“It’s the closest thing we poor creatures have to magic, my dear – the ability to be transported through time by a waft of scent that unlocks a memory.” – Jason Fry
On a recent warm Spring Friday night, my kids and I walked up to a local burger joint. It’s six city blocks away and the walk held its own sense of nourishment as we looked at flowers, stopped to talk with neighbors, and chatted about some of our favorite memories that this route holds. Like the time when Miss O was three-years-old and got a Wonder Woman shaped balloon made for her by a balloon animal vendor at the farmer’s market. Then as we walked home, she rubbed it along a picket fence, popped one of Wonder Woman’s legs, and burst into tears for the rest of the way home.
The weather was in the high-60’s and we scored an outside table under the awning at the local burger place. As we sat there waiting for our food and watching the other people in line, ten-year-old Miss O noticed big splotches of rain dotting the pavement. She said, “I think it’s raining.” A surprise because it wasn’t in the forecast.
And then I was hit with the smell of rain, noticeable even amidst the odor of the bacon and burgers emanating from the restaurant. I replied, “Oh yes, I can smell it.”
Miss O questioned, “Rain doesn’t have a smell. What does it smell like?”
Her query launch a flood (pun intended) of sense memories. The sound of the wooden typhoon boards being slotted into place when we lived in the Philippines when I was a child. The electricity in the air when the weather shifts on a mountain. And from Eastern Washington where I went to high school, the smell of a crop field absorbing the first drops of rain.
As I contemplated the words to describe what rain smells like, she exclaimed, “I smell it!” And I smiled knowing that she was starting her own memory file named The Smell of Rain. The first entry is a warm Spring Friday night in the neighborhood she grew up in.
(featured photo is from Pexels)
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Beautifully written. The way scent ties moments to memory is truly remarkable, and you captured it so vividly here. “The smell of rain” becoming part of your daughter’s memory file is such a tender and meaningful image. 🌧️
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Thank you for the lovely comment! I appreciate it!
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In intimate, tender set of memories. One of mine is alfalfa, which is attached to my childhood. Thanks, Wynne.
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Ah, that’s so rich. Thank you, Dr. Stein!
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What a fun and nicely written story (unless you’re the Wonder Woman balloon, then it’s probably traumatic😁)! Great post Wynne!
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I’m laughing, Todd. That balloon guy was amazing – it was quite a good Wonder Woman…until it wasn’t. 🙂 Thanks, my friend!
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😁😁
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I’ve always been fascinated by memory tied into smells. You’ve written about that beautifully.
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It’s fascinating, isn’t it? Thanks for the lovely comment, Gwen!
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Aroma can be very powerful in evoking feelings and memories. Or just for pleasure like when I stop to smell flowers. 🌷😃
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Ah, you said it perfectly, Brad! So true!
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Memories are precious entities, all the more so as we grow older. Kudos to you, Wynne, for guiding your children to store away these moments as jewels to be treasured!
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What a beautiful comment, Nancy! Thank you – I’m grateful for your encouragement!
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This gave me goosebumps, Wynne. Yes, rain really does have a distinct smell, and so many incredible memories tied to it… and you’ve awoken mine this morning. 😊
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What a sweet comment. Thank you, Erin!
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Your closing paragraph brought tears to my eyes, so beautiful, Wynne! You made me start searching my own scent memory files.
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And now I have tears in my eyes. Thank you, Dana!
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Yes, I love the scent of petrichor released by rain. Thank you for sharing Miss O’s you and your family’s scent memory experiences.
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Jan, you’ve brought up the one reason I know the word “petrichor.” Thank you for the lovely comment!
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I love the way families have their own ‘do you remember when’ stories that remain as an important part of family folklore. I talk to my brothers about our parents and childhood… Our children remind us of stuff that happened forty years ago… and we listen to grandchildren recalling their own family memories. It’s a truly precious part of family life.
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Precious — such a great word for it. Your description is so good – family folklore that brings us together. Thank you, Malcolm!
