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UK: 'Please, don't let me be sick'

Deborah Ross

The Independent

Thursday 01 May 2003

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Last night, I had my first spliff/ joint/reefer/whatever. You may
reasonably wonder how I've got to my advanced age without ever having even
tried grass/weed/ hash/blow/dope/pot/skunk/ganja/puff... Well, I've always
deliberately steered clear. I'm a hopelessly addictive person. Introduce me
to something I like (alcohol, fags, absurdly exorbitant skin creams, the
Lakeland catalogue) and I'll run with it all the way. I've always sort of
known that if I ever got into drugs - any kind of drugs - I'd run with
them, too, and pretty soon I'd be that old bag lady who sits in the park
with the mad Alsatian and dribble on her whiskery chin. The line between me
and that woman, I have always suspected, is very, very thin.

Still, I kind of want to have a go, and I have a friend known to be fond of
dope, so I invite him round with the sole purpose of allowing him to take
my virginity, so to speak. He arrives with his girlfriend and "some good,
clean Lebanese hashish". Smashing, I say, as if I know what he is talking
about. I'm guessing, though, that good, clean Lebanese hashish is better
than bad, dirty Lebanese hashish.

My friend rolls the joint while we watch I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of
Here!. (Rubbish telly programmes are not habit-forming. I should know -
I've been watching them for years.) We try to recall the names of Toyah's
hits. We can't. The joint is ready. I go first because this is all about
me, remember. I take a big puff. Ouch! It really hits the back of your
throat, doesn't it? I take two more big puffs. Ouch, ouch! I can't feel any
effects as of yet, so I take three or four more. Ouch! Ouch! Ouch! Ouch!
Bloody hell, I'm thinking, give me the non-throat-abusing Lakeland
catalogue any day.

Then the sensation kicks in, and I mean really kicks in, man. I go all sort
of fizzy round the edges. My limbs feel funny, as if the joints have been
replaced by water. I say I still can't think of a Toyah song but didn't she
star in Derek Jameson's The Tempest? I'm aware that my friend's girlfriend
is laughing, and I know I've said something wrong, but can't work out what
it is. On the telly, I think I can see someone having live maggots put down
their pants. I then, for some reason, launch into a long and, I imagine,
excessively tedious tirade against Lesley Garrett, which is kind of weird,
because Lesley Garrett is not someone I've ever spent a lot of time
thinking about. I didn't even know I had any feelings one way or the other
about Lesley Garrett. "She's just too pleased with herself by half," I can
hear myself saying. I actually feel quite disturbed by this, as I know I'm
talking complete rubbish but cannot stop. I then realise I need the loo,
quite desperately, which is a problem because all my limbs have now turned
to air, to nothing, maybe even to nothingness itself. I am thinking:

1) Can I get up?

2) If I get up, will I be able to stay up?

3) Will I be able to walk?

4) If so, how far?

5) Didn't Toyah have a hit with the word "free" in it somewhere?

I manage to get to the loo, via a combination of rocking, teetering,
holding on to things and sitting down on every other stair. The world is
swimming. I feel I have been out of the room for hours, but by the time I
return, the ad break is just finishing, so I know it can have been only a
minute or two. I'm now getting strange rushes: prickly, hot waves that
start at my feet and move quickly upward. The same rushes you get just
before you faint. The same rushes you get just before you are about to be
sick. Oh, please, I am thinking, don't let me be sick, here, in front of my
friend and his girlfriend. I guess I am now well stoned. Man.

Back on the telly, someone is walking across a high bridge and not liking
it. Toyah looks rubbish without her make-up. At some point, my friend and
his girlfriend go. I suspect that they let themselves out. Then my partner,
who has a knee injury and is on crutches, and has had a few puffs "because
it never affects me", gets up from his chair and falls flat on his face.
The crutches fly. This shouldn't be funny, but it is, wildly. I laugh until
the tears run down my face. I laugh until I have tummy ache. I laugh until
my face hurts. The laughter banishes the nausea, thank God. And then,
somehow, I get to bed, where I sleep very well and dream of neon daffodils.

And this morning? No hangover as such; just a very dry mouth that tastes as
if someone in extremely muddy boots has stamped through it, and a raging
thirst.

Overall, I think I generally quite liked the experience. It's a bit like
getting drunk, only without any of the calories. And Lesley Garrett is a
little too pleased with herself. Oh, hell. Am I a grass fiend now? Isn't
dope simply a crutch for people who cannot cope with reality? On the other
hand, though, maybe reality is simply a crutch for those who cannot cope
with dope.That's my line, and I'm sticking to it.

 

 

 

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