Throughline - History of the Self: Smell and Memory
Episode Date: December 19, 2024"History" can seem big and imposing. But it's always intensely personal – it's all of our individual experiences that add up to historical events. Over the next few episodes, we're exploring the per...sonal and how it's changed history: from the story of romantic love, to the man who tried to cure aging, to the contents of our dreams...First up, memory and our sense of smell. What if we told you that the key to time travel has been right in front of our eyes this whole time? Well, it has: it's in our noses. Today on the show, the science — and politics — of smell, and how it links our past and our present. (Originally ran as The Scent of History)To access bonus episodes and listen to Throughline sponsor-free, subscribe to Throughline+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/throughline.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for this podcast and the following message come from Autograph Collection Hotels,
with over 300 independent hotels around the world, each exactly like nothing else.
Autograph Collection is part of the Marriott Bonvoy portfolio of hotel brands.
Find the unforgettable at autographcollection.com.
Before we get started, a note to listeners that this episode includes exploration of racist material.
So the other day I was reading this book about the first crusade.
It's a moment in history that anyone who knows me knows I have long been obsessed with.
And in one passage there was a detailed description of what the city of Antioch was like
then. There were details about the way the streets looked, the size of the citadel, how loud the
central market was. But there was something noticeably missing. No description of what it
smelled like. It was weird because I register a lot of thoughts and memories in my head through
smells. I'm sure you do too.
And I realize I almost never stop to think about how or why I smell things.
Why does a rose smell like a rose?
Would the people in medieval Antioch have described the smell of a rose the same way
I do?
Well, Christina Kim, a reporter and producer on the Throughline team, has been thinking
about those kinds of questions a lot over the last few years.
The other day she even described smell as a superpower that allows us to time travel.
Yeah, she went deep on some of the big questions about our sense of smell and ended up on this
winding historical journey.
And now you get to go on it too.
Christina is going to take it from here.
Ever since I was a little girl, I've been enveloped by the smell of lemon, rosemary and spices.
It's the smell of this Spanish perfume called Alvarez Gomez Agua de Colonia,
the classic fragrance that's been made in Spain since 1912, that
my grandmother, mi yaya, and my mother have always worn.
It's the smell of my yaya sitting on the couch in Madrid, with her legs crossed, wearing
her kitten heel house slippers, reminiscing about being a little bit wild, un poco traviesa,
as she reaches over with her soft hand
to give mine a squeeze.
I love you, grandma.
And I love you very much.
It's the smell of my mom running after me
whenever I'm in my childhood home in California,
with a bottle of it, trying to spritz some over my head,
a fuzz-fuzz before we leave the house to smell fresh.
Christina, you've made fuzz-fuzz. You leave the house to smell fresh. Christina, hija, te has hechao fuzz-fuzz, te hueles bien,
y que da gustito verte, vamos.
And the smell of her reassuring hugs, which let me know I
am never alone. Sssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss The top note is crisp, sharp, like a Mediterranean lemon whose yellow-hued brightness makes my
nose tingle.
Once I let the inhale get to my chest, I reach the fragrance's heart note, and it becomes
more green and fresh. And finally, when my breath makes it all the way to my belly, the bass note rounds everything
together.
It's like the umami part of the fragrance, this kind of fullness and richness that expands throughout my whole body. Like a soft hug.
Like home.
The act of smelling a perfume is like hearing a full orchestra.
In order to actually smell it, your nose has to parse through thousands of different molecules,
translate them, and then transmit it to your brain so that you can smell what you recognize
as your favorite scent.
Be it a perfume or a rose.
And that's just what has to happen to smell a single thing.
The reality is that for most of us,
our noses are parsing through a massive number
of different odor molecules a day.
And it's so easy to take this riot of smell for granted.
Unless it disappears.
In the summer of 2022,
I became one of the 15 million estimated people to have lost their
sense of smell because of COVID.
The minute I noticed that I wasn't able to smell anything, I ran around from room to
room sniffing anything I could get my hands on.
I went to the kitchen and opened a jar of peanut butter.
Nothing.
I took a spoonful of peanut butter and put it in my mouth. Instead of the sweet, salty, nutty flavor I expected,
all I could sense was how it felt.
A thick, flavorless paste sticking to my tongue and gums.
Finally, I ran to my bedside table
where I kept my giant glass art deco bottle
of Alvarez Gomez Agua de Colonia.
I took a big breath, waiting for the fresh herbal scents to take over and make me feel better.
But all that I inhaled was an empty void of what I knew was there, but I could no longer access.
