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How to Address Hidden Odors in Your Home

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How to Address Hidden Odors in Your Home

Do You Smell Something?

Ever been taken aback with this question when someone new enters your home for the first time? Nice change of subject there, but they wouldn’t have asked the question if they didn’t smell SOMETHING. What do they smell? Why can’t I smell it? Is my smeller broken?

Your home most certainly has a particular scent or blend of scents – all homes do. If you’re unable to detect a certain individual scent in your home, you may be experiencing something known as “olfactory fatigue.” This doesn’t mean that your nose has necessarily gotten tired; it just means that your smeller may have become numb to certain nuances of smell over time.

Breaking Down Olfactory Fatigue

Olfactory fatigue happens all the time, and sometimes it can even happen fairly quickly. For example, have you ever shopped in a store with many varieties of strong scents, like perfume or scented candles? You can smell two or three, but before long it’s hard to tell the difference between any of them. They all just seem to run together, and it’s as if the individual scents have disappeared!

The unique scent blend inside each of our homes features a combination of all the scented products we use on ourselves and in our home, but it also involves so much more. It also includes your furniture, bedding, decorative pillows, body oil and sweat deposits, all of your possessions, dust and dander from people and pets, cooking odors that linger, even the very materials of which our homes are constructed. This is one reason why I shop for low or no VOC materials whenever possible… but that’s a topic for a whole different column some other time.

The Funk You Didn’t Know You Had

Bad odors can grow in your home over time, starting out as something subtle which gradually gets stronger. But because people acclimate to odors, it’s possible for someone to be effectively unfazed by a strong odor that would otherwise offend most visitors! Certain air fresheners and scented candles only serve to mask the odor; others may actually help clean the air, but they still won’t eliminate the source.

Time to Root Out That Funk

To help find the source of the smell in your house, bring in a trusted confidante who can be brutally honest, and who also has a strong sense of smell. You could opt to choose a more objective, scientific approach – bring in an air quality expert who can take samples of the air inside your home and analyze it.

Some More Things You Can Try

If you’re determined to get to the bottom of this yourself, consider the air flow of your house. Odors rise from bottom to top, and they tend to travel along with the prevalent interior air currents. While there are more scientific ways to measure, a simple thing you can try is to light a match or spray perfume in one room and see if your friend can smell it in another. With this trial-and-error approach, you might be able to uncover the root causes of a particular odor.

Don’t Let That Funk Sabotage Your Home

I hope these tips for finding that lurking funk are helpful! I’d love to hear what things work for you in your journey of olfactory discovery. With a little luck and a little persistence, you can have your home smelling great again in no time!

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