My mum died very early on the morning of September 9, 2013.
The night before, we had driven to the hospital twice, with the nurses telling us they thought this was it.
Her large, bland hospital rooms were filled with colour and love whenever she was in there. Fake flowers, millions of photos, a canvas covered in multicoloured permanent marker with words of strength from every loved one who entered the room. Everyone knows that hospital smell... the pressed linen and weird hot food, the sanitiser and the smells of hope, but also devastation. Every time I set foot in the Hollywood Hospital, I smelled all of that, until I crossed the threshold of my mum’s room, where it smelled like Mum.
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The smell association in our brain is incredibly powerful. It’s like how we can study while smelling eucalyptus and then sniff a eucalyptus-drenched tissue in an exam and the answers will come flooding back, or smell the air before rain and feel like we’re falling in love. Mum’s signature scent was J’adore by Dior. Every snuggle, every smooch, every time I hopped into her car after school, every tear-filled breakdown, was accompanied by that perfume. It’s something that, when I smell it now, can bring me comfort but also send me to my knees, depending on the day.
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