Friday, January 24, 2014

In Praise of a Sense of Smell

Most of us have imagined at some time or another how much harder life would be if we lost the ability to see or to hear.  But I have to say that I've never really sat and wondered about how different things would be without a sense of smell.  Sure, I knew it was a nice sense to have, but I didn't realize how much I rely on it....until the past few days.  My sinuses are still so stuffed that I have had close to zero ability to smell for almost three days now.  Blowing my nose doesn't help most of the time, as the obstruction seems to be way up high.  And my pregnancy really limits the medications allowed to me, so I've just been waiting it out.

Here are a couple things I've discovered about the importance of a sense of smell:

1. If someone invented a pill that completely removed your ability to smell, it could be the ultimate diet pill. 
I can't taste anything.  Not a thing.  And food has basically zero appeal to me because of it.  I haven't found myself snacking or eating any junk food, because there's just no pleasure in it if I can't taste it.  I told Tom a bit over-dramatically the other night that "I didn't even care about dinner, since I wouldn't be able to taste it anyways," which prompted him to offer to make it instead.

Whoever taught us back in elementary school that you have all these taste buds on your tongue that can register "sweet, salty, bitter, and...whatever the other one was [sour??]" must have lied.  Or else you still need those flavors to pass through receptors in your nasal passages in order to actually "taste" them, in which case...does a separate sense of taste really even exist?  Yep - such are the deep philosophical questions in my head these days.

Last night, I found myself craving a hot fudge sundae so bad.  I thought at first it was the pregnancy talking, but then I realized - it was because my brain had actually come up with a food that I would be able to get some sort of sensory pleasure out of.  The contrast between the hot and cold temperatures would at least make for an enjoyable eating experience, even without the ability to taste any of it.

I felt fairly uncivilized doing it, but during dinner tonight, I gave my nose one good hard blow right before I took each bite, because it allowed me a fleeting half-second of being able to kind of taste my food.  I had a box of tissues sitting by my plate.  I've sunk pretty low.

2. Moms use their noses for their mom duties all the time.  
The other morning, Sly insisted that he had soaked the bed during the night.  But everything felt dry, and I didn't smell anything, so I left the sheets on his bed and just folded up his pajamas to be reused.  At the end of the day, I dressed Sly back in the same PJs, and sent him over to Daddy to read his bedtime story.  Sly jumped onto Tom's nap, and Tom immediately got a disgusted expression, and said, "ugh! What the heck?  Christine - are these pajamas clean?!" (Allow me to pause, because I'm laughing pretty hard remembering this).  Nope!  Apparently, Sly had been right.  And his whole bed needed to be stripped down and changed, too.

I usually use the sniff-test for random articles of clothing or towels I find strewn on the floor, to determine if they are clean, "clean enough", or dirty.  Without the ability to do this, things have been just ending up in whichever pile my current whim decides to throw them....so far, I haven't had any complaints.  But we'll see. 

The sniff-test is also my main way of knowing when a diaper needs to be changed.  Since I haven't smelled any diaper odors recently, I find that I haven't even been thinking about changing them, so have left several diapers on a bit too long.  Oops.  Tom's the one who keeps "discovering" the offensive diapers now.  I think part of him isn't fully convinced that I actually can't smell them :-)



So don't underestimate the power of your nose, people! I'm really looking forward to having a working one again, so I can get back to enjoying my meals and my coffee, and protecting my family from the various odors that really should be dealt with in a timely manner!


10 comments:

  1. My husband has no sense of smell. It's just the strangest thing. I ask him all the time if he can smell certain things and then I remember that he can't smell. It's really one of those senses that I think a lot of us take for granted. When it comes to food he says he can taste it, but he has to add a lot of spices and seasonings to his food to really taste it. I imagine that what he tastes is what most of us experience when we have a cold. When he has a cold the food doesn't taste funny to him at all. It's really crazy when you think about it and scary, too. If the house were on fire or there was a gas leak he wouln't be able to smell it at all.

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  2. Didn't you say you were a biology teacher? ;0) LOL

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    1. Ha - I know. But that's how I know that much of what they teach kids as scientific knowledge is so drastically oversimplified as to be actually incorrect. Plus, my brain has emptied out a lot of the non-essential information, such as which nerves control which sensations!

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  3. Ugh, I hope you feel better soon! I hate sinus infections but I seem to get them a lot these days. :-/ Love the story about the sheets though, haha!

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  4. I lost my of smell after I gave birth to my oldest daughter. Occasionally, I can taste a smell (which his odd). I know if something is burned by the charred tasted in my mouth, or if something is really bad-smelling by gagging, or really sour by the tingle in my mouth, but I can't smell it at all. I can't smell a dirty diaper (which was a blessing while pregnant with my second and changing my infant's dirty diapers!), a disgusting trash can, or a dead skunk....but nor can I smell fresh-baked bread, a pot of spaghetti simmering on the stove, or a freshly-cut Christmas tree.

    I have to spice my food a ton if I want to taste it and even then, it's sometimes a miss because then I've spiced it so much that I get sick after eating it. I was never one for spicy food but now it doesn't bother me in the slightest - in fact, I prefer spicy and bitter over sweet now because I can taste it! As you said, food has kind of lost it's appeal and I usually eat because I'm hungry, not because I'm craving something. I've eaten more soup over the last five years than any other meal!

    So - I don't usually miss my sense of smell, but it really has been a huge adjustment! I'm always aware that I might smell and not know it, so I don't wear perfume and shower every day that I have contact with people (let's not lie, folks, moms don't shower everyday, usually!), eat mints like they're going out of style, am afraid to burn a candle in my house because what if it is smells bad??, and take the trash out everyday because I'm afraid it smells. :)

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    1. SENSE of smell. :) Typos, typos....maybe no sense of smell causes that, too? ;)

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    2. Wow! I've never heard of losing your sense of smell like that. Do you know if it's something that happens much? Was it related to childbirth?

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    3. It doesn't happen much, from what I understand! I lost a lot of blood and sustained a lot of damage to the nerves on the right side of my body during that birth. A good friend of mine is a doctor and when I mentioned once that I couldn't smell, he asked when it happened. When I told him it was after my first's birth, he said that I'm the first case that he's seen. There's a condition in the medical world where a woman who loses a lot of blood during childbirth (or maybe anyone who loses a lot of blood?) loses her sense of smell and it's a condition that many doctors don't think exists because so few people have it. He, of course, couldn't say if that was the cause, but he said it sure sounded like I proved to him that it does! So, I'm guessing that's what caused it. I don't miss it much, except during cooking and baking, and even then, if I inhale deeply, I can kind of taste the smell (if that makes sense!) so it's not a huge deal! Of all my senses to lose, I'd choose smell. :)

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  6. Christine, have you tried a neti pot for your sinuses? It won't hurt and it might help.

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