Thoughts and memories created whenever I feel like I need to vent........could be poetry, could be political ranting, could be all about my love for my children, my animals, current state of the world. Read, if you must!! While you are here, also visit my reading blog: rnocean.blogspot.com *Random Reading* or my grandog's blog: "Frieda and Frank's Frolics".
Monday, December 07, 2009
*MAGICAL BEAST*
Saturday, December 05, 2009
*OUR INTERNET RELATIONSHIPS*
Do some of us feel more comfortable behind a compuer screen where we can be who we want, say whatever we feel (uncensored at times) and allow others to think about us in a way that may not be accurate in the real world? How often do we hear others say that they are there for us, and within a few weeks, maybe even days, their words dissolve like alka seltzer in water, and we do not even hear from them again? Are others reactors (i.e. people who only say, I am sending you thoughts and prayers), does this mean that they really care about us, would take the time to be there if necessary, or just want to look good on the computer screen for others to see?
Sometimes it seems as if we give those individuals whom we meet on the internet more value and excuse them more often if they do not meet our expectations, than those individuals who are a part of our real, non-cyber lives. Sitting behind the veil of a screen reminds me, in a way, of the great and powerful Wizard of Oz. We imagine grandiosely, when in reality, there may sit someone who, like everyone else, is timid, shy and maybe a cut below average.
I remember back in 2002 when I found that my oldest daughter had passed away. I came home with my then husband and was at a loss for what to do with myself. My then husband, of course, had no difficulty just going to bed and sleeping. I couldn't do that, I couldn't function, I couldn't move, I didn't know what to do. I turned on my computer and began journaling my thoughts, my anguish and my pain on one of my nursing message boards. It was the middle of the night and I thought no one would even notice. The next morning my email was flooded with my cyber nurse friends love and concern. It literally made me sob. This wasn't just published on the nursing board, this flood of email was sent to me personally and the thoughts were so kind and caring. My cyber friends overwhelmed me with their kindness and yes, their love.
Pain and loss are the great equalizers, and it is often the case that during these times, we know truly who our friends are, and who are those who say the are, but are not. That being said, there have been individuals whom I have met through the internet who have been genuinely concerned, caring and even loving in so many ways. I thank you from the bottom of my heart. Every human being with whom we interact is created in God's image, and therefore, is as valuable as we are ourselves.
I have belonged to a board called The Perfume of Life for over 8 years now. It is a board with thousands of members who discuss their love of fragrance, all of the industry news, as well as various topics such as life issues, art and music, a Swap and trade section. Recently a very loved member of our little community had not been on the board for over a month. I personally had sent her several personal messages wondering if she was okay. I didn't know if she was ill, was on vacation, or what was going on. Through the search function of Google, one of our members discovered her obituary! This was immediately after her death, less that a week or so. We were all so sad and so upset, she was beloved to us. One of our members from Leeds, England knew that her youngest son posted on Facebook. That member, our Prince Barry, messaged how much we all loved and missed her and were sorry to hear of her demise. I woke up early this morning to see a message posted on the Perfume of Life board from her husband and it made me cry. He came to our board and contacted me personally to thank all of our members for the numerous messages posted when we found out she had died. One of our moderators personally copied and sent her husband all of the loving memories we posted about her. This is the power of the internet, these are people that I love and that I care for.....
What have I learned from this experience, and where does it leave me in terms of the conclusions that are reached about relationships on the internet vs. those outside of cyber-space? For one thing, I am much more appreciative of the real friends that I have. Flaws and all, you are grand, and when you say you care, you mean it. When you say you pray, you do it, and when you say you are there for me, I can literally feel your hearts beat......
Saturday, November 14, 2009
*YOU MIGHT AS WELL DANCE*
Sunday, November 01, 2009
*NATORI* One gorgeous fragrance
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Thursday, October 29, 2009
*LEGACY* (from Story People)
Friday, October 09, 2009
* The Nobel Peace Prize *
Mahatma Ghandi is the man who stated "You must be the change you wish to see in the World".
