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The Runner's High

The Runner's High

As seen on
Green Entrepreneur


Many Americans of a particular generation vividly remember the anti-cannabis ads run on broadcast television during their adolescence. Educators hung posters on school bulletin boards. Cartoon characters taught everyone how to "just say no." The public was told with unquestionable certainty that "marijuana is a gateway drug." 

It turns out that gateway might be the finish line of a marathon. 

The legalization of cannabis research has not only discredited cannabis propaganda but also shined a light on the Endocannabinoid System's involvement in human health and the "Runner's High." 

Discovered at the end of the 20th century, the Endocannabinoid System has proven to be pivotal in understanding mental and physical health, providing a bounty of holistic and natural solutions to many modern ailments. Now, cannabis has shown to be vital in improving anxiety, inflammation, nausea, joy, pain, and unlocking access to the endocannabinoid system. 

The Runner's High

A brief history of the Runner's High

In the 1960s, the popularity of running was burgeoning across the country, launching some of the world's biggest brands today, such as Nike and Asics. Researchers began attempting to understand the Runner's High since it entered the pop-culture lexicon. 

At first, the data was anecdotal. Runners began sharing their feats of endurance, mentioning an inexplicable and intoxicating experience of euphoria, clarity, calm, and pain relief only after they reached a point where they were about to give up on their run. The mass adoption of running made it clear that the Runner's High was not an isolated event but something many could (and did) experience.

The term "Runner's High" became the de facto label for the biological effect humans experienced during endurance sports (in retrospect, it is unlikely that it is only a coincidence that the popularity of illicit cannabis use and running took parallel paths in their growth along the same timeline). The effect many runners experienced was often compared to the high cannabis users experienced. Both cheeky and accurate, "Runner's High" stuck as the favorite term for cardio and endurance exercise, even as other activities' popularity also brought their high, including cycling, swimming, weight lifting, rowing, and many others.

No matter the sport, athletes who experienced the Runner's High found it very addicting. People across the country began chasing the high. Although not entirely understood back then, the undisputed truth that exercise is good for your mind and body is prevalent today. The motivation as to why so many became addicted to staying healthy, while others found no purpose in it, was a mystery for some time. That mystery is just now being explained.

Born to Run High

Born to run

When considering the evolutionary theory as to why people experience a Runner's High, today's popular view is that for hundreds-of-thousands of years, humans (specifically Homo Sapiens) developed the ability to run long distances for survival. In short, the flight portion of "fight or flight" meant that when climbing a tree was not enough to get away from a big-cat, the next best thing was to run.

While many predators prevalent in prehistoric times were capable of reaching much faster speeds for short distances, homo-sapiens could run for much longer at a relatively fast pace. The human anatomy evolved to better cope with the impact, energy depletion, and mental stress of running by deploying the endocannabinoid system. Rather than giving up halfway and being mauled by a big-cat, humans were given a second wind in the form of a Runner's High to continue their escape and survival. Those that could outrun the danger would procreate the next generation of runners.

The agricultural revolution led to the development of cooperative strategies amongst humans, which resulted in more need for working the land, rather than running away from prey. But the development of the Runner's High was already coded in our DNA, only to return to a wider population once again with sport creation.

Understanding the high

As runners began telling their version of the experience, it became clear that this was not an isolated phenomenon. Researchers were curious as to how and why so many people were sharing similar stories. There was already an obvious correlation in the slang between getting high on cannabis and a Runner's High, but academia was not buying it, nor were they legally able to. Cannabis research laws were strictly enforced by the federal government, making it bureaucratically impossible to connect the dots in a lab setting without years of debilitating red tape.

Many even claimed that the Runner's High was a placebo effect from eager runners trying to reach euphoria having heard of others' experience. 

For decades, experts debunked theories of the Runner's High like these. Early studies conducted on the Runner's High found that endorphins (naturally produced opioids) were being released. Yet, endorphins alone were unable to produce the full experience of the Runner's High. Unlike endocannabinoids (that scientists hadn't yet discovered), endorphins cannot travel past the brain stem, making them obsolete when it comes to decreasing inflammation and improving circulation in the joints and muscles most fatigued by running. 