It felt like my tie to my mom and my grandmother was severed.
After I gathered myself, I did what any journalist would do next.
Hello? Okay, you are here? Okay, wonderful.
And that meant calling up someone who's dedicated
their life to studying and understanding smell.
My name is Rachel Hertz.
I'm a neuroscientist and I've been studying the psychological science of smell for over
30 years.
Rachel is the person for all things smell.
She's the author of The Scent of Desire, discovering our enigmatic sense of smell.
And she immediately empathized with how I was feeling.
The fabric of our existence,
the literally the threads that weave together,
how we feel within the world,
both with other people, with our past experiences,
and fundamentally with ourselves,
is deeply, deeply connected to our sense of smell.
I felt vindicated.
I wasn't being overly dramatic.
This was a big deal. And when that
becomes broken, those relationships, those outer relationships and our inner relationships with
ourselves, start to really stumble and fumble and fall. But even though our sense of smell is such
an important facet of our lives, it turns out we still don't seem to know that much about it.
We really do not still fully have a grasp or grip
on how it is that we perceive smells.
So it really still is the sydneykma.
The deeper I dug into what we know about smell,
the more I started to realize how much our sense of smell
has shaped not just our personal experiences,
but also the world we live in and our understanding of the past and the present.
And it got me thinking about how smell is kind of like the science of history, because it's so wrapped up in who we think we are and how we remember the past,
which kind of makes it the perfect ThruLine episode.
So here we go.
I'm Christina Kim, and today on ThruLine from NPR, I'm asking you to go on a little
adventure to unpack the enigma of smell.
We're going to explore how olfaction actually works, from our nose to our brain, how smell
has been used to legally divide us, and finally, how harnessing our sense of smell and memory
can make us all into time travelers.
Coming up first, how we know what we know about the science of smell.
This is Khadijah from Seattle.
You're listening to Throughline from NPR. This message comes from WISE, the app for doing things in other currencies.
Send, spend, or receive money internationally, and always get the real-time mid-market exchange
rate with no hidden fees.
Download the WISE app today or visit wise.com, T's and C's apply.
This is Eric Glass.
On This American Life, we like stories that surprise you.
For instance, imagine finding a new hobby and realizing...
To do this hobby right, according to the ways of the masters, there's a pretty good chance
that you're going to have to bend the law to get the materials that you need.
If not break it.
Yeah.
To break international laws.
Your life stories, really good ones.
This American life.
This message comes from the Dateline original podcast,
Deadly Mirage.
Join Josh Mangowitz as he unravels the story
of a seemingly perfect marriage turned deadly
and the secrets about sex, friendship,
and religion that came to light.
Search Deadly Mirage to follow now.
and religion that came to light. Search Deadly Mirage to follow now.
Part One. To smell is to feel.
It's 1988, and a young scientist named Linda Buck is sitting in a laboratory at Columbia University,
struggling to wrap her brain around a question. That's one of the things I love about doing science.
It's really puzzle solving.
What you find is so beautiful.
Nature's designs are so elegant.
This is Linda Buck's voice from an interview she did with the American Academy of Achievement.
She sat at her desk in the lab astonished by a simple reality.
One of nature's elegant designs, one many of us take for granted, I know I did, smell.
Well, at that point in 1988, scientists didn't really understand it at all.
The first question was how you can detect up to 100,000 chemicals in the environment
in the nose.
How was that done?
I became completely obsessed with this.
This was it.
I had to solve the problem.
It may seem unbelievable, but scientists didn't understand exactly how the nose and brain
were able to process and make sense of the wide range of chemicals we breathe in.
So I decided that the first step had to be to find out how odorous molecules or odorants
are detected in the nose.
Nothing else mattered.
From that research bench at Columbia, Linda began her quest to understand
how the sense of smell worked.
This was actually a very high-risk project,
and in retrospect, it was potentially suicidal.
I mean potentially suicidal in terms of a career.
Linda, along with her mentor Richard Axel, invested much of her time in this research.
Research that was not well funded and largely ignored.
And she passed on other job offers to study other topics along the way.
I'm a very empirical scientist.
I don't theorize because what usually happens
is that the answer, the biological mechanisms that are used
are usually far more elegant
than the theories that people come up with.
She ran experiment after experiment using rats,
an animal whose sense of smell works similarly to humans. She studied their genetic code relentlessly. This went on
for years and then one day, eventually, she figured it out. It was a Saturday
night I think and I was in my kitchen. Sitting in her house looking at the
results of her experiments, she recognized a pattern.
And I had colored pens, and I had written down the sequence.