Today our President Obama won the Nobel Peace Prize for initiating change, for opening the doors of communication with the other nations of the world, for diplomacy and tact in negotiating peaceful solutions, and he deserves it.
Over the past 8 years, we as a nation were hated and our place in the world deteriorated because our former president would not negotiate with other countries, would not discuss anything with some nations for that matter. We, as a result, have lost close to 5000 of our finest to a unprovoked war with a nation that did not have 'weapons of mass destruction' and will probably lose more. That is not acceptable.
Our flag was burned in other countries and our people disrespected. It was unsafe to travel in some countries because of all of the anger against our country. Al Qaeda appears on our airwaves frequently mocking us for being 'so stupid' while they hide in the mountains of Afghanistan. We could always fight another war in Afghanistan but this would only push them further into Pakistan, where we could fight another war and lose thousands more. In the meantime, our economy is trying to recover from the damage done during the last 8 years with no regulations being put on Wall Street. Hopefully, we won't continue sending troops to Afghanistan to be slaughtered. If President Obama decides not to send more troops, he will be criticized for hurting the defense industry.
It has been stated that he 'has not been in office long enough' to win the Nobel Peace Prize, yet he is also criticized for not doing everything he promised, has he been in office long enough for that, I ask?
His presidency has already displayed diplomacy, class and tact where our former president displayed only arrogance, no accountability and no apology for any wrongdoing by his administration. President Obama could develop a cure for all cancers, and the GOP would criticize that as well.
I just want to state, however, that I could not be more proud of my country and my President. We are on the right track, peace in the world is possible..... We should be proud as a nation of this prestigious award being given to our President, yet many Americans are not, and I don't for the life of me understand that. Whether you approve of his administration or not, he won the most honored award in the world. That is something to be proud of, as Americans, not the political party you ascribe to.
Monday, October 05, 2009
*BITTERSWEET*
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
*You Can Go Home Again!*
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
*THE WORLD AS IT COULD BE*
I’d seen their hoof prints in the deep needles
under the pines,
nibbled some damp tassels of weeds.
This is a poem about the world that is ours, or could be.
would have come to my arms
I was thinking:
Mary Oliver, House of LightBeacon Press, Boston (1962)
Thursday, September 10, 2009
*A MEMORIAL TO DREW LARIMER*
Sunday, August 30, 2009
*TIME FOR DEMOCRATS TO STEP UP TO THE PLATE*
Then I began to get somewhat angry at all of the delays in the progress of healthcare reform. I voted for Barack Obama, now I want him and his administration to do their job.
I have seen all the nastiness, the gun-toting, the name calling and shouting at public town halls and I am sick and tired of it! Progressive Democrats like myself, the outspoken champions of health care reform, have literally not been doing their job. They need to be more vocal, to stand in Congress and yell "no public insurance option, no healthcare reform".
They have become, over the years, like the Republican party, deeply influenced by corporate money. Are they afraid that if they turn off the powerful interests of the health industry, the drug industry and Wall Street, they will influence Obama's re-election efforts in 2012?
President Obama, we elected you because you promised healthcare reform, to end the war in Iraq, not continue funding Afghanistan and tend to our own country's needs. You need to be less conservative and more progressive. I know you can, you need to fight more and finesse less. You need to stand up the Republicans, who lost the election by the way, and say "we need this because we are a decent country". The conservatives have dominated the debate over health care lately and the right wing has been winning the debate. We are a country of people who are hurting. The Republicans are the party that lost and the conservative movement that was deeply discredited over the last 8 years are setting the agenda for a Democratic Party that controls the White House, the Senate and the House. What's wrong with this picture???
Thursday, August 20, 2009
*Leslie, Gone But Not Forgotten*
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
*FAVORITE THINGS*
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
*THE BRIDGE*
There was a man who had given much thought to what he wanted from life. He had experienced many moods and trials. He had experimented with different ways of living and he had had his share of success and failure. At last, he began to see clearly where he wanted to go.
