic use.
Social Anxiety
Social anxiety is one of the factors most strongly correlated with cannabis use in adolescents. Young people who feel uncomfortable in groups, who fear others' judgment, who struggle to speak up, discover that cannabis "disinhibits" and (apparently) facilitates social interactions. Cannabis then becomes a self-prescribed "social medication," which is effective in the short term but catastrophic in the long term: untreated social anxiety worsens, social skills do not develop, and dependence sets in.
Boredom and Existential Emptiness
Adolescents who find no meaning in their daily activities, who feel invested in no projects, who experience a form of "emptiness" are particularly vulnerable. Cannabis fills this void by altering the perception of time and providing artificial sensory stimulation. Boredom, often minimized by adults, is a major risk factor that therapy can address by working on values, goals, and behavioral activation.
Peer Pressure
In adolescence, the need for group belonging often takes precedence over individual judgment. An adolescent may start using not because they want to, but because refusing would exclude them from the group. Pressure can be explicit ("you're not a man if you don't smoke") or implicit (everyone smokes, not smoking means being "different"). Training in self-assertion and building self-esteem are essential therapeutic levers to help adolescents resist this pressure without losing their social belonging.
Emotional Self-Medication
This is probably the most clinically concerning factor. Adolescents suffering from depression, generalized anxiety, post-traumatic stress, or school bullying-related disorders discover that cannabis temporarily alleviates their suffering. Self-medication masks the underlying disorder, delays appropriate care, and adds a problem (dependence) to the initial problem.
In my practice, I observe that the majority of regular adolescent users present with at least one concomitant psychological disorder. Treating the addiction without treating the underlying disorder is doomed to fail. Treating the disorder without addressing consumption is equally so.
The Cycle of Dependence
Cannabis dependence in adolescents does not develop overnight. It follows a gradual process that CBT models as a cycle:
1. Trigger → emotionally difficult situation (family conflict, academic pressure, social rejection, boredom) 2. Automatic Thought → "I need to smoke to cope with this," "a joint will make it better," "I can't relax otherwise" 3. Emotion → irresistible urge (craving), anticipation of relief 4. Behavior → consumption 5. Immediate Consequence → temporary relief (positive reinforcement) 6. Delayed Consequences → guilt, fatigue, academic difficulties, family conflicts, isolation 7. New Trigger → negative consequences themselves become triggers for consumptionThis circular model explains why rational arguments ("it's bad for your health") have little effect: the adolescent is trapped in a loop where immediate relief systematically outweighs distant consequences. The prefrontal cortex, precisely the structure that cannabis weakens, is the tool that allows resistance to this impulse. This is the central paradox of adolescent cannabis addiction: the substance destroys the very tool that would enable resistance to it.
The CBT Approach: Tools That Work
Motivational Interviewing
Before any technical intervention, it is essential to meet the adolescent where they are, without judging them or imposing a goal they haven't chosen. Motivational interviewing, developed by Miller and Rollnick, is a non-confrontational approach that explores the young person's ambivalence towards their consumption.
Most adolescents are not "in denial": they know that cannabis has negative effects. But they also place significant value on the perceived benefits (relaxation, belonging, emotional management). Motivational interviewing helps to weigh these two sides of the coin, to explore the discrepancies between the adolescent's values (succeeding in studies, having good relationships) and their current behavior, and to elicit motivation for change that comes from within.
Functional Analysis
Functional analysis is the central CBT tool for understanding addictive behavior. It involves breaking down, with the adolescent, each episode of consumption: what was the context? What emotion was present? What thought was activated? What did consumption provide? What were the consequences?
This work allows the adolescent to move from automatic and unconscious behavior to a clear understanding of their own mechanisms. This awareness is the first step towards change: one can only modify what one understands.
Relapse Prevention
Relapse prevention, developed by Marlatt and Gordon, is an essential component of treatment. It teaches adolescents to identify their "high-risk situations" (parties, Sunday boredom, conflicts with parents), to develop avoidance or coping strategies for each of them, and especially to manage a "slip" without catastrophizing.
Relapse is not a failure: it is information. Each relapse analyzed in session helps to refine the understanding of triggers and strengthen alternative strategies. The goal is not perfection but progress.
The Role of Parents: Dialogue vs. Control
Parental reaction to adolescent cannabis use is a delicate balance between the need to protect and the risk of breaking the bond.
What Doesn't Work
- Excessive control: searching their room, confiscating their phone, imposing urine tests. These methods generate mistrust, destroy the relationship, and push the adolescent towards more secrecy without changing their consumption.
- Threats and punishment: "if you smoke again, it's boarding school." Fear is not a lever for lasting change. It produces submission or rebellion, never authentic motivation.
- Denial: "they're experimenting, it will pass." Certainly, experimentation can remain occasional. But ignoring the signs of regular use means allowing the adolescent brain to develop under chemical influence.
What Works
- Open, non-moralizing dialogue: "I'd like us to talk about cannabis. Not to lecture you, but because I want to understand why you need it and how I can help you."
- Listening to their reasons: understanding why the adolescent consumes is more important than proving them wrong. If the reason is social anxiety, it's the anxiety that needs to be treated. If it's boredom, it's meaning that needs to be rebuilt.
- A firm but benevolent framework: setting clear boundaries (no consumption at home, no driving under the influence) while maintaining the emotional bond.
- Support towards professional guidance: suggesting (without imposing initially) a consultation with a psychotherapist. Specialized support programs offer a structured framework for addressing addictions in adolescents.
When to Seek Professional Help
A consultation is recommended when:
- Consumption is daily or near-daily
- The adolescent needs cannabis to "function" (fall asleep, socialize, manage stress)
- Academic results drop significantly
- The adolescent disengages from all previous activities
- Major family conflicts erupt around consumption
- The adolescent presents with associated depressive or anxious symptoms
- Risky behaviors appear (driving under the influence, polysubstance use)
Conclusion
The issue of cannabis in adolescents is not simply "it's bad" or "it's not serious." It is a complex subject that touches on neurodevelopment, the psychology of emotions, social dynamics, and the mechanisms of dependence. The appropriate response is neither panic nor trivialization, but understanding.
The adolescent brain is a masterpiece under construction. Cannabis disrupts this construction in measurable and, in some cases, lasting ways. But the good news is that modern therapeutic approaches—motivational interviewing, functional analysis, relapse prevention, and addressing underlying factors—offer concrete and effective tools to help young people break free from the cycle of dependence.
Thomas? After four months of CBT support, he gradually reduced his consumption. The work focused primarily on his social anxiety, which proved to be the main driver of his use. With anxiety management tools and self-assertion training, he discovered that he could socialize without a chemical crutch. His average grades went up two points. "The most surprising thing," he told me, "is that I'm more relaxed now than when I was smoking." The brain, when given the right tools, does the rest.
If your adolescent uses cannabis and you are concerned, do not face this situation alone. Book an appointment for an initial consultation.Pillar Article: Find our complete guide to adolescent psychology for an overview.
Video: To Go Further
To delve deeper into the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:
The Lie of Childhood That Ruins Our Lives - Dr. Gabor Mate | DOACThe Diary of a CEO
To understand the scientific methodology behind this analysis, discover our dedicated page: Cognitive Distortions
Also read: Imposter Syndrome: 70% Affected - CBT Test
Also read: Parental Imposter Syndrome
Also read: Savior Complex in Love: Understanding It
Recommended Readings:
- When the Body Says No — Gabor Maté

About the author
Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner
Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 900 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Sérénité.
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Notre assistant IA spécialisé en psychologie de l'adolescent vous guide — 50 échanges pour mieux comprendre et agir.
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