The 1990s brought a wave of understanding with the discovery of the biological endocannabinoid system (ECS) found in humans and other mammals. The ECS consists of endocannabinoids that bind to cannabinoid receptors. Researchers identified two primary cannabinoid receptors: CB1 in 1990 and CB2 in 1993, believing they could identify more receptors as they gained a better understanding of the ECS. CB1 receptors are the main molecular target of exogenous THC and endogenous Anandamide (discovered in 1993). In comparison, CBD acts as an antagonist at both CB1 and CB2 receptors.

Anandamide (named after the Sanskrit word for "bliss") is created naturally in the human body in relatively low quantities and has very similar THC properties. It produces pleasant feelings of relaxation, pain cessation, and euphoria, much like the shared experience for running enthusiasts over the years.

In 2015, a team of German scientists released research that proved "a Runner's High depends on cannabinoid receptors in mice." Their ability to use pharmacologic, molecular genetic, and behavioral studies in mice allowed them to demonstrate that the endocannabinoid system is crucial for a Runner's High. Debunking the myth that endorphins alone were the cause by proving running exercises increase blood levels of both endorphins and anandamide. Unfortunately, euphoria cannot be studied in mouse models. However, anecdotal accounts of people experiencing euphoria during a Runner's High are frequent and consistent.

Enjoy The High

Mental euphoria and physical health

Although the Runner's High is analogous to running, naming it an Exercise High would be more accurate given the many modern forms of exertion people can perform to create the same effect on a biological level. Non-running fitness enthusiasts and cannabis users have been found to use similar language to explain their experience and affection for their sport of choice. We can attribute much of these comparisons to the similar reaction endo, and phytocannabinoids have on people.

In 2015, researchers released "Cannabis and Exercise Science" claiming that "policies regarding cannabis use are rapidly changing, yet public officials have limited access to scientific information that might inform the creation of these policies. One important area in which to begin investigations is the link between recreational cannabis use and health, specifically exercise."

Inability to conduct adequate research led to relying solely on anecdotal reports, which were mixed. Pointing out a peculiar fact (given that policymakers tended to lean towards the notion of "cannabis makes you lazy"), the World Anti-Doping Agency includes cannabis as a prohibited substance in sport, partly because they believe it can "enhance" sports performance.  

In 2019, the University of Colorado Boulder published research in Frontiers in Public Health that found many people use cannabis before or after their workouts. The survey noted that cannabis users tend to exercise more than the average American. And more than 80 percent of respondents said they used cannabis before starting to exercise or within four hours of ending a workout. Many participants reported that cannabis motivated them to train and allowed them to enjoy the activity even more. Although the findings are conducted exclusively in legal cannabis states, experts must do more research with a larger population of participants and a non-user control group.

Another survey conducted on social media by Humboldt State University in Arcata, California, targeted people that specifically used cannabis for exercise. The study of 126 men and women uncovered cannabis use before numerous types of activities lead not only to greater enjoyment, but participants believed that cannabis increased their focus, concentration, and mind-body awareness. 

A New Era in Cannabis

What the future holds

With America divided into two halves on almost every issue, how is it that Cannabis Legalization became the one thing Americans agreed on most in 2020? 

Other than Gen-Z, every living generation has grown up under the influence of an "anti-drug" propaganda machine, funded by our own tax dollars. State legalization and capitalism are now forcing everyone to wake up to the smell of money. Revealing the ridiculousness of having fought a war against a plant, only to find out the plant is a pacifist.

Gallup polls show that 68% of Americans are in favor of federal legalization. With overwhelming positive sentiment towards Cannabis Reform from voters, politicians are doing their best to usher in legislation without making themselves look like fools for their involvement in the war on drugs. Just now, South Dakota jumped headfirst and legalized medical and recreational cannabis simultaneously. California is on track to become the largest cannabis market globally, and less than a decade ago, California was still conducting military-style raids on marijuana cultivators and dealers. 

As cannabis commerce has expanded rapidly, research has been limited. In December of 2020, the federal government has presented separate bills. The Cannabidiol and Marihuana Research Expansion Act allows cannabis research to be streamlined, removing excessive barriers that make it difficult for researchers to study cannabis and giving the FDA power to analyze CBD and medical cannabis products. The Medical Marijuana Research Act offers researchers access to state-legal cannabis, removing the over half a century-long requirement that cannabis research may only be conducted on marijuana grown at a single federally approved facility at the University of Mississippi. This grants access to consumer products that are actually consumed as opposed to what is produced federally.

