Body Parts: Who Knows What the Nose Knows? Ask Me When I’m Older

Dr. Janet HoultOP-ED

[Editor’s Note: This is the 10th in a series of poems from “Body Parts,” Dr. Janet Hoult’s collection of poetry about aging.]

The Nose Knows or Does It?

Do you smell what I smell?

    A smoky, subtle scent is in the air

    Is it your perfume or your hair?

    No, it’s the fire beneath the stair!

Oh nose, you do not serve me well.

Can you sniff what I sniff?

    Is it lemonade with a tangy odor?

    Is it something for which I need a decoder?

    It’s just cleaning liquid spilled on the floor.

Oh nose, please help me tell the diff!

Why don’t you work like you used to do?

You’re not much better than my shoe

In providing me the ability to tell

The differences in everything I smell.

I guess our age decreases the intensity

Of aromas for which we once had

    the propensity

We’d sniff and sense

    the many lovely fragrances

That lured and promised

    marvelous romance

But now we live with just

­the vague remembrances

Of scents our senses

no longer can enhance.

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Ms. Hoult, who lives in Carlson Park with her husband Charlie, may be contacted at HOULTight@aol.com
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