Diligently, he proceeded to find the right opportunity. Sometimes he came close, only to be pushed away. Often he applied all his strength and imagination, only to find the path hopelessly blocked. And then at last it came. But the opportunity would not wait. It would be made available only for a short time. If it were seen that he was not commited, the opportunity would not come again.
Eager to arrive, he started on his journey. With each step, he wanted to move faster; with each thought about his goal, his heart beat quicker, with each vision of what lay ahead, he found renewed vigor. Strength that had left him since his early youth returned and all kinds of dormant desires reawakened within him.
Hurrying along, he came upon a bridge built high above a river in order to protect it from the floods of spring. He started across. Then he noticed someone coming from the opposite direction. As they drew closer, it seemed as though the other were coming to greet him. He could see clearly; however that he did not know this person who was dressed similarly except for something tied around his waist.
When they were within hailing distance, he could see that what the other had around his waist was a rope. It was wrapped around him several times and probably, if extended, would reach a length of 30 feet.
Just as he was noticing this fact, the other began to uncurl the rope, and as they were coming close, the other said "Pardon me, would you be so kind as to hold the end a moment?"
Surprised by this request, which was made so politely, he agreed without a thought, reached out and took it.
"Thank you" said the other, then added, "two hands now, and remember, hold tight". At that point the other jumped off the bridge.
Within a second the free-falling body hurled the distance of the rope's length and from the bridge he instantly felt the pull. Instinctively, he held tight. The weight almost dragged him off the bridge. He managed to brace himself against the edge; however, and after having caught his breath, looked down at the other dangling distantly, close to oblivion.
"What are you trying to do?" he yelled.
"Just hold tight" said the other.
"This is ridiculous" he thought and began trying to haul the other in. He could not get the leverage; however. It wasn't as though the weight of the other person and the length of the
rope had been carefully calculated in advance so that together they created a counter weight just beyond his strength to bring the other back to safety.
"Why did you do this?" he called out.
"Remember," said the other, "if you let go, I will be lost".
"But I cannot pull you up" he cried.
"I am your responsibility" said the other.
"Well, I did not ask for it" he said.
"If you let go, I am lost" repeated the other.
He began to look around for help. But there was none. How long would he have to wait? Why did this happen to befall him now? "Just as I was on the verge of true success." He examined the side searching for a place to tie the rope. Some protrusion, perhaps, or maybe a hole in the boards. But the railing was unusually uniform in shape; there were no spaces between the boards. There was no way to get rid of this new found burden, even temporarily.
"What do you want?" he asked the other hanging below.
"Just your help" the other answered.
"How can I help? I cannot pull you in and there is no place to tie the rope so that I can go find someone to help me help you."
"I know that" said the other. "Just hang on, that will be enough. Tie the rope around your waist, it will be easier".
Fearing that his arms could not hold out much longer, he tied the rope around his waist.
"Why did you do this?" he repeated. "Don't you see what you have done? What possible purpose could you have had in mind?"
"Just remember," said the other "my life is in your hands."
What should he do? "If I let go, all my life I will know that I let this other die. If I stay, I risk losing my momentum towards my own long sought after salvation. Either way this will haunt me forever". With ironic humor he thought to die himself, instantly, to jump off the bridge while still holding on. "That would teach this fool". But he wanted to live and to live life fully. "What a choice I have to make; how shall I ever decide?"
Some time went by, but still no one came. The critical moment of decision was drawing near. To show his commitment to his own goals, he would have to continue on his journey now. It was already almost too late to arrive in time. But what a terrible choice to make.
A new thought occured to him. While he could not pull this other up by his own efforts alone, if the other would shorten the rope from his end by curling it around his waist again, together they could do it. Actually, the other could do it by himself, as long as he, standing on the bridge, kept it still and steady.
"Now listen, he shouted down. "I think I know how to save you." Then he explained his plan.
But the other wasn't interested.
"You mean you won't help? But I told you I cannot pull you up myself, and I don't think I can hold on much longer either."
"You must try" the other shouted back in tears. "If you fail, I die".
