Chasing Tulips, Finding Stillness in Amsterdam

The last time I came to Amsterdam, I arrived with a different kind of hunger. It was a decade ago, in another version of my life, when cities were measured by their nightlife and memories were stitched together in the blur between bars and laughter and long, unplanned nights. Amsterdam then was loud and electric, a place of fleeting connections and neon reflections in the canals.
This time, I arrive differently.

It is Good Friday when I leave London, the morning still holding that early spring chill that lingers just before the sun decides what kind of day it will become. At St Pancras, everything feels purposeful but unhurried. People move with quiet intention, as if aware that the long weekend is not just a break, but a pause. The Eurostar hums forward, slipping out of London and into the countryside with a kind of grace that feels almost symbolic. There is something about train journeys that invites reflection. You are moving, yet still. In transit yet suspended. The fields outside blur into soft greens, interrupted occasionally by towns that appear and disappear before you can fully register them. A decade ago, I might have filled this journey with plans, messages, expectations. Now, I sit by the window and let the movement do the thinking for me.

By the time we arrive in Amsterdam, the light has changed. It is warmer, more generous. The station opens out into a city that feels instantly familiar, yet subtly altered, as though it has been waiting patiently for me to return with a different perspective. The city feels softer now, or perhaps I do. The canals still hold their patient reflections, the narrow houses lean in their familiar way, and bicycles glide past like whispers. But I am not rushing anymore. I walk instead of wander. I notice instead of consume. I sit at a small café in Dam Square with a coffee that tastes richer simply because I am paying attention. There are lilies and tulips on the table, unapologetically bright, as if announcing that spring here is not a season but a declaration.

The next morning, I take an Uber instead of navigating the trams and trains. Not out of haste, but out of ease. The car moves through the city, past canals that catch the sunlight in quiet flashes, past cyclists who seem to belong more naturally to the rhythm of Amsterdam than any visitor ever could. As we leave the centre, the city begins to loosen. Buildings give way to space. The roads stretch wider, the air feels different, and there is a quiet sense of anticipation that builds with every passing mile. It is not the anticipation of nightlife or novelty, but of something softer. Something slower.
And then, almost without warning, colour arrives. Keukenhof is not simply a garden. It is a carefully composed symphony of spring. The tulips may be its most famous voice, but they are not alone. Cherry blossoms hover like soft clouds above winding paths, their petals drifting quietly to the ground. Magnolias stand in gentle contrast, their blooms larger, more deliberate, unfolding like something ancient and patient.

The air itself feels different here, lightly perfumed, almost weightless. Every turn reveals a new combination of colour and texture. Tulips in impossible shades stretch across beds in quiet confidence. Deep reds, luminous yellows, soft violets, and blush pinks arranged in ways that feel both intentional and effortless. Some stand tall and open, reaching outward. Others remain slightly closed, as though still deciding how much of themselves to reveal.

I walk slowly, almost instinctively resisting the urge to capture everything. And still, I find myself capturing more than I intend. There is a stillness within the park that gently reshapes how you move. People speak more softly. Even the laughter feels lighter, as though absorbed by the landscape rather than echoing against it. I find myself drawn not just to the flowers, but to the spaces between them. A quiet bench beneath a cherry tree. A stretch of path dappled with sunlight and falling petals. A moment where nothing is required of me except presence. The tulips are fleeting, and perhaps that is what makes them so compelling. They do not bloom indefinitely. They arrive, they dazzle, and they disappear. There is no permanence here, only a brief and perfect expression of beauty.
Leaving the park, the surrounding fields extend the experience outward. Rows of colour stretch endlessly across the land, uninterrupted and bold. The landscape feels wider, less curated, but no less striking. A windmill turns slowly in the distance, steady and unassuming, grounding the scene in something older than the moment itself. The day softens as the sun begins to lower. Light warms, colours deepen, and the edges of everything blur into something gentler. It is a kind of beauty that does not ask to be held, only noticed. On the journey back to Amsterdam, I watch as the fields recede into memory. The city returns quietly, its canals catching the last of the light in soft reflections. I walk without direction, without urgency. The version of the city I once knew feels distant now, replaced by something quieter, something that asks less and offers more.

Later, I sit outside Bar Bellini, in the heart of Amsterdam's vibrant De Pijp district, letting the last of the spring sun rest on my skin. Around me, the city continues in its gentle rhythm. A market winds down. Tourists drift through unfamiliar streets. Trams pass with quiet determination. Nothing feels hurried, yet everything moves. A decade ago, I came to Amsterdam searching for experience. This time, I came searching for something I could not quite name. Somewhere between the train, the gardens, and the quiet unfolding of tulips under a spring sky, I found it. Not in the grandeur of the landscape, but in its gentleness. Not in the act of chasing, but in the willingness to pause. And in that pause, something shifted. Something that, unlike the tulips, might just last.

TRAVEL TIP
The easiest way to reach Keukenhof is by Uber or Bolt, which takes around 60 minutes from Amsterdam city centre and allows you to travel at your own pace.
Tickets can be purchased at the park, though booking online in advance is recommended, especially during peak season. The best time to visit is April, when the tulips are in full bloom and the gardens are at their most vibrant.












