Le Nez (The Nose) and Why We should Protect it.
I've been thinking about the nose. (NB: it has been a topic of controversy here in NoFla).
(Getty Images)
Sensing Scent
When I moved to
Charlottesville, Virginia. in my twenties, I was fresh off of a year of teaching in
France. I took a job at a small Provençal restaurant on East Main St., across from the train station, in-between the University of Virginia campus and the downtown area.
It was called Lavande.
One diner who frequented
the restaurant made a major sensorial impact on me. When I placed her plat principal (main course) before her, she would raise her hands over the dish as if to contain and direct the scent
flowing from the steaming repast to her nostrils. She would meditate over the
fumes, taking in the subtle smells from the mélange of
herbs, garlic, olive oil, wine, and other varied ingredients prior to lifting a
fork. It was an olfactory meditation,
devoted to an engagement with multifarious messages traveling between the diner
and her dish. I always took a step back from her before interrupting this
sacred moment in time. I now think of her whenever a dish talks to me in such a
way that all inner chatter is interrupted, and I surrender to the odor rising
up through my nostrils, making its sacred passage to the brain, with all of its
stories.
Emma Bovary's narines
Flash forward. One of my many brilliant professors at the University of Virginia graduate program in French is pointing out the number of times Flaubert mentions Emma Bovary's narines (nostrils). I find myself uncomfortable contemplating the cavernous, dark entryways highlighted on the face of this famous protagonist. Throughout the analysis, I'm aware that narines have always on some level contained an element of deep mystery to me. Why had I gone this long without realizing their primary importance to our breathing apparatus, to our energy, to our life itself?
The experience I had with the ENT doctor in Williamsburg, VA, when I had moved on to my first job as Visiting Professor only aggravated my misunderstanding. I was no doubt driven to this appointment by an allergy of some kind to the local flora in spring causing sensory deprivation and listlessness. He took one look up my nostrils and said I had a "massively deviated septum." This deviation was interfering with the airflow on one side of my nose. It was a really important discovery. I'm just starting to put all of the dots together.
One take-away I have from such a close look inside of my nose is that nose-breathing, and breathing itself, is very personal, (and this is a sensitive area all the more in these times).
Snhorror
As a child, I had been ruthlessly teased by my siblings for a low-level but persistent noise I made while breathing and sleeping (the French noun for "snore" is the onomatopoeic 'ronflement', and the verb is ronfler (to snore). It occurs to me now that I probably suppressed a negative feeling about my own nostrils as a result of this medical issue. Could that have led to my own underuse of the lovely sensory gift of smell?
Peut-être
Maybe.
Yet it may not entirely be "on me". Smell seems more often tied to taboo than to pleasure in the culture I was born into, where anything overly pungent is often considered abject. Am I wrong?
Smeller
And now, in the era of
CV-19, suddenly the sense of smell is at the forefront of our collective
consciousness. We are more aware of when and what we can smell well, or the
exact opposite. We wonder when our smell will return. We test through the
nostrils, realizing how tender they are, wondering what is going on up there.
We think about the distance of the nostrils to the brain. We dwell on the
traveling of that disease from a cumulative set of societal nostrils to the
space we share. All the while we breathe in, we breathe out, of our nostrils
(ideally).
So what is a
nose?
I looked into it further, and felt seen
by the nose researchers at healthline.com (Feb 1, 2021) who wrote the first
line:
"The
importance of your nose often goes unnoticed — until you have a bad
cold. A stuffed-up nose can reduce your quality of life. It can also affect
your ability to sleep well and function in general.
The
nose produces nitric oxide, which improves your lungs’ ability to absorb
oxygen.
Nitric
oxide increases the ability to transport oxygen throughout your body, including
inside your heart. It relaxes vascular smooth muscle and allows blood vessels
to dilate.
Nitric
oxide is also antifungal, antiviral, antiparasitic, and antibacterial. It helps
the immune system to fight infections."
This
helpful graph pointed out the importance of nose breathing vs. only mouth
breathing (normally, people do some of each):
Advantages of nose breathing
- The
nose acts as a filter and retains small particles in the air, including
pollen.
- The
nose adds moisture to the air to prevent dryness in the lungs and
bronchial tubes.
- The
nose warms up cold air to body temperature before it gets to your lungs.
- Nose
breathing adds resistance to the air stream. This increases oxygen uptake
by maintaining the lungs’ elasticity.
My interest in the nose reached a new height prior to the pandemic. I had begun studying Ayurveda, which introduced me to a clarifying product that helped me breathe in a way I didn't know was possible: "Super Nasya." I learned to drop it into my nostrils first thing in the morning, inviting oxygen in:
"Yogis
believe the nose is a direct route to the brain and the entrance for the
breath, or prana. Having healthy breathing passageways is considered essential
for the efficient passage of prana into the body."
After
using these life-changing drops, I have an entirely different understanding of
the sacred nature of these portals to the brain and entire respiratory system.
Scent
and Memory
As I
wind down this meander, I go back to France in 1988. My sister and I are
promenading down a street together in Strasbourg when we pass an ivy-covered
building and freeze in our footsteps. "Mrs. Oliver's Garage" we say at the same time.
Mrs. Oliver was our neighbor at our first childhood home in Urbana, IL when we were growing up. She allowed the neighborhood children to use her garage as a play and dress-up area, and we practically lived there after school. It held a particular odor that, we learned, was forever embedded in our memories, and yet available for instant recall. How magical we should have this all-encompassing moment in the same country where Proust remembered the perfume of madeleines and where Pierre Nora made famous the concept of Lieux de mémoire or memory sites.
I've been thinking about the nose-- and have a lot more to learn and to consider about it.
Here, from Stanford Children's Health website, is the actual answer to what the nose "is":
What is the nose?
Your nose helps you to breathe and to smell. The inner part of the nose is above the roof of the mouth. The nose is made up of:
External meatus. Triangular-shaped projection in the center of the face.
External nostrils. Two chambers divided by the septum.
Septum. Made up mainly of cartilage and bone and covered by mucous membranes. The cartilage also gives shape and support to the outer part of the nose.
Nasal passages. Passages that are lined with mucous membranes and tiny hairs (cilia) that help to filter the air.
Sinuses. Four pairs of air-filled cavities, also lined with mucous membranes.
*If you are interested in Ayurveda, see the work of:
Diane Booth Gilliam-Mary Bradford-Leslie Hanks-The Ayurvedic Institute-Dr. Vasant Lad.
c' est, toute simplement, les doigts dans le nez !
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