At the time of writing this article, both bills show some rare signs of bi-partisan support. No matter the vote, private enterprises continue to fund and advance the industry through innovation and scientific breakthroughs, circumventing federal bureaucracy in the name of state-sanctioned progress, capitalism, and living a plant enhanced life.

CBG: The Mother Cannabinoid for Focus and Clean Energy

Everyone has met CBD by now. It is on the gas station counter, in the seltzer, folded into the post-yoga conversation. But the cannabinoid that quietly makes CBD possible has spent most of that time backstage. That cannabinoid is CBG, and in 2026 it is finally stepping into the light.

CBG, short for cannabigerol, is having its breakout year. Search interest in "what is CBG" keeps climbing, supplement brands are scrambling to add it, and athletes who already understand CBD are asking a sharper question: if CBD calms, what gives me clean focus without the wired edge of another espresso? The answer keeps pointing back to the molecule the cannabis plant builds first.

What Is CBG, the Mother Cannabinoid

Here is the part that surprises people. Every cannabinoid in the plant starts as one thing. The cannabis plant produces CBGA, the acidic form of CBG, and enzymes then convert it into the precursors of THC, CBD, and the rest. CBG is the source. That is why researchers and growers call it the mother cannabinoid, or the "mother of all cannabinoids."

Because the plant converts most of its CBGA into other compounds as it matures, mature flower usually contains less than one percent CBG. It is rare, it is expensive to isolate, and for years that scarcity kept it out of the conversation. Extraction and breeding have caught up, and now CBG can stand on its own.

CBG is non-intoxicating. It will not get you high. What makes it interesting is how it works in the body, which is different enough from CBD to matter.

What the Research Actually Shows

CBG interacts with the endocannabinoid system (ECS), the network of receptors that helps regulate inflammation, mood, appetite, and recovery. Unlike CBD, which mostly works indirectly, CBG binds more directly to the CB1 and CB2 receptors and also engages alpha-2 adrenergic receptors, the same family involved in focus and alertness. That receptor profile is part of why CBG is associated with a sharper, more awake feeling rather than a sedating one.

The inflammation story is the most developed. A 2025 review in Frontiers in Pharmacology catalogued cannabigerol's antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity across the cardiovascular system, noting its ability to dampen inflammatory signaling in preclinical models. Broader reviews of the cannabinoid describe consistent suppression of inflammatory cytokines, the same chemical messengers that flare after a hard training block and slow you down the next day.

The honest caveat: most CBG research today is preclinical, meaning laboratory and animal studies rather than large human trials. The signal is promising and consistent, but the field is young. Anyone selling CBG as a cure is getting ahead of the evidence. What the data supports right now is a credible mechanism for lower inflammation and improved focus, which is exactly what an athlete wants from a daytime cannabinoid.

Why Focus Is the Story Athletes Care About

Caffeine works. It also overshoots. The jitter, the 3 p.m. crash, the second cup that turns a good warmup into a racing heart at the start line. Most active people are not looking for more stimulation. They are looking for cleaner stimulation, the kind that sharpens attention without hijacking it.

This is where CBG earns its place. Stacked with a moderate dose of natural caffeine, CBG appears to smooth the experience, supporting alertness while the ECS engagement keeps the edge off. It is less "floor it" and more "find the right gear." For a lifter dialing in a heavy set, a runner settling into tempo pace, or anyone who just needs to be present for a hard hour, that distinction is everything.

It also fits the larger truth OFFFIELD keeps coming back to. The Runner's High is not an endorphin myth, it is an endocannabinoid event. Your best sessions are already an ECS phenomenon. Supporting that system with the right exogenous cannabinoids is not a hack, it is working with the body's own chemistry instead of against it.

CBG in the OFFFIELD Stack

This is why CBG is not a footnote in our formulas, it is a load-bearing ingredient. Our High Performance Energy Gummies pair 10mg of CBG with 40mg CBD, a low 3mg of THC, and 10mg of natural caffeine from yerba mate. The CBG and caffeine handle focus and drive, the CBD supports recovery and keeps inflammation in check, and the trace THC adds the enjoyment that makes you actually want to lace up again.

Prefer to skip THC entirely? The Enhanced Energy Gummies are THC-free and build the same idea around 50mg CBD, 8mg CBG, and 15mg natural caffeine. Same philosophy, different dial setting. Either way, CBG is doing quiet, unglamorous work in the background, which is fitting for the molecule that builds everything else.