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Oh my! Powerful…and what a closing thought! Peeking into Miss O’s future! ❤️❤️❤️
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Thank you, my dear friend!! ❤ ❤ ❤
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😉❤️😉
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Such an earthy, heavenly scent. The first time I visited Tara in Nevada, a sudden shower popped up over the desert, and she rolled down the window to breathe in the scent of rain-soaked sagebrush. There’s nothing like it in the world.
(Thank you for unlocking my own Smell of Rain memory file!)
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Oh wow – what a memory! I love it, Mark!
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A good scent is a quiet memory, and the sweet smell of rain is a great one to file away!
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A quiet memory – I like that, Mary! Thank you!
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Beautiful, Wynne! Yes, “The first entry is a warm Spring Friday night in the neighborhood she grew up in”—with my wonderful mom, who taught me that rain has a smell.
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Ah, thank you, my friend!
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You’re so welcome.
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For me, rain, especially summer rain, has a distinct smell of rest, recharge and renovation. It also smells of afternoon naps, a movie under a comforter with a bowl of popcorn, and slowing down. It’ll be interesting to see the memories Miss O starts to associate with the scent of rain.
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Slowing down — I love that, Ab! And the fondest for summer rain — yes, that’s the best! Thanks for these wonderfully rich descriptions!
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isn’t that wonderful? sensory memories are the best. and to hear your daughter begin to experience (and remember) the world this way is such a joy
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They are the best! You said it perfectly!
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ahh yes; learnt theterm for this decades ago through my learned friend, Neil: ‘petrichor’
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A great word!! Thank you, John!
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The smell of rain evokes such pleasant feelings. Yesterday, was our grandson’s birthday. It was a great day, but after the party, there was a huge rainstorm that included high winds and hail. It wasn’t exactly rain smelling weather as the sirens were going off for tornadoes in the area, which thankfully didn’t happen.
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A year already?!! Amazing, Pete!! Good point about not all weather being conducive for smelling. Glad you all are okay! Happy birthday to your amazing grandson and his parents!!
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Nice! I love how Miss O was able to put a name to something, and how you’re seeing it as the beginning of a lovely memory file.
I love all the different smells of rain, well except for some smells which are smellier when the rain hits. When I first moved to Tucson it was raining and folks were taking in deep breaths and exclaiming how they love how the desert smells in the rain. My daughter and I had looked at each other and has wrinkled our noses. Yuck, it smelled like manure to us! A year or so later, we too were inhaling deeply when it rained, the smell having grown on us. Now it is a cherished memory.
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I love this memory, Tamara. I’m laughing — thank you so much for sharing!
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My pleasure!
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Rain does have a special kinda smell. Thanks for reminding me/us.
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It certainly does! Thanks for the comment!
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That’s the best kind of memory, YK the ones that arrive on their own terms. Also the Wonder Woman balloon story living in the same walk I love that those streets hold all of that. Beautiful post ❤️
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The streets hold it — such a good way to put it, Ritish! Yes!
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When we have heavy rain here after a long “El Nino”, we smell a different rain and changing season. Beautiful memories soon, O.
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Love how you say you smell a changing season. So good, Hazel!
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The word for the aroma after rain hits dry ground is petrichor. I discovered that word when I wrote a blog post about the scent here when it rains. It’s the creosote bushes that make such a strong fragrance. Memories are so tied to scents. One of mine was our cabin on the Stillaguamish River. I brought home some cloth bags from our cabin before we tore it down and kept them in my hallway closet in Palm Springs. They carried the scents of memories from my childhood staying in our cabin.
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Love the memories tied to your cabin, Elizabeth! How beautiful — and precious!
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Ah yes. The sweet smell of petrichor. There’s nothing like it. Isn’t it amazing how smells can bring back memories?
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Those associations are so strong, aren’t they? Thanks, Michelle!
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The nostalgic memories and the new memories being made, what a sweet bridge you created between the two.
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Thank you, Rose!
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love the smell of rain- and the idea of memory files!! x
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Thank you, Linda!
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🌞
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I love the smell of rain, especially if you are in the nature. I’m not sure that now rain brings me back memories because it rains too often in Brussels 🤣
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Ah, that’s so true. Those memory files are full! 🙂 Thanks, Cristiana!
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I love this so much, Wynne!
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