Let's Get Scentimental
In Depth 
                            
You already know this, but your sense of smell is linked to your memory. For me, the smell of Folgers coffee will always remind me of my grandmother’s kitchen. I’ve been obsessed with perfume, and cosmetics in general, since I was a kid, even though I’m a horrific, slovenly dresser with many a bad hair day.
What’s sort of odd about the perfume we decide to wear as opposed to the color of lipstick or brand of mascara we buy is that when we choose perfumes specifically because of the memories we associate them with, we are choosing to live in the past, surrounded by phantoms. Fucked up, I know. Maybe only I do this, but if the Basenotes forums are any indication, I don’t think so.
I love buying perfume. I buy too much of it. I can’t stop myself, for instance, from purchasing celebrity-endorsed fragrances, even when I don’t care about the celebrity. Currently, I own Lady Gaga’s Fame, Katy Perry’s Killer Queen, Someday by Justin Bieber and Jennifer Aniston’s Jennifer Aniston. None of them are particularly great or even solid, with the exception of the Aniston, which makes me smell like a permanent vacation. But mostly, I buy perfumes for their place in my own personal timeline. I wear them, every day, based on my mood or the shape of the bottle. I don’t buy anything too obscure. Perfumes always remind me of something or someone specific, and that, to me, is cool. Here are some of my current favorites.
In college I was waiting tables in a restaurant one Saturday night. Maybe it was late because the place was clearing out, and, though I was scheduled to be there until the restaurant closed, I groaned inside when I saw the manager leading back a young couple, seating them in my section. As I walked over to greet them, I was overwhelmed by a smell so gigantic and sickly sweet that I wasn’t even sure what I was smelling was perfume. Was it a dessert? An insecticide? It was sort of impossible to tell, until I approached the couple and confirmed that it was the woman. As I walked away from them after having taken their drink order, my mind began savagely questioning where I’d smelled it before. “What is that?” it asked me. I even mentioned it to the bartender: “Strangest thing, so overpowering.” I was transported backwards in time – but to where I was not sure. I am very shy, so I didn’t work up the courage to ask the woman what she was wearing. What an imposing question (and one which I have since learned is always best to ask, rather than risk never smelling a smell again)! As I drove home that night, I remembered. The answer — that it was my ex-boyfriend’s brother’s girlfriend’s perfume — was mundane and unexciting. But the satisfaction is always in identifying, and I felt good, though I still didn’t know what the perfume was called.
Eventually, while wandering through a mall maybe half a year later, I passed an older lady and smelled it again. I wanted to reach out and hug her, the smell was so familiar and cozy to me. “What perfume are you wearing?” I asked her. “Amarige,” she replied. I bought it the same day.
I quickly learned the secrets of Amarige, which is that it doesn’t always smell the same, and it doesn’t smell the same on everyone. That’s true of many, many perfumes, but more so of this one than any other I’ve encountered. It’s also not its best at first application, either, and in fact, I like it more when I smell it on my clothing from yesterday, or on my skin after a full day of work. It was my first real introduction to the powerful, divisive world of white florals and tuberoses. Though for years it was what I sprayed on (sparingly, my God!) almost daily, I don’t wear it all that often anymore — my husband once said it smelled “old” to him (pretty common with the white florals, it turns out), and when I have recently rolled it out, I’ve noticed it doesn’t smell as nice as I remembered on me. Even my sense of smell has rose-colored glasses. But this morning, knowing I would write about my first true perfume love, I spritzed a little on and moved on to the rest of my day. At first, it gave me a little perfume headache. Then, it mellowed out a bit and settled into its sticky sweetness. Hours later, I only catch a whiff of myself every so often, and it is glorious.
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