Her life's work, the genomic sequence of the smell receptors in the nose.
It was really beautiful. I remember just being stunned looking at them
when I first had the first set of them.
Linda couldn't believe what she was seeing.
And I had a friend in the other room
who was watching TV or something.
I kept running back and forth saying,
look at this, can you believe this?
It was like patchwork quilts,
where bits and pieces were exchanged
between the different receptors to make proteins
that would be able to detect different odorants.
Linda and Richard Axel solved the puzzle.
They'd found 1,000 smell receptors.
It was just absolutely thrilling.
receptors. It was just absolutely thrilling.
Over the next decade, Linda Buck, Richard Axel, and their collaborators continued to
build out how our brains perceive smell.
Which then led to them winning the Nobel Prize in 2004.
Rachel Herz says the Nobel Prize made Linda Buck into a rock star in the science world.
Suddenly, everyone was paying attention.
And so a lot of people who were working in the molecular biology and biochemistry and other systems went to study smell.
And this led to basically an explosion of research looking at the molecular basis of how the sense of smell works. The thing that surprised me the most about all of this was we, as in humanity, knew very
little about this sense that I was now learning to live without.
Like the smell of onion sizzling, rain on warm concrete, or my yaya's perfume.
How does that go from out there in the world into my nose, up into my brain, and become
a fundamental part of my memories, emotions, my story?
Well, after Linda Buck's discovery, we have a better understanding of how we smell what
we smell.
What smells are is that they're chemicals
that float through the air.
Air, what we breathe in every moment,
is made of chemicals like nitrogen, oxygen, helium,
that we can't actually smell.
So, air is like a blank canvas,
and the scents that we can perceive are like the paints on
it that are the world that we exist in.
Today, we know that humans can detect around a trillion scents.
This number dwarfs the amount of tones we can hear, about 340,000.
Or shades of color we can see, around one million.
So our ability to detect smells is actually far greater
than our ability to detect any other sensory experience.
This is because smell was extremely important
for our prehistoric ancestors
who lived in an inhospitable world.
A world where they needed to be able to smell predators
or prey from long distances away. A world where they needed to be able to smell predators or prey from long distances away.
A world where their instincts were driven by the smells they encountered on a daily basis.
And the accuracy of those instincts were often the difference between life and death.
We're breathing, we're inhaling through our nostrils, taking a deep inhalation in every couple of seconds.
And with each breath, we are carrying in the odors in
the air. Air that we can't smell coming into our nostrils and traveling up our nostrils right into
our nasal passages which are actually quite complex. There are sort of there are these all
these sort of little curvy structures and kind of curves and bends inside the nose which are actually
there to create as much turbulence to bring up the air carrying these odor molecules.
The odor molecules move up and up, lightning fast, and eventually they're stopped.
Landing on this patch of mucous membrane, which is basically at the level of our eyebrows,
and on this patch of mucous membrane, this is where all the receptors that are capable
for detecting, you know, smells exist.
The genes responsible for those receptors are what Linda Buck discovered in 1991.
They detect the chemicals, then start communicating with other neurons that will carry that information
to a part of the brain that processes scent.
And that's the amygdala hippocampal complex,
and this is where we go, ah, it's a lemon.
This also happens to be the part of the brain
where our emotions and memories are processed.
The same part of the brain
that's giving us the experience of the motion
is also giving us the experience of scent.
And so instantly that we are consciously registering a scent,
we are also to some degree experiencing an emotion.
I mean, to smell is to feel is what you just said.
It's the exact same system.
It's exactly that.
It's perfectly said to smell is to feel.
I love that.
So after Rachel patiently explained to me
exactly how smell worked, I had one obvious
question.
How do I get it back?
At this point in time, the most supported way to, you know, engage or reactivate your
sense of smell after smell loss, and especially if it's from illness like COVID, is with smell
training.
I know what you might be thinking.
Same thing I was thinking when she said it.
Smell training? Really?
Well, Rachel walked me through it.
All you need are four distinctive scents.
So for instance, maybe peanut butter, shampoo,
maybe suntan lotion, and coffee.
Let's just, for random example.
Let's actually try it together
like us. Go ahead and grab something to smell. Ready? Several times a day, so at least three times a day, sit down, unscrew the jar, sniff at what is in the jar, and even if you can't
smell anything, think about, okay, lemon. I know I know this lemon lemon maybe I'm even salivating just thinking about it I
put lemon on fish or whatever so you have a little thought connection as well
as the scent itself you know thinking about what it is even if you can't smell
anything. Okay I'm using peanut butter because I love that smell. So open the jar and breathe it.
