The power of memory.

Alexis Madrigal writes at The Atlantic about the pleasant smells of 1948 San Francisco, as reported in a reading passage from a school textbook,and how oddly out of place one of them seems today:

Just a minute ago Rick Prelinger tweeted a page from a 1948 school textbook that includes a list of pleasant things to smell in the city. They include:

  • "The beautiful flowers in Golden Gate Park"
  • "The cooked lobster and crabs and shrimp along Fisherman's wharf"
  • "The coffee roasting in factories near the Ferry Building"
  • "Delicious chocolate" from "the factories near Aquatic Park"
  • "Vegetables in our great wholesale district"
  • "The salt of ocean spray" and "The clean, washed air of the Pacific Ocean"
  • "Oil from ships along the piers by the Embarcadero"

Hmmm… Which one of these does not belong?

At least that was my thought on first inspection. But then I started to think about the way these smells are framed. Humans are responsible for nearly all of them. It's not just chocolate it's chocolate from a set of factories; it's not just crabs, but cooked crabs. It's not just oil, but the oil that powers ships that bring goods to the city and leave with its salable cargo. These students are not smelling the California landscape so much as the goodness of humanity's own creations from fuel to farmed vegetables. 

He's talking about the oil because nowadays, post-environmental movement, people think of oil as something that has less of an "aroma" than of a "stench."

Smells can play tricks on your memory.  For example: 

I am a lifelong nonsmoker.  

When I was in college in the mid-1990s I hated the smell of cigarettes:  hated the way my clothes would reek the morning after a night out at the bars, hated it when smoke wafted over to my table from the smoking section of a restaurant, would cross the street to avoid a cloud of smoke.

Now it's 2012 and (at least where I live) smoking is banned in bars and restaurants and almost every public place I go.  I go days, maybe weeks, on end without ever smelling cigarette smoke.

But now, if I happen to be out and about, and I catch a whiff of someone's cigarette smoke, it now smells good to me.  It reminds me of being young and in college and hanging out in bars with friends.  It's funny, because when I was young and in college and hanging out in bars, I hated the smell.  But now it's nostalgia.

I also derive a whiff of pleasure from diesel exhaust, which reminds me of Paris.

I wonder if someday I will feel nostalgic about the smells that surround me these days.   Burned grilled cheese sandwiches, or the faint scent of urine, or the appalling perfume they put in baby wipes — will they all remind me of my young-motherhood, and be forgiven?


Comments

4 responses to “The power of memory.”

  1. I’m not sure I’ll ever get to the point where cigarette smoke smells good to me, no matter how nostalgic I get for college days. Being an asthma trigger makes it have too negative an association. But I understand what you mean about how bad smells can have that nostalgia factor. Right now I can’t think of anything that does the same for me. Then again, I’m in the first trimester and almost any smell gets my nausea going, so all I can think of is how innocuous smells can make me gag and choke just because I smelled them previously when I was in this stage of pregnancy. Like that perfectly innocuous prenatal vitamin that I took when I was pregnant with Bella that had a sort of candy coating. I think it was a vanilla sort of smell rather like Tic Tacs. Oh even thinking about it makes me feel rather ill though.

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  2. Neither cigarette smoke nor diesel fuel smell good to me, nor do I like over cast 60-something chilly days. But put all three together, and I immediately remember Strasbourg, and am happy.

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  3. Just learned this yesterday while reading from our Apologia General Science book. “The nerves that pass the signals from the olfactory cells to the brain are part of the limbic system, the part of the brain that deals with memories and emotions.” So, they are intimately connected. This is only true with the sense of smell. Intersting.
    When I smell the leaves in the fall I am reminded of a house we lived in when I was 10. It was the only house we ever lived in with a plethora of leaves.

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  4. I can kind of sympathize with the feelings about the smell of oil. The smell of tar reminds me of days spent at the La Brea tar pits museum in downtown LA as a kid (where the giant statuary mastadon struggled endlessly in a pit of tar out front, with a saber toothed tiger on his back) and of long ribbons of natural tar washing up on California beaches.

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