Our house was
filled with the smell of baking delights last night as we made some cakes to
take to a Macmillan Coffee morning today.
With work, I wasn't able to attend the coffee morning in person, so we
popped the cakes across before work and school and made our donation.
It’s funny how a
smell can take you to another place isn't it?
I had a
firelighter in one of the kitchen cupboards over the summer, in preparation for
a BBQ. Each time I opened the drawer
above the cupboard I smelt the odour that kind of paraffin scent and it took
me there. It took me to Uganda .
There are lots of
smells that remind me of Uganda .
Little scent
triggers can crop up at any moment of the day and I feel like I’m there. I can even relate it to certain aspects of a
visit.
We went to the Welsh History
Museum , St Fagan’s, over
the summer. As we walked past the old
houses, with their fires fiercely burning, I am reminded of Uganda . That fire in the air scent. Everyone out in the villages; open air
kitchens; Ugandan cooking all around.
It’s not quite ‘THE’ smell, you need a trip to Uganda to experience it for
yourself, but it’s a close enough match.
Smells can be a
trigger for our children’s memories too.
For lil Miss L,
it’s rice boiling on the hob. As the
steam rises, she breathes it in and voices that it’s her memory of Uganda . It’s a good memory.
There are many
more too. Not all of them will be
good. Not all of them we will be aware
of. Just knowing they exist is a help as
we can support our children in reliving the good and working through the not so
good memories as they dance through their minds.
We all have our
own personal scent memories from our childhoods. What’s yours?
Most of them will be opportunities to recall happy times but when our
children didn’t have the best start in life, we have to be mindful that a scent
can trigger an upsetting memory. We
can’t stop that from happening but we can help manage the reaction and offer reassurance
that the time has passed and is in the past.
We can also offer opportunities to link new memories to old scents and
create a new catalogue of recollection. We
very often fill our house with the aroma of Ugandan cooking and then have a
good time sharing with friends or simply being together as family.
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