And then you try to do it at least two more times a day
and try to keep on going at it for at least 12 weeks.
According to Rachel, studies have shown this should help smell re-emerge.
So our sense of smell is constantly regenerating,
which is one of the great things about unhealthy sense of smell.
And what we're hoping to do with smell loss is like,
start up that process again.
And if there hasn't been any damage to the pathway
between the nose to the brain,
then this is something that you can help do by just actively sniffing.
So like sort of turning on the genes that will then turn on the receptors to reengage and regrow.
But Rachel says this is something anyone can and should do, even if they haven't lost their
sense of smell.
I think everybody should be doing this, regardless of the sensibility of your sense of smell,
at least once a day, every day. And this is because our sense of smell is directly involved with the health of our brain
and our body.
Smell is a deeply personal thing.
It's a conduit for our deepest memories and thoughts.
But it isn't just about what's happening in our minds.
Smell has played an important role in shaping our society, in deciding who does and does
not belong.
Coming up, how one of the most infamous legal cases in U.S. history came down to Ascent. This is Jose Rodriguez from Tampa, Florida.
You're listening to Brunei on NPR.
This message comes from This Is History with Dan Jones with a new season that relives the
dramatic victories, bizarre parties, and deadly inventions of the Middle Ages.
Join the drama and relive the Middle Ages like never before.
Listen now wherever you get your podcasts.
This message comes from 16 Sunsets, discovering the untold story of NASA's space shuttle.
Host Kevin Fong uncovers the secrets of the most complex machine ever built. From
the makers of 13 Minutes to the Moon, new episodes drop every Wednesday.
Hey everybody, it's time to join NPR's All Songs Considered as we celebrate a very tolerable
Christmas with a mix of seasonal songs and special guests.
Yeah, we're in for like the saddest Christmas ever. Stuck with Robin, who is basically a
lump of coal in the shape of a man.
Hear new episodes of all songs considered every Tuesday, wherever you get podcasts.
Hey, it's REND. It's almost the end of the year, and this is the season when NPR comes
to you, as a nonprofit news organization, to ask for your support. The easiest way to support Throughline and NPR network stations across the country is
to sign up for NPR Plus.
It's a recurring donation that gets you special perks for more than 25 NPR podcasts, like
sponsor-free listening, bonus episodes, behind-the-scenes content, and even exclusive and discounted
items from the NPR shop and the
NPR wine club.
It only takes a few minutes to sign up, and you can do it right now at plus.npr.org.
We know you value through-line stories that take you back into the moment and explain
how we got here today.
And you can help keep our reporting possible by supporting us now.
Thank you again for being a critical part of the public media community.
Join NPR Plus at plus.npr.org.
Part two, to smell is to judge. I was in the backseat of the car on a beautiful summer day and the windows were rolled down.
We're going through pastoral landscape and all of a sudden from the front seat, my mom
says, oh, I love that sound.
She says it, it's got to be good.
It's this beautiful day.
I'm all really happy.
So I make this connection between positivity and scent. And I disclosed this on the playground when I was about seven years old.
I made this comment that, oh, I love that smell.
I actually still didn't know what it was called at this point.
And then everyone turned to me and yelled, oh, that skunk, you're so weird.
And I was met with derision and screeches
and children pointing fingers at me and running away.
To smell is to learn.
Sense of smell allows animals, including skunks,
to detect danger and navigate their environments.
We humans also use our nose to discern dangers,
with the smell of a gas leak or a fire.
But we've also ascribed emotions and perceptions
to certain smells, associating them with feelings,
like fear, delight, or something putrid.
And those associations aren't natural. They're learned.
So the culture around me tells me that skunk is a bad smell. So I have learned that. And yet,
I have this personal experience, which is really positive. And that's actually going to supersede
the cultural aspect of it. So it's a multi-layer system between sensitivity, cultural learning and
personal experience. And it's the meaning which determines how much you like it.
We create the meaning of smell, but the cultural constructs around what we decide smells good
or bad can be weaponized.
So for instance, the immigrants who moved in next door, you know, using the smell of
both food and then the smell of the person
who eats that food as being other and bad and not part of my tribe and someone or a group
that should be pushed away from who I am. So it's not pure. The scent is very much tied up
in the culture. It's very much tied up in the particular moment in that instance in time,
let's say politically, where whatever is going moment in that instance in time, let's say
politically, where whatever is going on, that that scent then takes that meaning and where
it's coming from. Simply put, smells can have as much of a history as a black and white
photo can. We're kind of hostage to visual conceits. This is Mark Smith. We fetishize
the ocular. We look at the visual as the preeminent source of truth and reason.