CBG and CBD Are Not Rivals

It is tempting to frame CBG as the new thing replacing CBD. That misses the point. They are teammates. CBD is the broad, calming, recovery-leaning cannabinoid. CBG is the focused, alert, inflammation-targeting one. Together they cover more of the day than either does alone, which is why thoughtful formulas use both rather than picking a side.

The mother cannabinoid spent years building the rest of the family and getting none of the credit. In 2026 it is finally getting its due, not because of hype, but because the way it works lines up neatly with what active people actually need: focus that does not fray, and recovery that keeps showing up.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is CBG?
CBG, or cannabigerol, is a non-intoxicating cannabinoid known as the "mother cannabinoid" because the plant produces it first and then converts it into CBD, THC, and others. It is associated with focus and anti-inflammatory effects.

Does CBG get you high?
No. CBG is non-intoxicating. It will not produce the high associated with THC.

What is the difference between CBG and CBD?
CBD tends to be calming and recovery-oriented and works mostly indirectly on the endocannabinoid system. CBG binds more directly to cannabinoid receptors and engages focus-related pathways, so it is often associated with alertness rather than sedation.

Is CBG good for working out?
Early research points to anti-inflammatory and focus-supporting properties, which is why CBG is showing up in pre-workout formulas alongside caffeine. Most studies are still preclinical, so treat it as a promising support, not a miracle.


Movement Made Happy. Train with focus, recover faster, and enjoy every session. Explore the High Performance Energy Gummies or dig into the mechanism on our Science page.

Related reading:

Legal disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. OFFFIELD products are hemp-derived and contain federally compliant levels of THC. CBG research is largely preclinical and ongoing. Consult a healthcare professional before use, especially if pregnant, nursing, or taking medication. Do not drive or operate machinery after use. Keep out of reach of children. Not for use by anyone under 21.

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Sober Curious Summer: Why Active People Are Trading Beer for Low-Dose THC

The post-run beer used to be sacred. You logged your miles, you earned your pint, and the patio session afterward was half the reason you showed up. But hang around a run club meetup this summer and you'll notice the ritual has changed: precision-dosed gummies passed around like orange slices at halftime, and a lot fewer cans of anything.

This is the sober curious movement hitting its stride. Low-dose hemp products are now one of the fastest-growing corners of the cannabis market. According to BDSA consumer data, 42% of edible consumers prefer 10mg of THC or less per occasion, with 2.5mg to 5mg the most common choice. The people driving this shift are not stoners. They are the ones setting PRs.

Alcohol Charges Interest on Every Workout

Here's the uncomfortable math the fitness world has started doing out loud. Alcohol is not just empty calories. It actively works against the training you just did.

A frequently cited study in PLOS ONE found that alcohol consumed after exercise reduced muscle protein synthesis rates, even when athletes ate protein alongside it. Translation: the beer after your lift partially undoes the lift.

Then there's sleep. Alcohol fragments REM sleep and suppresses the deep stages where physical recovery actually happens. You fall asleep faster but recover worse. Stack three or four drinking nights a week on top of a training plan and you are essentially running with a parachute.

The sober curious crowd did not need a lecture about any of this. They just noticed they felt better, trained harder, and stopped losing Saturdays to hangovers. Harvard Health's comparison of cannabis and alcohol captures the core appeal: a social buzz without the dehydration, the calories, or the next-day tax.

Low-Dose THC Works With Your Biology, Not Against It

This is where the science gets interesting. Alcohol is a blunt instrument that depresses your central nervous system. Cannabinoids interact with something your body already built for movement: the endocannabinoid system (ECS).

The ECS is the network of receptors and signaling molecules responsible for the Runner's High. Research over the past decade has shown that endocannabinoids like anandamide, not endorphins, are the primary drivers of that post-exercise euphoria. Exercise raises your endocannabinoid levels naturally. Low-dose exogenous cannabinoids like THC, CBD, and CBG engage that same system.

A landmark University of Colorado Boulder study published in Sports Medicine found that runners who used cannabis before exercise reported greater enjoyment and a stronger runner's high during their workouts, without perceiving the effort as harder. The participants were not getting blasted before a 5K. They were using modest doses to make movement feel better.

That's the distinction the sober curious movement understands intuitively. At 2.5mg to 5mg, THC is social lubrication and mood elevation. At 50mg, it's a couch. Dose is everything, which is why the low-dose format is winning.

