
If you run a wellness brand, dispensary, or health blog, the question "how long does a 10mg edible stay in your system" never really goes away. Customers ask it in DMs, Reddit is full of threads comparing saliva, blood, urine and hair tests, and regulations change the language you must use. The Triangle Hemp Wellness guide breaks down how edibles are metabolized, how 11-hydroxy THC behaves, and why factors like dose, tolerance and metabolism matter across those 24-hour, 1–3 day, 30-day and rare 90-day windows.
Manually re-reading Reddit and medical articles before every campaign, email or FAQ update is a tax on your team’s focus. This is where delegating to an AI agent becomes powerful: you can let an autonomous computer agent continuously scan Reddit, re-check trusted guides, and keep a structured, compliant knowledge base updated. Instead of hunting for the latest post or quote, your marketers pull ready-made, summarized insights on demand, while the agent quietly does the late-night research rounds for you.
You run growth for a wellness brand. Every week, someone on your team has to answer a familiar question: "How long does a 10mg edible stay in your system?" They trawl Reddit, reopen the Triangle Hemp Wellness guide, paste quotes into a doc, and rewrite them for email, blog, and social posts.
That research loop is perfect for automation. Here is how to handle it manually, with no-code tools, and finally at scale with an AI agent.
Method 1: Read and synthesize from trusted guides
Method 2: Mine Reddit for real-world context
For help with search, see Reddit support: https://support.reddithelp.com/hc/en-us/articles/205173165-Searching-on-Reddit
Method 3: Build a reusable FAQ draft
Method 4: Maintain a simple update log
Method 5: Train your team on tone and boundaries
Once the basics are in place, you can use no-code tools to keep sources and drafts flowing with far less manual effort.
Method 6: Monitor Reddit with automation tools
Method 7: Centralize reading lists and drafts
Method 8: Light AI-assisted drafting (without full agents)
Manual and no-code flows still depend on you opening tabs and clicking through interfaces. A computer-use AI agent like Simular Pro can instead operate your browser and desktop the way a human assistant would.
Method 9: Autonomous research sweeps
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Method 10: Drafting and refreshing multi-channel content at scale
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Method 11: Knowledge-base maintenance loop
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Used together, these approaches let you move from ad-hoc Googling to a reliable, auditable pipeline where a computer-use AI agent handles the repetitive research and drafting, and your humans focus on judgment, ethics, and brand voice.
Start by being clear about your goal: you are researching how people talk about 10mg edibles and detection windows, not looking for definitive medical rules. On Reddit, use targeted searches such as "10mg edible how long in system" and filter results by “Top” and by recent timeframes (past year) so you see posts with both quality and recency. Open only threads from relevant subreddits and skim for well-upvoted, thoughtful comments rather than one-line anecdotes. As you read, separate three buckets in your notes: 1) what people report about onset and duration of effects, 2) what they report about different tests (saliva, blood, urine, hair), and 3) disclaimers or reminders that everyone metabolizes THC differently. Never copy a single comment as truth; instead, look for repeated patterns across many posts. Finally, cross-check anything you plan to publish against more structured guides (like Triangle Hemp Wellness) and, where necessary, against medical or legal professionals before sharing it with customers.
Think like an editor. After you have collected a handful of solid Reddit threads and at least one structured article on 10mg edibles and detection windows, pull everything into a single research doc. First, outline the questions your audience actually asks: how long until I feel it, how long until it is gone, what affects detection, and what types of tests exist. Under each question, paste short bullet points from both formal guides and aggregated Reddit experiences, clearly marking which is which. Next, draft an answer that starts high level (for example, explaining metabolism and the 30–90 minute onset and 2–4 hour peak) and then introduces detection ranges as ranges, not promises. Weave Reddit insights in as color: “Many Reddit users report …” rather than “Reddit says you will…”. Add strong disclaimers that this is educational, varies by individual physiology, and is not medical or legal advice. Store this as a master FAQ that you can adapt by channel, and schedule periodic reviews so it stays aligned with current science and policy.
Outdated content is a real risk when you publish around sensitive topics like cannabis and drug testing. Start by creating a simple source registry that lists which guides, studies, and authority sites you trust for detection windows and how edibles work. For each, record the URL, publication date, and when you last reviewed it. Then, tie this registry to your content: every FAQ, blog, and email template on 10mg edibles should reference which sources it relies on. Operationally, set a recurring reminder—monthly or quarterly—to re-open those sources and check for updates. If you are not yet using automation, this can be a task in your project tool with a short checklist: reread primary guide, reread top Reddit threads, update notes, adjust copy. If you have many SKUs or clients, this is where AI agents shine: a Simular-based workflow can re-open your source list, compare current text, flag differences, and draft suggested edits, leaving your team to just approve or decline changes.
You can remove a lot of manual copy-paste by using no-code automation. Start with a tool like Zapier or Make and set Reddit as your trigger app. Configure a trigger for new posts or new comments that match keywords such as "10mg edible", "gummy", and "drug test" in specific subreddits. Your action step should send the post title, URL, author, and score to a central destination: a Google Sheet, Airtable base, or Notion database. Add fields like "Reviewed" and "Use in content?" so your team can triage later. Over time, this becomes a curated inbox of potentially useful conversations. Combine this with another automation that creates review tasks once a week, ensuring someone reads and categorizes the top new items. When you are ready for deeper automation, you can hand this stream to an AI agent, which logs into Reddit via a browser, skims the content, and pulls structured summaries into your knowledge base for human approval.
An AI computer agent like Simular Pro can go beyond text generation and actually operate your browser and desktop, which is ideal when you need to keep a recurring FAQ updated across many channels. First, you define the workflow once: open your browser, navigate to your list of trusted sources (for example, the Triangle Hemp Wellness article), check for changes in sections about metabolism and detection windows, then open Reddit and run a set of saved searches. The agent copies key snippets into a draft research doc. Next, it opens your FAQ in your CMS or help center, compares the current copy to the latest research, and highlights where language might be stale or ambiguous. It can draft suggested revisions, add or update disclaimers, and save everything as a pending change. Because Simular logs every action in a transparent trace, your team can see exactly which sources were used and quickly approve, tweak, or roll back. This lets you manage many brands or regions while the agent quietly handles the repetitive, error-prone work.