He's a sensory historian at the University of South Carolina and author of the book,
A Sensory History Manifesto.
And I think what sensory historians try to do is say, hang on a minute, historians should
examine all of the senses.
Mark says that historical writings are full of descriptions of sounds, textures, tastes,
and smells.
All of a sudden what was implicit is now explicit.
And all of a sudden, your world is increased by a factor of five.
So history becomes much more robust, more meaningful.
And those sensory descriptions can provide important details that are key to better understanding
our history. For example, Plessy versus Ferguson. Yes, that Plessy versus Ferguson, the Supreme
Court case that legalized separate but equal treatment. Segregation in the United
States was founded in part on an argument based on racist perceptions of smell. If
you were to explain how that case actually worked, just by relying on eyewitness accounts,
you'd have no idea why that case was so important.
If you don't pay attention to smell, you've really missed the foundation of modern segregation
in the United States.
So to understand, we have to go back to Louisiana in 1890.
We're in New Orleans.
This is in the aftermath of the Civil War.
Slavery is being abolished.
An educated, wealthy black and Creole population is thriving.
But a new system of bodily control, social authority has been erected and that's called
segregation.
Segregation was a key part of a larger system that would later be called Jim Crow.
It was a wide-ranging effort to reverse the progress black people had made since emancipation.
To achieve that, a strict separation of life for black and white people was enforced.
Separate entrances, separate schools, and one of the most public spaces at that time,
railroad cars.
And what you have is a group of whites who want to segregate railroad cars in New Orleans.
One of the things about New Orleans
is that it has a very high African-American population
and a very, very robust, elite African-American population
that has been there for many, many years.
And they want to push back against the segregation.
many years and they want to push back against the segregation.
A group of prominent black leaders, the Citizens Committee, came together and organized to specifically challenge this segregation law on train cars. So the group decided the best way to
do this is to create a setup to stage an act of disobedience that will allow them to bring a case
to court to challenge the law and ultimately have it struck down.
Think Rosa Parks.
So, in order to do this, they needed someone that could blur the lines of segregation.
And they choose a man named Homer Plessy.
Homer Plessy.
He was a shoemaker, an activist, born into a family of French-speaking Louisiana Creole
people.
And they choose him because he is visually ambiguous.
He is considered to be black under Louisiana's stature.
But visually, he looks white.
And it's because of this ambiguity that he was the perfect person to challenge the validity
of segregation laws.
Segregation is based on the assumption that race can be seen and always detected.
In other words, that race can be fixed, that it is a stable category.
And we know that race is an invention.
It functions to fulfill the mandates and imperatives of people who have power at the time.
So here they have Homer Plessy and they say, we want you to go onto the white car.
So Homer Plessy boards the whites only car.
And he sits down apparently.
And a conductor who was in on Plessy's plan asks him if he was quote, colored.
And it's home of Plessy because he's trying to prove a point that has to tell the conductor,
sir, I'm on the wrong car because I'm black.
So what you have here is a really powerful illustration of the fact that you cannot see
race in all instances.
And if you can't see them in all instances, then how on earth could you erect an entire
system on segregation that assumes that you can detect race?
Everything went as planned.
Homer Plessy was arrested and charged for violating the law,
and the case went to criminal court in front of Judge John H. Ferguson.
So we're in the courtroom, and the way that it's framed is these black leaders in this parish in New Orleans are trying to say,
hang on a minute. If you want to prosecute my client, Homer Plessy, for violating a segregated
car statute, for going into the wrong car, surely you have to be able I say, well, we could identify him as black.
Please tell us how you know that my client is black, because if you can't tell us that,
then he's innocent.
And Louisiana's prosecuting attorney replies to this claim by the defense counsel.
He said, well, I don't really need to see him to know that he's
black. I don't need to see his race. I can smell it.
I can smell it. And what the prosecutor argued was, I might not be up to the task of locating race
and identifying Homer Plessy's race, but my nose is.
And that's the conceit, right?
That's the invention.
They're not true, they're inventions.
But if you have the authority to make the claim
that you smell, it becomes the social truth
broadly accepted.
Homer Plessy was found guilty by the state, and his legal team appealed the case all the
way to the Supreme Court.
But the damage had already been done.
I mean, it doesn't matter if Homer Plessy is innocent or guilty.
What matters is that people have now articulated very clearly that they can rely on the sense
of smell in order to adjudicate judicial cases and that relying on that argument is going
to have long-term implications.
