Anosmia

THIS BLOG IS ABOUT LIFE AS AN ANOSMIC - SOMEONE WITHOUT A SENSE OF SMELL. I AM A 22 YEAR OLD MA STUDENT IN LONDON AND HAVEN'T HAD A WHIFF OF ANYTHING IN ABOUT 15 YEARS. I AM WRITING THIS TO RAISE AWARENESS OF THIS INVISIBLE DISABILITY AND WILL UPDATE EVERY TIME THERE'S SOMETHING TO WRITE ABOUT.

Monday 11 February 2013

The Phantom Menace

The only reason I know that I used to be able to smell. I still have no idea when I actually lost it; I can only try to pinpoint from the things I remember smelling. The last distinct clear smell that I have was one of gone off cheese and onion sandwiches from a classroom in my first year at secondary school... so when I was about 11 years old.

 Phantosmia is is a form of olfactory hallucination. A condition where your brain realises that it should be able to smell something and so produces a corresponding memory to compensate for not actually being able to smell anything at that time; the perception of a smell in the absence of any actual physical odours. Phantosmia is not something you do consciously and it can be the smallest, weirdest thing that can cause it to occur. Sadly, it does not happen all the time so there is no way that it can be used as compensation for not being able to smell new things. It can also effect anosmics in lots of other ways; many complain of only ever smelling foul or disgusting odours.


I still haven't heard anything from Spire Hospital about my referral, but I'm expecting to get a letter in the post this week. If I don't then I will chase them up at the beginning of the week. I think I'm slowly coming to terms with the fact that they won't be able to do anything to treat it, seeing as though the cause of my anosmia is a complete mystery. But it would still be nice to be told that from someone who actually knows what they're talking about.


I was walking onto campus the other day and I saw sparks from someone's garden; they were having a bonfire. I know that bonfires have a very distinct smell of smoke and burning, but I literally had no idea that anything was on fire until I saw it. This kind of scared me a little bit as I've never been confronted with a large fire since being diagnosed as anosmic. It hammered home the point that if there's a fire in the house, the first thing that will wake you up is the smell of smoke. I won't have any idea until the flames are literally at my door and it's too late. When I have a house of my own I am literally covering the place in smoke detectors.


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