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| Week
Seventy-Eight: |
Using
Fragrances to Shift States |
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I was at a meeting a couple of weeks ago, where one of my colleagues was
showing us some new aromatherapy scents she has recently begun to use.
One of them was balsam. As I sniffed in the fragrance of the balsam oil,
I was immediately transported back to a pine woods in the Berkshire hills
of Massachusetts, where I lived for a couple of years. I used to go to
the pine woods to meditate and, the moment I registered the scent of balsam,
I was back there, settled in, sitting under tall pine trees, shafts of
sunlight shining through, pine needles under me. The stillness of the
woods again surrounded me, sending a message all through my body-mind
being to relax and settle.
It was a delicious moment and reminded me of the psychological power of
fragrances, scents, and odors. It also reminded me of the ways in which
we can choose to use certain scents to shift from anxiety or distress
to deeper experiences of comfort. For some people, the smell of cinnamon
reminds them of quiet times in childhood, or the fragrance of peppermint
draws them immediately into a cozy, comfortable state of mind. Whenever
I smell roses, I’m back in my grandmother’s rose garden, surrounded
by the color and scent of these beautiful flowers. Each of us has different
associations to scents – those that settle us into experiences of
comfort and those that remind us of scary or painful times.
For this week’s experiment, allow yourself to explore which scents
give you an opportunity to settle in, relax, become calmer and more comfortable.
I carry bottles of aromatherapy scents with me to use as I go through
the day that help me feel more alert when I need to, or relax if I move
in the direction of tension.
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