I have a very powerful sense of smell.

  • @idiomaddict@feddit.de
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    1 month ago

    I was telling an ex about smelling my coworker’s fear all day. He had a crush on me (it was a call center, so not an especially professional environment), and we had to share my cubicle for training, and he was just pouring out anxiety sweat. My ex had no idea what the fuck I was talking about and I’ve never met someone else who can identify the emotions that a person has by their sweat.

    Saying someone “can smell fear” is a normal thing that comes up a lot in media, so I assumed it was also normal to notice. Apparently not. I’ll take all of the help my autistic ass can get in iding others’ emotions though

    • @Armok_the_bunny@lemmy.world
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      930 days ago

      Oh hey, I remember Mythbusters did a thing on that years ago, got a professional sniffer in who was almost consistently able to detect samples of fear sweat out of a lineup of sweat samples. So yeah, fear smell is absolutely a thing if you know what to sniff for.

    • @Aggravationstation@feddit.uk
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      71 month ago

      I always thought when people talked about “smelling fear” it was just a poetic way of saying it was obvious that someone was afraid. I’ve certainly never been aware of picking up on a person’s emotions via scent or heard someone say that they’ve done that.

      • @idiomaddict@feddit.de
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        1 month ago

        Can you smell it on yourself? Like, do you find that your sweaty clothes smell the same after a run and, say, a presentation (or something else that gives you anxiety/scares you)? I think it’s most noticeable with my own sweat, but fear/anxiety sweat smells bad to me in a way that normal body odor or exercise sweat don’t.

        Sex sweat also smells very different, but that’s normally more pleasant to me than the others. I haven’t noticed a specific smell of aggression or any other kind of sweat though.

        Edit: I think you’re right that “smelling fear” is metaphoric, but I did not realize that until I started talking about it.

            • @Hadriscus@lemm.ee
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              229 days ago

              That’s crazy to me. I’m just learning all this. I barely have a sense of smell so distinguishing between different kinds of sweats is probably entirely out of my reach. I’ll try and train it still

    • @Sunrosa@lemmy.world
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      430 days ago

      It smells kind of sour in my experience and i believe I’ve been able to smell it in my childhood pet bird as well as my wife

      • @idiomaddict@feddit.de
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        429 days ago

        Yeah, it smells like battery acid to me. It’s fucking wild if birds use the same chemical signals as we do

    • @NationProtons@sh.itjust.works
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      229 days ago

      This is kinda interesting to me. I can pretty easily notice it with myself (If I’m scared for a presentation or calling with somebody). But I don’t think I’ve every been able to identify it in somebody else

    • credit crazy
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      221 days ago

      Now I had the opposite thought because I thought it was normal for people and I was the only one who couldn’t lol

    • livus
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      71 month ago

      If there’s a food source they’re all over, it will smell like that even when they leave.

    • teft
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      31 month ago

      Worse than the girl who kills people by a touch?

      • @Hux@lemmy.ml
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        41 month ago
        • Suddenly makes a game of “tag” way more high-stakes—and FUN!

        • Don’t have to feel guilty about boiling your lobsters alive.

        • Ticks and mosquitoes? Never an issue.

        I’ll admit it makes petting zoos a tragic affair, but what the hell good is “smelling” ants?

  • @juliebean@lemm.ee
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    81 month ago

    i only found out they had a smell a couple years ago, and i’m in my 30s. not because i can’t smell them though, but just because i hadn’t noticed it before.

  • @Halasham@dormi.zone
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    61 month ago

    Yeah… I can barely smell at all. Even normally strong smells like that of the urine of an unfixed male cat aren’t particularly impactful to me. I wouldn’t have even considered the potentiality that ants have a distinctive smell in spite of being aware that they use pheromone trails for navigation.

  • Onii-Chan
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    41 month ago

    I’ve always been able to smell them. I can’t believe there are people out there who can’t. My world has been rocked.

    • @lars@lemmy.sdf.org
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      130 days ago

      Non-ant-smeller here. Can you smell them before you see them? Or is the smell usually after you see them?

      • Onii-Chan
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        230 days ago

        For me it’s usually only after they’ve died. They have this bitter, extremely unpleasant acidic smell to them.

  • @carbon_based@sh.itjust.works
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    221 days ago

    Yes, it’s known that humans have individually different sets of smell (and taste) receptors. So it wouldn’t surprise me that some people would be able to smell ant trail/nest pheromones and the like. I’d guess it has less to do with formic acid though, as they do not regularly release that (it’s used mainly for defense). Some people may be really triggered by the smell of certain flowers while most people would barely notice them. I my self recently developed a sensitivity to some certain chemical that appears to be in many cleaning agents, and it’s very disturbing to find that disgusting smell in so many public places, dishwashing detergents, hair shampoos.

    This phenomenon comes apparent a lot with foods and spices. My great example is coriander (cilantro): half of the people like the herb but for the rest it has a soapy taste so much that any food that contains coriander leaves is spoilt for them. Coriander seeds however, do not contain that specific compound. I’m one who can’t stand the herb but very much likes the seeds as a spice.

    Related and very interesting is also, is individually different bouquets of mating pheromones which are also present in humans (but perception is mostly subliminary). Those are connected to individual genetic sets of the immune system, a place where genetic variability and mixing is of great advantage. We choose our partners by (being able to) smell, more than we are aware of.

    Infodump? … Infodump.