The point of decision has arrived. What should he do? What an impossible decision to have to make. "My life or this others?" And then a new idea, a really new idea. So new, in fact, it almost bordered on revelation, so foreign was it to his traditional way of thinking.
"I want you to listen carefully," he said, "because I mean what am about to say. I will not accept the position of choice for your life, only for my own, the position of choice for your life I give back to you."
"What do you mean?" the other asked, afraid.
"I mean, simply, it's up to you. You decide which way this ends. I will become the counterweight. You do the pulling and bring yourself up. I will even tug a little from here." He began unwinding the rope from around his waist, and braced himself anew against the side.
"You cannot mean what you say," the other shrieked. "You would not be so selfish. I am your responsibility. What can be so important that you would let someone die. Do not do this to me."
He waited a moment. There was no change in the tension of the rope.
"I accept your choice," he said, at last, and freed his hands.
(anonymous author)
Sunday, July 26, 2009
*A TRIBUTE TO MINERVA FRANCES BALLARD*
I have missed her deeply since the day I traveled to Troy, Ohio to her funeral and met her brothers and sisters from Mississippi attending her funeral. Her sister Susie looked so much like her it made me cry. I had never met any of her people, the Ballards, from Mississippi, but I would have loved to have know them.
My grandmother married my grandfather, Cecil (in picture above), as a young girl and moved to Kentucky with him. She bore him 4 sons, losing one at birth. She lost my dad, Stanley Eugene Ballard before her death and I know that it literally broke her heart. Since I have lost a child at almost the very same age that my grandma did, I understand the pain that she suffered at the time.
My grandma was in the room of the home on Simpson Street when I was born. I was her first grandchild and I was the girl she always wanted. My mother had already decided my name was going to be Linda Diane, but my grandmother convinced her to name me Charlotte Diane. Charlotte was a dear friend of hers that I never knew growing up, but I have her name just the same.
My grandmother literally doted on me the moment I was born and loved me deeply until the day she died.We moved from Ohio when I was barely 9 years old. It was extremely difficult leaving my grandmother in Ohio. She solved that problem by having my Dad drive me to Ohio the very minute that school let out. I stayed with her for the whole summer, just returning to Michigan when it was time to go back to school.
My grandmother ran a boarding house for men in Ohio. She also had a gentlemen who worked for the railroad have only his meals every day at her immaculate, well-maintained home. This was her source of income since she had no skills, marrying as young as she did. I grew up around her roomers and boarders and remember each one of them fondly. She also lived in sin with a man named Preston Cross for years and they had a wonderful relationship until the day he died. I never questioned why they didn't marry, but I never associated her with my grandpa Cecil. Preston was like a grandpa to me as well. My grandmother doted on me when I stayed with her.
I remember going to a dry-goods store and going up to their upper floor by way of the old creaky wooden stairs and looking through all of the books of paper dolls, and at the coloring books, and the crayons. My grandma would just tell the shop owner, "give the girl whatever she wants", she was like that. I didn't just get a box of crayons, I got the big box with the gold, silver and copper crayons! She was so good to me. I thought all grandmas were like that.
She would take me to the County Fair in Ohio and would say "let's have our picture made" and we did. I didn't know until recently that her real name was Minerva Frances. She went by Frances. I remember the fragrance of that dry-goods store, the fragrance of the paper doll books and crayons, and it is comforting to be able to remember them.
My travels to my grandmothers house in the summer continued all of my young life. I even stopped and stayed at her house on the way to Florida for my honeymoon. She was so glad that I did. She would write letters to me faithfully until her fingers became so crippled with arthritis that she couldn't. She then had a friend write as she dictated.
I traveled to Ohio to see her in the hospital right before she died. I remember brushing her beautiful, long, black hair that grew to the middle of her back. She never dyed her hair, but it was a lustrous black until the day she died, just like my Dads. She was confused during her last hospitalization, but told me that she had heard them 'calling me' over the hospital intercom to come to her side, and now, here I was. That was the last time I would ever see her alive.
