De Tweede Kamer which
translates as the Second Chamber is officially called the House of
Representatives and is the lower house of the States General, the
providers of law in the Netherlands. The higher house is the Senate
which is called the Eerste Kamer (First Chamber) which controls that
new laws are in agreement with other laws and European regulations.
These two Chambers form The States General and are situated in The
Hague.
The Tweede Kamer
consists of one hundred and fifty seats which are filled by national
elections run on a proportional representation basis. The
seventy-five seats of the Senate are decided by the members of the
twelve Provincial States and the three Carribean States of the Dutch
Antilles.
The Tweede Kamer is
also a cannabis coffee shop situated in Heisteeg in the middle of
Amsterdam near Dam Square and the Singelgracht. I was on holiday and
found myself standing outside this coffeeshop: I really did fancy
going in and try some hash as this was so different to what I was
used to because of living in England with it's restrictive laws on
cannabis use. I couldn't smoke cigarettes. When I was a young
teenager I tried to smoke to show off and look interesting to my
friends, but when I did, I ended up choking, spluttering with a red
face and looking ridiculous, so smoking cannabis was out of the
question. So what to do? I wanted to be daring.
I became very
courageous and walked through the door to the counter and explained
my problem to the very nice, tall and blonde man standing behind the
counter. He looked puzzled for a fraction of a second at me and then
invited me to take a seat at the counter. He then placed a plain
white ceramic tile in front of me and from a tin on a shelf behind
the counter took out a small lump of something and weighed it. He
nodded when he saw the reading on the scales. He then put the lump of
something on the tile in front of me. It looked like camel dung; it
was greeny brown, moist, crumbly and with a very fresh vegetable
smell. He told me to take out my credit card (how much is this going
to cost me? I thought to myself), then he used the card to cut into
the lump, making very small pieces on the tile. He gave me the card
so I could carry on doing it myself, and told me to break it up into
almost a powder.
I carried on for about
ten minutes while he toked on his joint and went off to do other
things. He came back, nodded in satisfaction at the little pile I had
made of the camel dung and got a box of ready made chocolate drink
out of his his fridge with the words “Chocomel” all over it. He
poured the brown contents into a mug and heated it from the coffee
machine. He sprinkled the camel dung dust into the brown drink and
stirred it vigorously and told me to sip it slowly. It tasted of
chocolate with a green aroma. While I did this he took a few more
tokes from his joint and explained that he didn't like to ingest hash
as he then had no control over it, when smoking he could take a few
puffs and then stop when he got a little high. When eating the stuff
it was too easy to take a lot all in one go and it went down into the
belly and there was no going back. I nodded in agreement: I had no
idea of what I was doing. He charged me seven euros.
I took the mug of
chocolate and sat at a side table where a woman was sitting.
“Do you mind me
sitting here?”
“ No not all your
company would be great!”
She was Dutch and could
speak English perfectly with a charming accent and it wasn't as I
expected. She had a huge fat trumpet on the go. Her voice was a
little deep and she was quite tall and thin and then I realised that
she may have changed gender. She looked at my chocolate, smelt it
and exclaimed in an loud and amazed voice Hot Chocolate! How
decadent, divine and bohemian! How wicked! We hit it off immediately.
We shared life stories and declared life long love for each other and
she was absolutely amazing. It hadn't been easy for her, she had been
through so much to declare her true gender to the world and I was
very impressed. She got to learn all about my troubles and why I had
ended up on holiday and alone in Amsterdam.
By now the hash was
starting to hit me. My mouth became very dry and I started to float.
My thoughts became ethereal and slow. I wondered about the nature
of the Universe and why did life exist, and where was I going and why
I was going there. My eyes saw the people outside gliding slowly
along the cobblestones and my companion was a beautiful extension of
my own thoughts. She smiled at me and our conversation became slow
and deep. I looked out at the pavement, wondering who all these
people were and why they were all these people and not some other
people, and where they were going and why there were going there
anyway and would they ever get back? I could hear voices coming from
distance spaces echoing in the room, flying round it and leaving from
where they entered and I couldn't hear what they were saying. The
laughter was angelic and came from heaven.
We spent a pleasant
hour together slowing down and taking stock of everything, of trying
to find our own direction and I became very spaced out; and very
hungry. I said I was hungry and she said she knew what to do. We got
up and she lead me out of the bar, along the pavements and through
some alleys. It was like walking on pink marshmallow, walking very
slowly almost floating on rosebuds, on feather quilts, and seeing all
the people hanging in stasis on invisible stilts.
She lead me to a
herring stall, stood me against a wall and handed me a dish
containing a roll with slices of raw herring with chopped up mild
raw onion, and it tasted delicious. It was the best food in the
world. I was ravenously hungry so I had another helping. I could
have eaten it all afternoon. Then I got worried about how I was
going to float back to my rented room. I knew where the tram stop was
and I had a weekly tram pass, but it's no joke walking over Dam
Square and getting up the steps of the tram when you are high. She
was so good. I had to get Tram Number Four to Fredericksplein and
then walk back to Utrechtsestraat and turn off at Utrechtsedwarstraat
and she went with me all the way to make sure I got safely back to my
room. She was my angel and I didn't even know her name. I still
wonder who she was and if I would recognise her again.
It wouldn't be the same without the onions.
It wouldn't be the same without the onions.

Quite a fascinating story Sarah! Maybe someday you'll come across her again huh?
ReplyDeleteOh thanks David! I love it when people read my stuff and comment, makes me feel warm inside! Perhaps one day we will meet again.Meet her for some nieuwe haring met uitjes gesneden.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading your story. It took me right back to Amsterdam, one of my favourite cities, although I've never been in one of their "coffeeshops." Dank u! (I took an introductory Dutch course for fun in the 80s.)
ReplyDeleteDank U wel Barbara! I thank you very much for taking the time to read this. I am so glad that you enjoyed it.
ReplyDelete