I
walk to work each morning, an hour-long trek along the Charles River, over the
BU Bridge, winding through the manicured lawns and vine-wrapped homes lining
certain streets in Brookline. It has been a hot and humid summer. Prime time
for smell. And as I walk, scents hit me—light but sharp, one at a time, pok pok pok, like ping pong balls. The
cool river-scent of the Charles. The dark and earthy dank of bark mulch. Hot
pavement. Car exhaust. Cigarette smoke twirling up into the air. I pass fellow
pedestrians and, bam, deodorant.
Perfume. Sweet, salty, sour sweat. There’s also grass, fresh cut. Coffee, fresh
brewed. The promise of sun and sand.
The
other night I had dinner with friends. I sat at their dining room table, close
to 9pm, ready to eat: thick slices of heirloom tomatoes, roasted eggplant,
anchovies, cheese, bread and wine. A veritable farmer’s market feast. Before we
began to eat, the hostess walked over to her windowsill and plucked a few
leaves off a small basil plant. The window was open, and right at the moment of
plucking, there was a waft of warm wind. Some stray olfactory molecules hit my
nose with the breeze—that fresh herbed scent. Such a familiar smell, but
surprising nonetheless. It filled my mind with the color green, the
lightness of summer.
On
Thursday I read from Season to Taste at
Porter Square Books. It was a wonderful evening, filled with friends and family
and readers and writers and just a few people who wandered in to buy a magazine
but stayed to listen and then chat. Afterward, I went out for drinks with a few folks, including one of my oldest friends, who lives across the country but just so happened to be in town for the week. I’ve been thinking a lot about what it means to be
here, in the present, in the moment, right now. I’m trying to pay more
attention to the small things right in front of me. The tastes, the smells, the
way it feels to laugh. But when my friend and I hugged for the first time in a long time, I inhaled, my nose right there by his head. And then there I was, immediately
transported back. I no longer existed in that moment, but one far in my past.
9 comments:
This is good stuff, Molly B.
I know you know this, but isn't it amazing how smell transports us? Lovely musings.
thank you, ladies. xo
I love the way you write.
Thanks, Holly. You're the best. xo
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