Minerva Frances was a very special part of my life and I will always love her and honor her memory. I like to believe that my Leslie is now with her and enjoying her like I did. I took Leslie on a train once to see her when Leslie was a toddler and my grandma showered her with the same love she always gave me. I am convinced she will know her when she sees her now................
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
*FRAGRANCE MEMORIES*
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
*ANT GODS* (from Story People)
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
*FIGHTING CHANCE*
Monday, June 29, 2009
*GREAT GAME*
Saturday, June 20, 2009
*SPRING/SUMMER FRAGRANCE* from my Perfume Board
From a Friend in New Orleans:
The night-blooming jasmine. The magnolias and gardenias have already passed their seasons, but there is a signature green, dry smell of the magnolia foliage on humid nights.
From a Friend in Georgia:
Sage brush after the rain, mountain laurel and all sorts of green smells coming down in the breeze from the mountains. Wood smoke from camp fires. The olive trees just finished blooming here, talk about a heavenly, heady smell. Pine trees that smell piney and musky. Roses and lavender and mint growing in my garden. In Georgia in mid-June there is a steamy quality, a promise of a hot day, in the early morning. This steamy damp supports the fragrances of magnolia, gardenia and mimosa uncoiling from their blossoms.
The magnolia blossoms, huge and white, are like giant bows festooning a green and gold taffeta ball gown.
From a Friend in Coastal Virginia:
Honeysuckle blooming along the interstate. The salty, metallic smell of the ocean, the smell of road tar on really hot days, the heavy smell of afternoon thunderclouds. On the weekends, freshly cut grass, the pungency of English boxwood, saucer magnolias on the tree in my front yard. The smell of peaches and tomatoes at the farmer's markets. Jasmine blooming aling the fence in the garden, hamburgers and steaks on the grill. The ozone in the air during a thunderstorm, the green, dirty smell of tomato leaves and the sulphuric smell of strawberries, peach skins and dirt in the garden.
From a Friend in Canada:
Tar and wet cement! In the summer, our town is construction city...roadwork and building construction galore and the smell of tar permeates the air where roadwork is being done. Walking by the construction sites, the fabulous smell of cool, wet cement.
Monday, June 15, 2009
*A Memorable Tundra Night*
Sunday, June 14, 2009
*PEONIES IN THE MORNING*
and they open —pools of lace, white and pink
boring their deep and mysterious holes
to their dark, underground cities and all day
the flowers bend their bright bodies, and tip their fragrance to the air,
blazing open.
Do you also hurry, half-dressed and barefoot, into the garden,
with their honeyed heaviness, their lush trembling,
Saturday, June 13, 2009
*PIECES OF HERSELF*
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
"THESE DREAMS" by Heart
Saturday, May 30, 2009
*ELEANOR DUSE* a fragrance by Laura Tonnato
Two flowers have near-mythical status in Italy: TuscanIris (Iris Florentina), to which Iris Nobile by Acqua di Parma pays homage, and Parma Violet, the very first flower to blossom as winter draws to a close. The emblem of the city of Parma, chosen by Marie-Louise of Austria, Napoleon’s second wife, violet was also the flower of predilection of the celebrated 19 th-century actress Eleanora Duse. A rival of Sarah Bernhardt, she was famous for her portrayals of the lyric works of writer Gabriele d’Annunzio, with whom she lived a great passion. At the request of the organizers of an exhibit dedicated to “la Divina” in Rome in 2005, Laura Tonatto created E.Duse, an olfactory interpretation of the great actress’s artistic and personal temperament.
Today I am wearing "Eleanora Duse" created by Laura Tonnato. It is a wet, moist violet picked from the black earthy moss in the forest and it is gorgeous! This fragrance has been discontinued and very difficult to find, but oh so beautiful..................
Saturday, May 23, 2009
*SOUNDS THAT BRING ME COMFORT*
Sunday, April 26, 2009
*WHAT WILL HEAVEN SMELL LIKE?*
If I go by scripture, here’s some fragrances sure to be in heaven. (and this is just the beginning of a small study).