The Patio Test: What Social Fitness Looks Like in 2026

Run clubs have become the new dating apps. Pickleball leagues are booked out weeks in advance. Group fitness is the social architecture of this decade, and it created a problem alcohol could never solve: nobody wants to feel like garbage at tomorrow's session.

So the post-activity ritual evolved. Fox Business reported this month that low-dose THC has become the buzz of the summer, driven largely by people cutting back on alcohol without going fully sober. And a gummy fits the moment better than any can ever did: it travels in a running vest, it doesn't need a cooler, and it says you're still here for the hang.

A 3mg gummy passes the patio test. You're present, you're elevated, you're laughing at the group chat recap. And at 6 a.m. when your training plan says tempo run, you're actually at the tempo run.

Precision Dosing Is the Whole Point

The lesson of the low-dose revolution is that cannabinoids reward precision. This is exactly the philosophy behind OFFFIELD's High Performance Energy Gummies: 3mg THC, 10mg CBG, 40mg CBD, and 10mg of natural caffeine from yerba mate. Enough to make movement feel happy. Never enough to take you out of it.

And for the recovery side of the ledger, where alcohol does its worst damage, High Performance Sleep Gummies pair 2mg THC with CBD, CBN, magnesium glycinate, and chamomile to support the deep sleep alcohol steals.

If you want to go deeper on how cannabinoids interact with the ECS, our science page breaks down the full mechanism.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does sober curious mean?

Sober curious describes people who deliberately reduce or question their alcohol consumption without identifying as fully sober. Many replace some or all drinking occasions with alternatives like low-dose THC gummies and other hemp-derived products.

Is low-dose THC better than alcohol for athletes?

Alcohol measurably impairs muscle protein synthesis and sleep quality, both critical for recovery. Low-dose THC engages the endocannabinoid system, which research links to exercise enjoyment and mood elevation, without the hangover or recovery cost. Individual responses vary, and neither belongs in your system during competition under some sports policies.

How much THC is a low dose?

Most industry data puts the social sweet spot at 2.5mg to 5mg. OFFFIELD's Energy Gummies contain 3mg per serving, designed for presence and elevation rather than impairment.

Will a 3mg THC gummy get me high?

At 3mg, most people experience mild mood elevation and relaxation rather than a strong high. As our tagline puts it: Run High, Not Stoned.

Movement Made Happy, Hangover Not Included

The sober curious summer is not about restriction. It's about the realization that feeling good tonight and feeling good tomorrow were never supposed to be a trade-off. Your body built an entire system for enjoying movement. Work with it.

Ready to upgrade the post-run ritual? Grab High Performance Energy Gummies for the session and Sleep Gummies for the recovery, and explore more on the OFFFIELD Journal.

These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. OFFFIELD products are derived from hemp and contain less than 0.3% Delta-9 THC in compliance with the 2018 Farm Bill. Must be 21 or older to purchase. Do not use before driving or operating machinery. Consult your physician before use, especially if subject to athletic drug testing.

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Why Elite Athletes Use CBD for Sleep and Recovery

Ask a pro athlete what separates a good season from a great one, and you'll hear less about training and more about what happens between sessions. Sleep is the only performance enhancer that's legal in every league, every country, every sport. And according to a new peer-reviewed study, elite athletes have quietly found a tool to get more of it.

Researchers publishing in Frontiers in Nutrition surveyed elite-level Canadian athletes — competitors on Olympic and Paralympic pathways, the most drug-tested humans on the planet. 38% reported having used CBD. Among those users, the numbers tell a clear story: 93% agreed CBD improved their sleep, 90% said it improved relaxation, and 77% reported reduced pain from training.

These aren't weekend warriors chasing a trend. These are athletes whose careers depend on what their bodies can do tomorrow morning.

The Most Tested Athletes in the World Are Choosing Cannabinoids

Context makes this study remarkable. Elite athletes operate under the World Anti-Doping Agency's microscope, where a single contaminated supplement can erase a career. CBD is the only cannabinoid explicitly removed from WADA's prohibited list — and even so, athletes in the study cited anti-doping concerns as the top reason for caution.

They're using it anyway. Why? Because the recovery math works. The study found 55% of athlete users took CBD in the evening before bed — not before training, not during competition. They're not chasing a high. They're chasing deep sleep, the window where muscle repair, memory consolidation, and hormonal recovery actually happen.