In an overwhelming 7-to-1 decision, the Supreme Court ruled against Homer Plessy, laying out the legal foundation
for segregation in the United States.
There's little objectivity to how we interpret what we're smelling. Most smells aren't
innately good, delicious, putrid, or even foul. And yet? If you don't pay attention to smell, you won't reveal the power hierarchies of that time.
You'll actually be in a kind of blind spot because, hang on a minute, that's natural,
isn't it? And the whole idea behind power is to naturalize it. It's always been this way,
it is this way, and it will remain this way.
So next time you really like how something smells, ask yourself why.
Start thinking about where you learned to like that smell, and what that tells you about
your history and identity.
Coming up, how our sense of smell can help us understand what we can't always see, both in the past and
the present.
Hi, this is James Van Omar and you're listening to 3 Line.
What happens to democracy when one political party has near complete power?
That's the question at the heart of Supermajority, the series The New Yorker just named one of
the 10 best podcasts of 2024.
Listen and hear what all the hype is about.
It's season 19 of NPR's Embedded Podcast.
Part Three. To smell is to remember.
Germany's big on Christmas. It's just such a huge festival. And there are many traditional Christmas markets.
And there was one particular stand
with a Christmas market selling roasted almonds.
This is Ernestine Deane.
She's a South African musician and medicine woman
who lived for a few years in Germany.
That's where she smelled those roasted almonds,
a scent that took her on a journey.
It was if there were these kind of fingers, she smelled those roasted almonds, a scent that took her on a journey.
It was if there were these kind of fingers,
like wafting, putting, drawing the end,
these tendrils of the scent.
It was so familiar and reminded me so much
of my grandmother's kitchen.
And I was back there when I smelled these roasted almonds, that sweet scent, this kind
of nutty aroma, chestnutty, beautiful almond scent.
And it was just such a delicious experience for my body.
Ernestine may have been thousands of miles away from her childhood home in Cape Town,
but in that moment, the smell of roasted nuts transported her.
You know how it is when you can have something like that and you
instantly are back there. Your eyes are closed and you are the physical one.
It's something that's happened to a lot of us. We smell something
and all of a sudden we're jolted out of where we are into a memory of a place or
a person that almost feels real.
Scent memories are bringing back a very discreet episode
that's fully fleshed out as one moment in time.
That's a very special kind of specific time travel
that scent enables us to experience.
And in a way that other sensory experiences don't
because we feel much more back
in that original time and place.
It's so much more visceral.
Like we've actually kind of moved from now to back then.
This is Rachel Hers again.
She says the reason our smell memories are so evocative
goes back to how our brain processes what we smell.
When we smell something familiar,
my grandma's perfume say,
or those almonds Ernestine Deen smelled
in the German Christmas market,
the parts of our brain that light up
are also the areas that process our emotions,
the amygdala and our memories, the hippocampus,
which is why today researchers are looking at
whether or not smell can improve cognition,
address PTSD and stave off dementia.
And it's also why smell triggers such emotional memories
that enable us to momentarily travel across time and place.
I feel like they are bookmarks.
Ernestine says she uses these certain smells to archive her memories.
If I looked at our stories as pages of a book,
they're very important bookmarks that remind us of who we are
and also really is who we are.
Bookmarks that help her remember her family's history in South Africa
during the decades-long era of apartheid
as mixed-heritage indigenous koi people.
According to God's will that the white race should be preserved. I think it is a generally accepted fact today that the non-European is at the lowest stage of development.
Under apartheid racial discrimination and segregation were completely legalized in South Africa from 1948 to 1994.
And many, like Ernestine's family,
had to abandon the homes they'd known their whole lives.
My family was forcibly removed in 1960
at the time of the Group Areas Act,
where certain groups or certain places
were zoned for white occupation.
Between 1960 and 1980, an estimated 3.5 million Black and mixed-race South Africans
were forced to leave their homes. Ernestine's family was part of that number. They lost their
home in Constantia, a lush, fertile suburb of Cape Town, and were forced to relocate to the much drier Cape Flats
and the suburban neighborhood called Grassy Park.
I was born into this amniotic fluid of grief.
Ernestine was born after the forced removals,
but she still inherited her family's deep sense of loss.
It took a lot out of my grandparents to do that.
My grandfather made sure that some animals came along,
and he said that when everything had been packed up,
when it had been packed on the donkey cart,
came to the back of the house that was now empty,
and he stood there.
He just stood there and took a last look at this place
that they had never imagined would at some stage not be home.
And he said he stood there at the back of the house
out of the sight of the family and everyone.
