You followed the protocol. You tried the products. It still isn't working — or it worked for weeks then stopped. That's not a you problem. That's a system problem.
I'll show you exactly what's broken in your protocol, build a personal Titration Map you can start tonight, and hand you a printable plan, a journal, and the infographics that turn it into a habit. Plus 7 days of direct follow-up.
Someone handed you a product with a strain name and a percentage. Maybe a leaflet. And then you were expected to figure out the rest on your own.
That is not a system. What you were given is one of the most pharmacologically complex substances on the planet — with no starting dose, no escalation schedule, no condition-to-product matching, and no one to call when something went wrong.
There are exactly three reasons medical cannabis fails. One of them — probably more than one — is why you're here.
Four questions. Pick the honest answer. You'll get a personalised read on which failure mode is yours — and what to do next.
This is not theoretical. Between 2008 and the early 2020s, the structured onboarding programs I built ran inside five of Israel's largest licensed cannabis operators — Tikun Olam, BOL Pharma, Bazelet Group, and IMC. The programs were eventually discontinued for internal operational reasons. The patient outcomes were not in dispute.
"Those programmes are no longer running inside the companies. That is why I am doing this directly — because the patients who need this guidance still exist, and the system still isn't providing it. You shouldn't have to wait for a corporation to prioritise your care."
— Gil Luxenbourg
With the patients I personally guide, the success rate is around 99%. By "success" I don't mean a clinical scale. I mean what the patient and I track together — the gifts the medicine gives back.
Three hours of straight sleep instead of waking every forty minutes from pain — that's a gift. A full meal eaten — gift. A family dinner at the table instead of a tray in bed — gift. Sitting with a grandchild long enough that the grandchild wants to come back — gift. The list is different for every patient, which is why the plan has to be too.
We build your roadmap together. We set your expectations together. We track the gifts together — and we keep adjusting the plan to collect as many of them as the medicine will allow.
That's the work. Managing your symptoms instead of being managed by them. Living the life you stopped expecting to have.

In 2004 I had Crohn's disease and nothing else had worked. I became the seventh patient in Israel to receive a medical cannabis license — the first to get one by direct application to the Ministry of Health, without a court order. The six before me had all required judicial intervention.
And then I did what nobody else was doing: I built the education system the medical world didn't have. I founded the Israel Medical Cannabis Association in 2005. I became the first MoH-licensed medical cannabis instructor in 2008. I designed Israel's first structured patient-education program — the one that moved the 50% drop-off point from 4 months to 34 months at scale. In 2012 I built the first nurses' training program. I've lectured doctors on cannabis therapeutics. I've helped shape medical-cannabis policy in three jurisdictions — Israel, the Czech Republic, and Spain (via Catalonia).
I am not a doctor. I never claimed to be. What I am is the patient who was pushed into building the patient-education system that patients, nurses, and doctors all ended up learning from — because no one else was doing it.
If you want to understand the protocol itself — how the WIZDOM system is structured, what it tracks, why it works — here is a longer walkthrough. Roughly seven minutes. Watch it if you are the kind of patient who wants to know the engine before you ride the car.
Take 60 seconds. Find out exactly which of the three failure modes is yours — and get a 2-page written self-assessment with one specific action you can take this week. Sent to your inbox in under 30 seconds.