Sacred anointing oils, fragrant blends that are the work of a perfumer (who knows, that could be us, we may be able to learn the skill of a professional perfumer).
There will be spices and various blended perfumes.
There will be beautiful treatments prescribed for us, ie months with oil of myrrh and months with perfumes and cosmetics.
Beds will be perfumed with myrrh, aloes and cinnamon.
Perfume in heaven will bring joy to the heart
The very name of God will be like perfume poured out
When we are seated at God’s table, OUR own perfume will spread its fragrance
Our love toward God will be more pleasing than wine, and the fragrance of our aroma will be more beautiful to God than any spice
Heaven will smell like beds of spice yielding perfume, and lilies dripping with myrrh.
There will be very expensive perfume in heaven
We will be preparing spices and perfumes
Milk and honey will be under your tongue.
The fragrance of your garments will be like that of the cedars of Lebanon
You will be able to climb the palm tree and take hold of its fruit,
Your aroma will be like the clusters of the vine, and the fragrance of your breath like apples.
Mandrakes will send out their fragrance, and at our door will be every delicacy, both new and old.
They will have been stored up for us.
The spendor of heaven will be like an olive tree, and its fragrance like the cedars of Lebanon
There will definitely be lilies of the valley, and the Rose of Sharon.
Because we know God, there will be a triumphal procession in God and through us spread everywhere will be the fragrance of the knowledge of Him
We will be to God an aroma.
Won't this be a wonderful place for us all?
Friday, April 03, 2009
*SECRETE DATURA* by Matre Parfumeur de Gantier
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Welcome To Our Family, Allison McAllister
Monday, March 23, 2009
*APRES L'ONDEE* a gorgeous classic
*LYRIC RAIN* fragrance by Strange Invisible Fragrances
Testament
Oh, let it be a night of lyric rain
Kinder the busy worms than ever love;
Dorothy Parker
Monday, March 09, 2009
*MYRRHE ARDENTE* for a chilly Tundra morning
Friday, February 06, 2009
*SPRING FEVER* with a new fragrance
Myrrhe & MerveillesEau de Parfumby Keiko Mecheri
The ScoopA fragrance of contemplation and utter stillness, Myrrhe & Merveilles is strength wrapped in softness. Cool toned and powdery at first, Myrrhe’s musk and white almond join in a softly reserved dance on the opening…but unlike many fragrances in this class, this surprising perfume turns down the powdery, sudsy notes as it develops and turns up the sweet, resinous notes of myrrh and a whiff of jasmine. Smooth and unusual, Myrrh always remains a tad aloof…regal without being pompous, Myrrhe & Merveilles’ chilly demeanor is nothing short of compelling and beguiling. Its notes may be written out, but they combine in a way that can never be obvious…a true study in the ability of a fine fragrance to bring you in and fully captivate you without playing the easy card (warm, gourmand notes). Stunning!
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
*INAUGURATION DAY* a new beginning!!!
I am stoked today, so happy to spend my whole day watching the inauguration of our 44th president, Barack Hussein Obama. I never thought I would see this in my lifetime.
The city of Washington, D.C. is literally overflowing with millions of citizens anxious to watch this important and long overdue event.
It makes my heart proud to see people of all colors, ethnicities, religion, old, young and infirm celebrating and smiling.
I was so worried about my country, the United States of America over the past several years.
We were hated by other countries; considered arrogant, self-absorbed and pampered with all of our required possessions. We had unlimited credit for everyone, huge houses, cars and possessions that could not be afforded. The selfish and greedy of our people took full advantage of this time and made off with vast sums of money. We raped other countries just for oil to run our cars. Over 4000 of our finest died in a war that they didn't create, invading a country that didn't need invading, overthrowing a terrorist that was blamed for 911 instead of hunting for the one responsible.
I don't recall a time in my aged life when I lived in a country that was so divided, people against people, state against state and political party against the opposite one.