And he cried like a baby.
He cried like a baby.
Ernestine inherited that grief, but she also inherited a connection to the land her family had to leave behind.
Consentia is a particularly fertile part of the cave. And so when I close my eyes, I'm already smelling that dark, rich soil,
you know, that kind of chocolatey brown, rich, grainy soil. A place of such comfort for us, because it's where we come from. Several times a year, the whole family would go back to Constantia
to bring Dahlia's and Lily's to the tombstones in the family graveyard.
Constantia to bring Dahlia's and Lily's to the tombstones in the family graveyard.
And when you walk in there, you walk on your crunching acorns with your feet and on like a bed of pine leaves, which also brings like releases so much earth, a dryness of it in the summer and then in the winter and autumn months where it's more wet,
but also feels so alive. And that's where there's so many pine trees there,
and there's so many cones on the ground that we can collect.
And those pine cones are what brings us back to the almonds that
Ernestine smelled while visiting that German Christmas market many years later.
Nutty aroma.
The one that transported her back in time
to her grandmother's kitchen in South Africa,
to Grassy Park, and back to Constantia.
One of the things that we did with them as children
was to go back and gather pine cones,
bring it back to Grassy Park,
roast it either on the fire or in the wood stove,
and this heat would then release the cones,
open them and release all, make visible pine cones.
They'd roast the pine nuts,
together with her grandmother, aunts and cousins,
and make a traditional sweet dessert known as tamalecki.
The whole house smelled like,
it was just this incredible
roasted kind of caramel scent in the house.
Put fire to begin with, the heat of the oven,
and then the pine cones open.
And we would take the pine kernels out and mash them,
add brown sugar and butter, and there is nothing,
nothing like that smell and that comfort that I
experienced in childhood. You know when I think of it now as a woman, as a mother,
my own children, older than I was as a kid, I see that loss more now.
Ernestine's smell-triggered memory was layered, complex.
It was happy, it was sad, it was both a window into a childhood memory and a whole country's
history.
And at its core, it was an act of resistance.
Because at the same time that Ernestine's family was making tamalecki, the brutal system
of apartheid was literally obliterating her sense of smell.
You cannot breathe. You start kind of choking and the throat is constricting.
Throughout the 1980s and 90s, the anti-apartheid movement was growing in Grassy Park.
And the response by the South African apartheid government was fast.
Riot police were a daily presence,
and the air always smelled like burning tires and tear gas.
The smell feels like an attack.
It literally feels like an attack.
It's a burning sensation,
like your nasal passages will throw your mouth
into your chest.
Your eyes are burning and tearing.
That's why it's called tear gas.
Tear gas is an assault on the senses. It's meant to disorient and dislocate.
But in the face of that, Ernestine's family made sure she knew that the smell of pine
cones, of rich fertile earth, of dahlias and lilies, and of sweet tamalecki were part of
her.
That she and her family were more than burning tires and suffering.
There's so much grief there, there's so much sorrow there.
And there's also so much joy and pride.
We are so strong as a people.
It's been 30 years since the end of apartheid
in South Africa.
And until recently, Ernestine lived just a few blocks
from where she grew up in Grassy Park.
She still goes back to Constantia,
only now she's bringing her three kids
and passing the smells and rituals onto them.
I need them to know certain rights that are also survival
and hold our story.
The grief is always still there.
To this day, Constantia is still a predominantly white
and incredibly wealthy suburb.
And while there's been a real effort to restore the land evicted families lost,
there's been very little traction. But Ernestine still takes her children back to tend the graves.
And she's found that by staying engaged with her sense of smell, there's room for healing all around
her. Because I'm on the other side of the acute grief that I was raised in
and the acute trauma of the times in the parted,
I'm starting to smell other things that must have been there.
They were always there, but I'm smelling the lick.
I'm smelling the wet kind of the marshiness of this part of Grassassy Park on the flay water, on the pond.
When she steps out of her house now,
the toxic bouquet of burning tires and tear gas
no longer clouds the air.
And in its absence, she's discovered
that a piece of Constantia, of her family,
was always in Grassy Park.
What's beautiful is that there are many lilies here,
Erem lilies, which is in a way the totem flower of my people, of Constantia.
It has a very, for me, it has a very fresh green scent, almost cucumber-like.
You know, I'm sure it's not different for other different people, but it has a green smell.
It's an old scent in a new place, a new bookmark in her and her family's history.
It's been special to be able to walk out into the water now and be amongst the lilies here
and feel somehow that my ancestors are with me.
