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BPAL Madness!
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Noses, rationalizations and songs

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valentina

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I have been reading through the blog and forum comments about how people react to the new update scents. I really enjoy that, it's fun to read. Seriously, we're all so attuned to scents and body chemistry and blends of aromas, it's pretty amazing. Compared to the rest of the world, it's astonishing. A lot of you have really sophisticated noses. I would guess that many of you are the type of person who sniffs their food. I could get a latte with flavoring in it, but not know what the flavor is, and I'm not always able to discern the flavor by only the taste. But if I smell it, I can almost always get the flavor category.

 

Many of us tend to get on ourselves about our BPAL addiction, and I'm certainly on that bandwagon. I showed a small amount of restraint this last update, although when you read what I did, you may not think so, but one person's restraint is another person's abandon, right? I got into a decant circle (eviltemptressd's!) so I can try out 6 or 7 of the Yule scents before I order. The new 13 sounded intriguing, so I did get a bottle. And as much as I wanted to buy bottles of Love Lies Bleeding, Mania and Horreur Sympathique, I ordered them in an imp package, because I've always wanted to try out Nosferatu, Miskatonic U and La Petite Mort. This will be fun, so much to sample!

 

I think BPAL is wonderful because it challenges us to use the wiring that's there in our brains to distinguish certain smells. This is something that the human brain can do (obviously, because even my brain can do it!), but it's not frequently needed for survival in the modern world. So rather than letting it sit and molder, we use it for our pleasure. So there's a very Gil Grissom-like rationalization for buying the shit out of BPAL. And as Ani DiFranco said, fuck guilt!

 

I haven't written a lot in the blog lately because I was rather -- oh, what should I say? -- spent. Last week was one of those weeks when everyone was interested in confessing things to me, wanting me to be their therapist or plugging into my energy. Whatever you want to call it, people were there, almost like zombies. I did have a relatively beneficial and mutual conversation with the guy at the coffee house (Mr. "Wandering Gypsy") about how he writes lyrics to his songs. He said something very similar to interviews that I've read with other singer/songwriters, who say that it's just channeled to them. They can't explain it any other way. They sit and write endless crap and then, standing at the refrigerator, something amazing downloads in their brain and they run over, find a piece of paper and write the lyrics to an entire song. I read an interview with Greg Brown, who said he had an entire album come to him as he was driving home in the dark; it was like he had the radio on, listening to new music, but he didn't -- it was in his head.

 

The psychology folks say that's just the left brain letting go and the right brain taking over, but my friend (and a lot of other songwriters) don't think it's that simple and/or simply biological. I read a book where a number of neurologists and researchers said that when one riddle of the brain is solved, it also leads them to discover that there's 10 more things that they don't understand. I don't think we'll ever figure it out, and why should we? Maybe the mystery isn't ours to understand.

 

And I'll get off that kick and close by saying that I tried my imp of Has No Hanna last Wednesday night when I thought a little boost would help. And if what happened afterwards was any indication, I can't explain it, nor do I want to, but it worked... ;)

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I like reading everyone else's first impressions too, and then I get excited when reviews start popping up.

 

You hit it on the head (har!) when you said BPAL challenges our minds to sniff and savor and experience. Writing a review is like a brain-teaser, trying to describe how something smells :)

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I was just thinking earlier today about how I used to think about blends/notes back in February when I was waiting on my first imp packs from the Lab. I read tons of reviews and entered comments into my spreadsheet like "A lot of people say this smells strongly of jasmine. I don't know what jasmine smells like though."

 

I do know what it smells like now (in perfume, anyway)... along with a slew of other things, many of which I'd never heard of before. Benzoin? Neroli? Tonka? I would have guessed those were pharmaceutical products.

 

But anyway, I remember reading reviews in which the reviewer described the exact notes she smelled in order from the wet stage to drydown, and I thought that this forum must be full of bizarre people with strangely precise noses. But with a little practice, I turned into one of those bizarre people too.

 

A few of my friends/family think I'm absolutely nuts to have about 600 samples and 200 bottles of perfume. They point out I can't wear it all. They scoff at the money I spend. I point out that my husband has several boxes of comic books he never reads and spent a lot of money on. This happens to be what I like to collect. I get as much enjoyment from a truly beautiful scent as I get from a really good book -- just in a different way.

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