26 - Megan Mbengue: Dancer to Nurse to Plant Medicine. cover art

26 - Megan Mbengue: Dancer to Nurse to Plant Medicine.

26 - Megan Mbengue: Dancer to Nurse to Plant Medicine.

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In this conversation, nurse and educator Megan Mbengue walks us through her path from hospital wards to cannabinoid care.

We break down the endocannabinoid system in plain language, why CBG is her daytime go-to for anxiety and focus, and how to use THC without wrecking your nervous system.

We dig into cannabis hyperemesis syndrome (CHS), the problems with high-THC vapes, why flower still matters, and what her team is seeing in a suppository study for period pain. We also touch on microdosing psychedelics, integration, and doing the root-cause work so you actually need less over time.

You’ll Learn:

  • What the endocannabinoid system does — in human words
  • Why CBG can calm the fight-or-flight response without sedation
  • How hormone shifts in peri/menopause can change your THC sensitivity
  • The early signs of CHS and why vapes fast-track trouble
  • When to choose flower, patches, teas, or suppositories
  • A nurse’s harm-reduction approach to anxiety, sleep, and pain
  • Where microdosing can bridge the gap when cannabis isn’t enough

Highlights:

  • Dancer to nurse to plant medicine: the career pivot that started in hospice
  • The seizure case that changed everything
  • CBG vs CBD: different receptors, different outcomes
  • “Start low, go slow” especially for women in peri/menopause
  • CHS red flags: morning nausea, abdominal pain, alcohol intolerance
  • Vapes vs flower: why potency and frequency matter
  • Suppositories for pelvic pain and periods: real-world outcomes women report
  • Microdosing + integration: working on the root, not just the symptom

Practical Takeaways:

  • Anxiety (daytime): try whole-plant CBG; keep THC low and targeted at night for sleep
  • New or returning users: start with flower or gentle oral routes; avoid high-THC distillate vapes
  • Pelvic or period pain: consider vaginal or rectal suppositories many women report reduced cramps, headaches, and nausea
  • Morning nausea with daily use: pause and assess for CHS signs; seek support early
  • Cycle tracking: you may need less THC mid-cycle and a different method in the late luteal phase

Resources Mentioned

  • Society of Cannabis Clinicians https://www.cannabisclinicians.org/
  • EntheaCare — https://entheacare.com
  • OnTracka —https://www.ontracka.com/

Connect with Megan

  • Instagram/Threads: @enthea.care

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Support the show

Connect with Kyla de Clifford
Instagram: @cannacuriousaus
TikTok: @cannacuriousau
YouTube: @cannacurious

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Disclaimer:
We are not doctors, and this is not medical advice. Everything shared here is based on our personal lived experiences and the stories of others. Always speak with a qualified healthcare professional before making any changes to your health or wellness routine.

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