Even though the times in our country are laden with debt, unemployment, lack of healthcare for millions, families just fighting to exist, to eat or provide a roof over the heads of their children, we have HOPE! We have pride in our chosen leader, and we once again have faith in the United States of American. Better days are on their way, we are united as a country, finally.................
Thursday, January 01, 2009
*PERFUME AND THE MEMORY OF WAR*
"Perfume and the Memory of War -Erin Solaro
Having arrived (inevitably yet somewhat unexpectedly) on the high side of 40, and never having been a glamour queen, I've concluded that most makeup is a waste of time and money. The only exceptions are a few flattering lipstick shades, which will of course vary from woman to woman, and perfume.
For many of us, scent is powerfully linked to erotic memories: first kiss, first penetration, a particular lover or lover's gift or request. There are also other experiences, often less fondly remembered. Scent can trigger everything from afterglow to PTSD. For me, whenever I smell Prescriptives' fruity, mossy Calyx, I think of heavy armor. I was a freshly minted Army second lieutenant, wearing Calyx the first time I ever saw an M-1 tank move, and what a revelation that was: the perfect balance of mobility, armor and firepower.
And therein lies a larger connection.
Scent is, or should be, part of more than individual memory. Like wine, scent is part of cultural memory. And of historical memory. People sometimes have the opportunity to drink very old wine. Imagine pouring a vintage made from grapes picked by men who went off to die in the Great War, better known to us as World War I, and by the women who had no choice but to watch them go. Almost instinctively, we feel a bond. Almost instinctively, we want to drink to them.
Yet we do not think of perfume this way. Cultural memory is intellectual and bound up with the wars and other great events that have shaped Western civilization. Wine is part of culture, part of history, however tangential. Perfume is merely part of fashion. Fashion--couture--may be an important industry, but it is mainly associated with women and the men who dress them: a significant endeavor, sometimes of interest to historians, but hardly on a par with war and the memory of war. Or so we think. We know we drink to the long-ago dead but we rarely perfume ourselves in their honor.
I recently purchased off Ebay some old (at least 50 years) Chanel No. 5, still sealed. It was an unusual purchase. Back in the 80s, when I was studying tanks and poetry and kindred matters, I never liked Chanel No.5. I found it far too commercial, and far too subtle, compared to my favorite young woman's scents, such as Yves Saint Laurent's Opium and Calvin Klein's Obsession for Men, or for that matter Guerlain's Shalimar, which I still love. A few months ago, however, I tried Chanel No. 5 and liked it. Perhaps they've tweaked the composition; more likely, my tastes have evolved. Thus my purchase.
With scent like this, who needs makeup?
Please do not think of me as some educated nose who can intone, "Ahh, top notes of aldehydes and base notes of sandalwood, suffused throughout with jasmine" (which is in fact true of Chanel No. 5). I simply hold that Chanel No. 5 in parfum strength is a beautiful scent, drying down to some Platonic ideal of baby powder and the very softest kidskin, with, at least on my skin, just a hint of cool sweetness. I smell it and I connect to poetry. Not lovesong or commercial tripe, but lines from a Russian poet beloved since high school, a connection as unlikely, yet also as evocative, as smelling Calyx and thinking of tanks.
Rummaging in your black memory you findgloves up to the elbow,and the Petersburg night. And in the dark of the theater boxest hat stifling sweet smell. Wind from the gulf. And there between the lines, shunning the 'ahs' and the 'ohs,'Blok will smile at you contemptuously--the tragic tenor of the age.
If you love scent, two of the great houses are Guerlain and Caron. My introduction to Guerlain was Shalimar as a girl; my introduction to Caron as a woman was Nuit de Noel. Two very beautiful scents that I almost instinctively related to military history, as I have Guerlain's Djedi, which I have never smelled.
