On feeling whelmed...
When I was talking with someone recently about feeling 'over-whelmed', I had the sudden urge to look up what 'whelmed' means.
Definition of whelm
transitive verb1: to turn (something, such as a dish or vessel) upside down usually to cover something : cover or engulf completely with usually disastrous effect
2: to overcome in thought or feeling : OVERWHELM
whelmed with a rush of joy
— G. A. Wagnerintransitive verb
: to pass or go over something so as to bury or submerge it
Hmm... somehow I thought it might be more positive - like we all hope one day to ravel ourselves together, or to become hibited, or to have our spirits pressed. But no matter, it danced its way into one of the many lockdown poems I've been writing recently about what's going on right now. I'm going to share my practice on here more - there, if I say I'm going to, I'll have to do it. Enjoy!
Top hat and tails
Sarah Salway
When we ask each other what we miss most
the answers spin off like arabesques:
crowded pubs, hugs, a train to nowhere
essential, evenings in sold-out theatres
forgetting real life, planning holidays.
Then there are the second drink answers:
enough years to play with grudges, politicians
who aren’t out to kill us, a tomorrow
where we might finally make that difference,
but maybe the more interesting question
is what we will take with us into new normal:
having time to pick up a dictionary and look up
whelm – to be swept beneath by a wave. Over
under, we’re cheek to cheek now, swimming
into the future, backwards and in high heels.