The sense of smell, so often lost to me due to allergies or some sort of cold, is known to evoke memories of days long gone. Despite my hampered ability to absorb scent, this phenomenon applies to my life as well. A list:
- The scent of Ben, my adopted older brother: Ben was home schooled. As a consequence, he was more self conscious than I when it came to social situations. He made sure that his hair was pointing just the right way and that his pants lined up with his belt. One of his biggest worries was smell, though; he would always shower as close to leaving the house as possible and had spent a lot of time picking out his deodorant in his youth before he finally settled on one variety. It was so recognizable, though. Early one March afternoon, the sunlight was beginning to illuminate the buildings sideways as it set. The winter was losing its grip and grass was finally more prevalent than snow. I had pulled open the glass door that emitted only a whisper as its hinges spun and maneuvered my load into the lobby. As I signed in, the only noise was the breathing of the college student behind the desk, the rustling of her book, and my pen scratching. I picked up my drum and started across the warm linoleum, my sneakers tapping. And then a waft of scent tickled the bottom of my nose, vanished, tickled again. It was Ben. He had walked through recently. I could picture him carrying his pipes and walking the same floor I did now, climbing the same stairs, pulling open doors and greeting friends. I was right behind him. I would catch up to him soon enough.
- Ham and Cheese Breakfast Loaf: Even though my mother's side of the family is Jewish, we celebrate Christmas and Easter in my house. However, we participate in the "trees and presents" and "bunnies and candy in a basket" side of things, not so much the "Jesus was born" and "Jesus is dead." Anyway, my mother cooked brunch for our extended family every Easter and everyone would come over and we would schmooze and hunt for easter eggs in the field. And every year, my mother would make this ham and cheese breakfast loaf that she had found a recipe for in a newspaper many years ago. When we moved away from the rest of the family, my mother made brunch for a year and then decided it wasn't really worth it. The next year, she just made the ham and cheese breakfast loaf. The year after, she made the loaf again. The year after that, though, Easter was so low on the priority list that she made homemade Egg McMuffins at 9 in the morning for whomever was awake and everyone else was on their own for Easter celebrations. But despite the lack of the loaf, when she does make it now (if ever), the smell reminds me of Easter's past with grandparents and missing Easter eggs and candy.
A short list, perhaps, but my time is up...
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The scent of Ben has real narrative potential. When you say "It was so recognizable." you are talking about his deoderant? Is the scent of Ben other than his deoderant? Or did the two become the same? I am curious about the final (unfinished) image-- Ben w his "pipes" (explain!) and you following him up the stairs, following his scent.
I also feel "story" in the scent of Ham and Cheese Breakfast loaf. It's always curious when Jews cook ham, even when it seems the most natural thing in the world to them! But, there is also a story in the move "away" from the family and how this changed everything. You DO have endless stories.
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