To smell the scents of the great perfume houses of Guerlain and Caron from say, 1910 all the way through the middle of the century, is to smell sorrow upon sorrow. Sometimes that sorrow is anticipated, in a perfume such as L'Heure Bleue, the blue hour of Parisian evenings. Sometimes it is as fresh as blood, as in N'Aimez Que Moi ("Love Only Me"). The poilus, French soldiers traveling such routes as the Voie Sacrée to Verdun, gave this scent to women they hoped would remain faithful to them. The women hoped that if they wore it and their lovers survived, they would return to them in a land more and more bereft of its young men. And sometimes that sorrow is remembered, as in Nuit de Noel, when the men who died should have been with their parents and sisters, the women they never married and the children they never raised. It is sorrow for the fair and the brave, ruined and broken and bereft before their time, the dead and their survivors.
Often the sorrow is for the young men slaughtered. Sometimes, as in Shalimar, it is for women. The scent is named after the Shalimar Gardens of Lahore, which Shah Jahan created for his wife, Mumtaz Mahal, who died giving birth to their thirteenth child. Until well into the 20th century, childbirth was to women what war was to men. With one exception. For men, war was an episodic horror. For women, it was routine decimation. Do the phrases strike you as odd? Isn't war supposed to be the routine decimation, childbirth the episodic horror? Think again. I did, after returning from Afghanistan in 2005 and discovering that, statistically, a modern Afghan woman has a greater chance of dying in childbirth than a World War II American infantryman did of dying in battle. How many of those men, I wonder, brought back French perfume for their women, or died with bottles in their packs, perhaps broken open by enemy fire.
Then there is Jacques Guerlain's masterpiece, Djedi, from 1927.
Djedi was the legendary magician of ancient Egypt. Pharaoh Khufu, the god-king, had brought Djedi to court to entertain his courtiers. Pharaoh wanted to see if Djedi could rejoin a severed human head to its body. Djedi said he could, and Pharaoh commanded a prisoner be brought in and decapitated for his amusement. But Djedi refused, saying, "Do not do this to a human being, my sovereign lord: surely it is not permitted to do such a thing to one of the noble herd of God." Pharaoh agreed and permitted Djedi to rejoin the head of a duck to its body instead.
For those who have been lucky enough to smell it, Djedi is the strangest perfume ever created, and often the most beautiful.
It opens with scents of stone and mineral. One might think of camel thorn bleaching in the desert sun, or smoke rising into the desert sky. Then it opens into rose and iris, vetiver and spice, beautiful and brief, before melding into leather and bitter herbs, and musk that is both animal and powdery and that to some people smells of roasting meat. One might, if one is so inclined, think of burning tanks and what happens to the crew inside, or of dead infantrymen. Indeed, some people note a scent of putrefaction, even of feces.
The overwhelming impressions of Djedi are of a regal beauty that is conquered by terrible grief, a beauty that does not stoop to weeping or pleading, but is broken to standing ruins like a shattered sword.
To name a perfume for women--wealthy, cultured, aristocratic women--after a mythical Egyptian magician who is remembered to us for upholding the human dignity of a condemned prisoner was the act of a great perfumer who understood that he was living in a civilization that had no serious defenders.
We live now as they did in 1912 (L'Heure Bleue) and 1922 (Nuit de Noel), or 1925 (Shalimar) and in 1927 (Djedi). We are living through the beginning of the ending of our world. Our civilization is slipping away, perhaps also towards some dreadful cataclysm. Everyone knows the catalogue of perils, from terrorism and climate change to lunatic wars and the lunatic debt that funds our wars. And how long can we pretend that reality will conform to our fantasies, so long as we keep up the pretense?
We talk now of failed states, but Europe of the first half of the 20th century was a failed continent, a failed civilization. And the great scents of those decades, the Guerlains and the Chanels and the Carons are suffused with mourning for that civilization, every bit as much as they were also suffused with, for example, the images of Jazz Age flappers daringly smoking in public, as Tabac Blond is.
When those of us who will survive the coming decades look back, what will be the scent we associate with these last ephemeral years?
Fantasy and Curious "by" Britney Spears, perhaps. And Heiress and Paris Hilton "by" Paris Hilton, perhaps also. Fruity, sweet, without staying power, "girly."
Unserious.
Unwomanly.
Uncivilized."