Anonymous wrote:It may be how your nose smells certain smells.
My husband confounds sweat and urine smells with tomato sauce smells.
So I let him pick all the spaghetti sauce we cook.
There are known chemical similarities between parmesan cheese and vomit. Some people don't like parmesan cheese because of that smell.
That would be my guess as to your grapefruit scent...it's a compound you smell in sweat or greasy hair.
Anonymous wrote:I am a daily hiker and super smeller - I can smell each person as they pass by me and smell cologne on the parent next to me as we sit outside at a youth sports event.
Career in public service and I think I know the grapefruit odor - there’s also a distinctive earthy, vaguely milky odor I detect on Asians, typically Chinese men.
Figured out quickly that a colleague is an alcoholic - perpetual rank odor emanating from pores and hair - worse in morning.
Then there’s the cigarette smokers. Not standard freshly lit cigarette smell but a deep, carbony stale smell.
First cold snap of the season means the elderly are getting their winter coats out of moth ball storage and I’m gagging. Makes no sense but this is the odor that is my undoing.
Anonymous wrote:It may be how your nose smells certain smells.
My husband confounds sweat and urine smells with tomato sauce smells.
So I let him pick all the spaghetti sauce we cook.
There are known chemical similarities between parmesan cheese and vomit. Some people don't like parmesan cheese because of that smell.
That would be my guess as to your grapefruit scent...it's a compound you smell in sweat or greasy hair.
Jaysus!!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Older people seem to develop a particular body odor I’ve noticed. It even seems to be culturally specific - maybe depending on diet, hormone levels, etc.
That is true but different. That is the smellnof decay from their interior. Usually expressed through breath or sweat.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe you are like this woman and can smell disease....
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/03/23/820274501/her-incredible-sense-of-smell-is-helping-scientists-find-new-ways-to-diagnose-di