QBST.

QBST.

At last. Sound a little horn that sounds like a bee playing a swing number in a little bee big band that sprays multicoloured pollen from the brass – the winter is over.

Bloody nora. What a long one. How long ago do bright young days of summer seem? The clocks going forward on Sunday morning has given the evenings a properly surreal sense of light and spring jollity, distinctly at odds with all we’ve become meteorologically accustomed to and with just about everything on the news.

Blossom in the garden? Fragrant fecundity on the air? Grass clippings on the garden path? Has the world gone mad?

Maybe. For in these times of upheaval and change and shifting social points of reference, I may be adding to the entropy of comfort.

Sunday morning I ran eleven kilometers in about an hour.

Me.

I know. Apologies for continuing to upset your understanding of the world.

Don’t feel too destablised. I plodded unathletically so you wouldn’t for a moment feel you couldn’t have done a more impressive job of it, had you seen me pass by. But, y’know – it’s further than I’ve ever run before without wising up and jogging off left into a café.

The Bournemouth Bay Run is next Sunday, and at least I now know what the distance will feel like. Of course, I bet I’m the sap who stays back with the two slow ones in solidarity for the team, while the others pee off for the glory. But still, I’m hardly doing this for glory, am I. My surest way to sporting glory is the one I’ve always instinctively adopted: don’t turn up in the first place. Lord, yes.

Still, the underlying nagging surreality of just about everything at the moment is there in the gorgeous weather too, it seems. For working here in the new studio with the windows and door open, birds twirpling and insects carousing and blooms swooning in the breeze, does all feel weirdly, oddly, disturbingly akin to working in the original shed – the one in my parents’ garden – more than twenty summers ago.

Which doesn’t feel much like having a job, it has to be said.

Sure, Typo has me busy with various honest bread & butter projects of graphic design and brand comms, while the wider creative To Do list includes some potentially groovy Momo-ey things ahead. So I am holding onto a sense of adult responsibility by confident fingernails, as always.

But… I dunno. The breeze isn’t filling the sails sufficiently at the moment, somehow. I recline at the tiller with a beer and squint up at the masthead as the wind arrow swings lazily against the blue canopy of sky sweeping overhead and it’s all very restoratively relaxing – but that drooping mainsail is a bit of a disappointment.

I think, in fact, it may turn out to be case of Quarter End Droop. Which there are sadly no mineral supplements you can take for.

What I mean is, that we have just three days left of the first quarter of 2011. Goodness knows why I now think in businessy fourths of the year, given that I work in the garden drawing boxes and playing the keyboard badly, but there we are. I am none-the-less psychologically at the end of a chapter this week. A pretty mentally full and, QED, tiring one.

And, as any professional athlete will tell you – and as I can now say from some experience – when a finishing line rounds into view you can basically start to give up.

Thing is, of course, there is much to be doing – Q2 is idly threatening to be a whole new tank of colourful goop to wade through, for which I must be prepped, trained and ready. Momo has gigs to prepare for in June, and sonic sessions are due to start on the great follow-up LP for Tempo next month – about which I am very excited, naturally. And along with all that hoo-hah goes branding development and video production ideas and band practice and costume hunting and… the whole bally shooting match, potentially. To say nothing of all kinds of other creative funny business to engage in while attempting to pay at least some of my bills with a semblance of dignity.

All of which really could turn 2011 into a slightly crazy year by the time the summer’s been shooed away by the next bleak midwinter. Man. I’m tired just writing that paragraph.

But from here in the spring garden, all that seems a long way off and not quite real. As I look up at those sails again, I am reminded of the depressing thought that the only way they will be filled is if I take a very deep breath myself…

Well, while this is a dispiriting thing when you’re only a quarter of the way into the course and you’re already knackered, I am reminded at least that not only is the sun out and the days longer, my aerobic fitness is improving all the time.

>breathes in sharply<

Whelm meant.

Whelm meant.

How whelmed are you?

You can see where I’m going with this. Are you over or under?

I for one currently feel suspended in a sort of twilight world weirdness, by being a little overwhelmed and underwhelmed at the same time. You’d think this might cancel out into a happy equilibrium of being comfortably whelmed. Well whelmed, if you like. But, ah, if only us human persons were simpler creatures.

Actually, give us a few simple things and I think we are simple creatures – a tickle behind the ear when we fancy it, a regular spot of tasty tucker and a new Ikea book case to doze in front of and many a human would be docile and complicit, I’m sure. Being fairly sure the house won’t explode inwards on top of them might help the siesta too.

But right now, I’m caught in this nether world of mute stress. And I wonder if it’s because I may be currently thinking about things at too many levels at once. ..See? There’s another one.

Not clever levels, you understand. Even D:Ream’s enthusiastic keyboard player could quickly lose me, had he gone too much further over the event horizon in lastnight’s Wonders of the universe. Properly clever I am not.

But from pictures around the Pacific rim, to voices across the Middle East, to the backdrop of our national story, to the tapestry of our little town, to the seismic testimonies of the individual lives around us and the daily tasks ahead of us, I could easily feel so overwhelmed by the complex narrative of everything that I feel practically powerless. Reactively demotivated. Sofa bound.

How the hell would I cope with worrying about my children on top of all that?

Probably the same way I cope with worrying about my social life – by putting all my efforts into keeping the near-impossible equilibrium of trying to get them to laugh and trying to get them to stop laughing. That might keep me mentally occupied until they left for uni. Not that they ever would.

Honestly, I am considering never leaving my little creative bunker.

After all the talking and thinking and feeling and not feeling and making tea and humming and hahing and pacing and list-making and pencil end-chewing and hand-wringing and even bell-ringing – what to actually DO? Where, I mean, to start? ..With… everything.

Bah.

If anyone has any good ideas about where I can actually turn out to be any ruddy practical use, would they forward them on, please. Otherwise, I shall continue to stand back and do my bit by trying not to be some clumsy oaf in the way of all the real humanitarian talent. Ask me to pass something to you. I might manage that. ..So long as you explain clearly what it is and where I can find it and what the difference is between my arse and my elbow.

And this is probably what it means to feel whelmed. For the ancient word actually means to be capsized. Taking shelter under your upturned boat, in fact.

Except.

Except I have actually decided to cautiously crawl out from under my upturned life raft and be a bit Forest Gump about the whole thing – by mutely starting to run.

A little person called Daisy will be on my mind as I run, and though running is not much practical help for anything, it is at least a response that involves the heart as well as the hands and feet.

http://www.justgiving.com/timo-peach/

You know CPR, right?