Who we are is a collection of the stories of our past and our life narrative is how we define ourselves
and our life narrative is dependent upon remembering
who we are and the things that have happened to us.
And absolutely, scent is the key to that.
The smell of your mother, the smell of your first child,
the smell of pain, the smell of
working out. These are things that kind of knit your experience together and if you take them out
of your sensory experience generally, you're not going to have that more robust sense of your own past. I like the old days, I liked the old days, I liked the old days.
A year after I recorded my yaya on her couch in Madrid, she passed away. It's been over six years now, and yet I find that she's never that far from me.
She lives in my memory, of course, and the recordings I have of her,
of her monogram necklace that I wear around my neck.
And she's embodied in the scent of Alvarez Gomez, Agua de Colonia.
After months of diligently smelling an array of different scented essential oils,
from lemon to clove to mint,
my nose actually pricked up one day, and I felt the faint warmth of clove invade my nostrils.
With time, I redeveloped the ability to smell the symphony of the world all over again.
And you better believe that I doused myself
in Álvarez Gómez Colonia.
I smelled fresh, clean, and most importantly,
I had a piece of my yaya back with me.
The minute I smelled the Colonia,
it's like I could remember her more clearly,
more fully, to the point that I could bring myself back
to the moment of one of our last hugs.
I love you, yaya. And I love Cristina and everyone.
To this day, all I need to do is smell it,
and I can conjure myself standing
in the hallway of her home again,
both of us in our nightgowns,
hugging for well over a minute.
I can hear the beep of her hearing aid,
feel her tiny frame holding mine,
and I smell the faint scent of Alvarez Gomez in her perfectly coiffed hair.
It's like I'm there, and so is my yaya, in all her fullness.
I went from having no sense of smell to being able to smell a chocolate wrapper from across a room.
And now I have a new reason to be obsessed with smell.
I recently gave birth to my first child.
She's made me think about smell in a totally different way.
I'm no longer just thinking about how certain smells shape my past and identity.
I'm thinking about her too.
What smells do I want to pass down to my daughter?
What scents will bookmark her life and remind her of me, of her dad, of her yaya, of who she is and where she comes from?
and where she comes from.
One thing I know for certain is that she will definitely know the smell of Alvarez Gomez Colonia. And she'll know that she comes from a long line of strong Spanish women,
of traviesas, like my boyfriend and nobody has taken her away from me. That's it for this week's show.
I'm Randa Abdel Fattah.
I'm Ramtin Arab-Louis, and you've been listening to Throughline from NPR.
Next week on our series series History of the Self,
we take on modern love. Dating becomes this thing you can do on your phone all the time,
just like you do everything else all the time. It's sort of where everything happens.
This episode was produced by me and me and Laurence Wu, Julie Kane. Anya Steinberg. Casey Miner.
Christina Kim.
Devin Kadiyama.
Peter Balanon-Rosen.
Thomas Liu.
Irene Noguchi.
Thank you to the American Academy of Achievement for their permission to use excerpts from their
interview with Dr. Linda Buck.
And special thanks to Hiro Matsunami, Dwayne Jethro, Melanie Bohi, Elise Perlstein, Connie Chang,
Natalia Fiedelholz, and Yolanda Sanguani for sharing their time and expertise.
Fact checking for this episode was done by Kevin Voelkel. Audio was mixed by Maggie Luthor.
Thanks to Johannes Durgi, Chiara West, Edith Chapin, and Colin Campbell.
Our music was composed by Ramtin and his band, Drop Electric,
which includes Anya Mizani, Naveed Marvi, Sho Fujiwara.
And finally, if you have an idea or like something
you heard on the show, please write us at doline at npr.org.
Thanks for listening.
Hi, it's Terry Gross from Fresh Air. I just interviewed Billie Eilish and Phineas about
many things, including how Billie's signature baggy clothes came from watching hip hop videos.
Instead of being jealous of the women who get to be around the hot men,
I would be jealous of the hot men. And I wanted to dress like them and I wanted to
be able to act like them. Find this fresh air interview wherever you listen to podcasts.
It's been a great year for TV, movies and music, and we are highlighting the best of the best.
We're talking about our favorite moments of the year, including some of the best pop culture
you might have missed. Listen now to the Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast from NPR.
I'm Jesse Thorne.
2024 is almost over, but before it's gone,
come laugh with us at the best standup comedy
of the year on Bullseye.
We'll hear from Tignitar, O'Kyle Canane,
Kimberly Clark, Lori Kilmartin, and many, many more.
You might even hear your next favorite standup.
That's on Bullseye for maximumfun.org and NPR.