Reword and rewrite the following article in HTML, use a hip journalistic writing style and make the heading statements in H3 or bold font where necessary: There’s a moment, somewhere past the hour mark, when Trinidad James leans back and drops it without drama: “I’m not fighting for my life. I’m fighting for my flow state.” It’s quiet, almost offhand, but it lands like someone who has spent years stripping away noise until only the essentials remain.

In the third episode of the High Times Podcast, Josh Kesselman sits across from the Trinidadian-American artist, songwriter and creative architect for a long, open conversation about smoke, discipline, vulnerability, work, and the strange ways people learn to live with themselves.

Watch the full podcast here.

A Conversation That Moves

James shows up the way he sounds on his best records: present, grounded, funny, observant. Josh opens the door and, instead of a Q&A, the episode settles into something slower and more lived-in, like two old friends comparing notes in the middle of the smoke.

Early on, they slide into the emotional weather report of the times: anger, frustration, this feeling that everything is at a boil. James cuts through it: “Anger is really just aggravation,” he says. “If you’re not going to do nothing, you’re not fed up.” It’s a small line with big consequences, especially in a world where everyone feels pushed to pick a side and start swinging.

Josh responds with a family memory instead of theory. He talks about his grandfather, shot three times fighting Nazis, once in the head, and how he came home without hate, even going back after the war to visit the people who had once been “the enemy.” Then he quotes his grandmother: “There are no good people. There are no bad people. There’s just people.” It doesn’t need unpacking. It just sits there, like a joint in the ashtray, changing the air in the room.

Cannabis, Enhancement And The Limits We Imagine

Of course, they talk about weed. But not as a brand deck or a flex; more like a tool that can help or hurt depending on how you hold it. James is clear: “Do not be dependent on cannabis… let it enhance your life experience. I don’t believe in dependency. I believe in enhancement.”

From there, the theme settles in: the difference between using something to run away and using it to come back — to yourself, to your work, to the people around you. James talks about taking tolerance breaks just to feel like his “raw kid” self again for a day or two, and how that version of him still designs whole collections and albums in one inspired stretch.

Josh counters with pandemic flashbacks, when the whole world was locked inside and he turned his feeds into rolling school. “You’re running out of tips?” he says, remembering those days. “Let me show you how to an index card and fold it the right way… If you fold it the wrong way, it’ll square up. No, you got to go with the fibers. You can see them. Hold on to the light, maybe you can see the fibers.”

At first, it sounds like a stoner how-to. Then  

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