This mirrors earlier findings in professional rugby, where Kasper and colleagues found players used CBD primarily for sleep and recovery, and a growing chorus of researchers arguing in outlets like Scientific American that cannabis prohibition in sport never made scientific sense to begin with.

Your Endocannabinoid System Runs the Recovery Department

Here's the mechanism, because the mechanism matters.

The endocannabinoid system (ECS) is your body's master regulator — a network of receptors (CB1 and CB2) and signaling molecules that governs sleep cycles, inflammation, pain perception, and stress response. It's the same system responsible for the Runner's High. Not endorphins. Endorphins are too large to cross the blood-brain barrier; anandamide, your body's native cannabinoid, is not.

When you train hard, your ECS works overtime. Exercise spikes circulating endocannabinoids, which helps explain the post-workout calm — but intense training blocks, travel, and competition stress can outpace what your body produces on its own. That's where phytocannabinoids come in:

  • CBD interacts with the ECS indirectly, supporting anandamide levels and modulating inflammation — the biological noise that keeps a sore body from settling into deep sleep.
  • CBN (cannabinol) is the sleep specialist. Recent randomized controlled research suggests CBN reduces sleep latency — the time it takes to fall asleep — and reduces nighttime awakenings, without the grogginess of conventional sedatives.
  • THC in precise microdoses (1–2mg) can deepen the early sleep phases where physical restoration concentrates.

Together they create what researchers call the entourage effect: cannabinoids working synergistically, the way the plant evolved them to.

The Dosing Problem Nobody Talks About

Buried in the Frontiers in Nutrition data is the study's most actionable finding. Among elite athletes using CBD, 63% consumed less than 50mg per dose, 27% didn't know their dose at all, and 73% couldn't recall the brand they used. Median confidence in achieving optimal dosing: 35%.

Read that again. The most data-driven athletes alive — people who weigh their food and track their heart rate variability — are guessing at their cannabinoids.

This is the unglamorous frontier of cannabis wellness: not whether cannabinoids work, but whether you know what you're taking. Gas station gummies with mystery doses aren't a recovery protocol. Precision is.

That's the entire premise behind OFFFIELD's High Performance Sleep Gummies: exactly 2mg THC, 20mg CBD, and 20mg CBN per gummy, alongside magnesium glycinate, chamomile, L-theanine, and lavender. A known dose, every night, so your recovery is a system — not a gamble. (The full mechanism breakdown lives on our science page.)

Sleep Is Where Champions Are Made

There's a cultural shift inside this study, too. A generation ago, athletes hid cannabis use behind closed doors while leagues handed out suspensions. In 2026, the WNBA has removed cannabis from its banned list, the NBA and NCAA already have, and elite Olympians are telling researchers — on the record — that cannabinoids help them sleep, relax, and recover.

Notably, athletes in the study disagreed that CBD improved their physical performance or competitiveness directly. They're not looking for a shortcut. They're looking for better recovery, which is to say: they understand that adaptation happens at rest. You don't get stronger during the workout. You get stronger during the sleep that follows it.

The stigma said cannabis makes you lazy. The data says athletes use it to work harder.

Recover Like It's Your Job

Movement made happy includes the part where you stop moving. If the most tested athletes in the world are building cannabinoids into their sleep routine, the question isn't whether it's legitimate — it's whether you're doing it with precision.

Train hard. Sleep deep. Know your dose.

Explore High Performance Sleep Gummies →
Dig into the science of the ECS →
Fuel the other side of the cycle with Energy Gummies →

FAQ

Do cannabis gummies help athletes sleep?

Survey research on elite athletes shows 93% of CBD users report improved sleep. CBN and low-dose THC may further reduce sleep latency and nighttime awakenings.

Is CBD banned for athletes?

No. CBD was removed from WADA's prohibited list in 2018. THC remains restricted in-competition above a 150 ng/mL urinary threshold, which is why precise, low-dose products matter.

What is the endocannabinoid system?

The ECS is a network of receptors and signaling molecules that regulates sleep, inflammation, pain, mood, and stress — and it's the system behind the Runner's High.


These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. OFFFIELD products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Hemp-derived products containing THC may cause impairment; do not drive or operate machinery after use. Must be 21+. Consult your physician before use, especially if you are subject to drug testing, pregnant, nursing, or taking medication. Athletes subject to anti-doping rules should verify product compliance with their governing body.

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