So I’m walking along on my Wednesday morning excursion slash
‘cause there’s a big hill coming back exercise
program to get coffee at Groundwork,
when I pass a young woman –mid-twenties maybe – walking her dog.
I take a few steps… you know,
like, there’s the speed of light, and the speed of sound? There is apparently
also be “the speed of smell”, which, my experience suggests, lags slightly
behind.
I have moved a few feet past the young woman with the dog,
when my nasal passages suddenly constrict, and my throat closes up to “one
notch below choking.”
The problem?
Perfume.
I’m talking, really strong
perfume.
Perfume with the piercing pungency of the Air Freshener at
the car wash, where I instruct them, “‘Luxury Wash’ – no Air Freshener.”
Here’s what seems to be happening, though I could easily be
wrong. A young woman – wearing sweats,
so if she’s not a gym teacher or a fitness instructor is not dressed for work –
has apparently immersed herself the most powerful perfume this proboscis has
every experienced…
Before going outside to walk
her dog!
Why?
The dog wasn’t
enjoying it. The stuff made its eyes water. Not to mention the dog's look of abject bewilderment:
“I’m fine with my scent. What’s wrong with her?
I seem to want to relate this to other olfactorial infractions, they may not really go together, but
I’m doing it anyway. The connection,
though tangential, may, on further investigation, have overarching
implications. (Whatever that means.)
The global idea
here is this:
We in our culture seem to have a serious difficulty with
anything that, in any way,
Smells.
That’s the concept.
Agree on disagree? I agree. But, of course, I said it.
We want things to smell pleasantly. Or inoffensively. Or, in some
cases, not smell at all.
Example:
You open the fridge, and you stick your head in. How do you determine whether some food item in
there is “off”?
It’s “off” if it smells.
You smell the milk.
If it smells like nothing, it’s okay to drink. Meat, vegetables, cheeses – except those that
were born smelly – the same
thing. The primary indicator for a
food’s “eating acceptability” is that its “Basic Odorosity” be zero.
The signal for, not all
food, but for a lot of food’s okayness for consumption is that, when you smell
it, the smell you smell when you
smell it…is nothing.
Okay, I get that. A
smell in certain foods sends the loud and clear message, “You waited too long.” This is, in fact, good. It’s Nature as “Safety Monitor.” For our health and welfare, Nature “smells up”
the bad food.
But consider your facial response when you get a whiff of
that cottage cheese that’s gone well past its “Expiration Date.” It’s not just a calmly objective, “Oh, this
has to go.” It’s disgust, mixed with
outrage. It’s like you’re personally affronted.
How dare anything smell!
Despite the grooming industry’s adopting the same idea, our
culture is not, I don’t think, implying that people who emit, what we define as
an undesirable odor – or smell – are “going bad.” But it seems to me these liberally-doused
young women walking their dogs – and I’ve encountered a number of them during
my Wednesday Walks – seem to be
making a not dissimilar assessment about themselves. To wit:
“You would not want to come near me if I’m not wearing
perfume.”
Now, I know that self-scenting has been around since ancient
times. Until recently, however, I was
under the impression that this had to do with people – both male and female – perfuming themselves to
cover up the fact that they rarely bathed.
(Fearing that, lacking central heating, they would emerge from the bathtub,
contract a chill, and die. This is not
as bizarre an idea as it sounds. When I
lived in England, exiting my bath into an unheated room made me think long and
hard about taking any further baths
in the future.)
I have only been recently illuminated to the fact that scents
and fragrances were primarily employed as a sexual enticement. It is, in fact, this purpose – seduction
through the nose – that makes the perfume industry is so incredibly huge,
leading superstars the likes of Brad Pitt to hawk Chanel Number 5 on television.
(Seeing an actor of Brad Pitt’s stature doing TV commercials left me wondering
whether the man had a serious gambling problem.
Or a wife who likes diamonds.)
Let me be clear here.
I am not advocating “Stink Nation.” I am merely offering One Man’s Opinion on the
issue of “going overboard.” It may not even be necessary. The natural “You” may smell better than you think.
In the end, it’s no big deal. You do, you don’t, you go subtle, you go for
broke – it’s entirely up to you. I am
just planting a modest contrarian seed here, by suggesting that your “come
hither” intentions may actually be working the other way.
And by the way – and you can take this for what it’s worth –
Your dog hates it.
I passed them on my way back. It was sneezing its head off!
I passed them on my way back. It was sneezing its head off!
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