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This debate topic comes from member bobby75703:
Perfume! For some it may smell beautiful. For others the solvents and chemicals in perfumes, scented candles, and plug-in air "fresheners" can be bothersome.
Some of the chemicals in synthetic scents can be toxic, some are even carcinogens, and can result in headaches, nausea, or respiratory difficulty for sensitive groups.
Perfume is banned within the choir at my Church for these very reasons. So lets clear the air on this topic.
Do some people's perfumes and colognes make you sick?
Moderator Addition: Where does it bother you most? Workplace? Elevator? Are there places where you think perfumes and other scented items should NOT be allowed?
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Here is some interesting information -- Allergy Triggers in Your Workplace -- that you may find helpful if you have been reacting to strong scents in your environment.
I once worked with the doctor who's body odor was so repulsive, that patients would repeatedly ask ME to tell him. I suspect that even it he wore cologne, that he would still stink.
Personally, I do not like strong perfumes or scents. I am not allergic to them...nor do I have headaches, but I don't care for them. I would go through other doors at a department store to avoid the perfume department, and I could never enter a scented candle store. When I exam a patient with strong perfume, it ends up on my hands. It can take hours of repeated washings to get the smell from my hands. The older the patient, the stronger the perfume, I have found.
Do I tell them? No. I just tolerate it. I really don't expose the B.O. group either. People can rarely smell themselves, at least critically, but I am not going to be the one who exposes them. Since I work 12-hours clinic shifts, I am more concerned about myself. I do use a bit of subtle aftershave (if I remember), and have never received a complaint.
After a lifelong career of smelling a lot of repulsive human odors, I really shouldn't complain if some of my patient are a bit over-flowery. It could be worse.....
Some peoples perfumes are so overpowering that if they give you a present you can't get the smell out of that item forever! lol! I like perfumes so most of the time they honestly don't get to me. I really don't think there should be restrictions. It is almost being sort of like a bigot if you put restrictions on this stuff. I think restaurant owners would be the only ones that should be able to tell there employees lay off the perfume because of working around fun it can really deter the taste of foods. But other than that how would you restrict that?? Obviously stores could not restrict this kind of thing. I guess when it comes to your workplace if it is an office setting again I think that should be up to the owner of the business.
I, myself, do enjoy a good perfume - although I prefer lightly scented after-shower body sprays- if they are not TOO strong. Many people put on too much or choose scents are overwhelming. You only need a small spritz on the chest area (or perhaps in the hair) or a small dab on the inner wrists and behind the ears. YOU'RE NOT MEANT TO BATHE IN IT!
Strong perfumes bother me the most in elevators (no ventilation) and at restaurants ( I want to smell my food, not you.)
A little bit is okay; too much is a big problem as it triggers my headaches and nausea.
I have this same problem with people who smoke and although they may not be smoking around me indoors, they all smell like disgusting, toxic, stale ashtrays. Even worse is when they come near my 5 year-old son and trigger an asthma attack.
I think people just need to stop and think a minute. Have some common sense and respect and courtesy for others.
I shouldn't have to breathe in your pollution, whatever form it may come in.
I think strong, offensive, and overwhelming perfumes, smell of cigarette or whatnot should be banned from schools, day-cares and health care facilities.
I don't like to push my problems on others but if you work in a closed in place your smells may be the cause of someone else's suffering.
Multiple Chemical Sensitivities is real and growing. At my allergist there is a sign about no perfumes or hairspray in the office. It is a safe place for some of us.
I laughed about the older you get the more perfume you wear...my Mom puts me into at least one asthma attack a month. She really tries, but still forgets and uses her fragranced lotion when I pick her up.
I agree with others that overpowering perfumes should not be allowed in work environments, particularly where there are sick patients who may be more sensitive.
and another time I had some techie come to the house to fix my computer he was wearing so much after shave or colone that his smell was in my house for 2 days the next time I called for tech support to get something fixed I spesified I would rather a tech that didn;t wear colonge or aftershave please and they were dumfounded as to why .It took some explaining so they sent me a guy that wasn;t smelly ..I told tham I would rather smell the body oder than the perfume...
Hugs Judy:)
Although you probably cannot detect this odor, you feel oblged to tell you that you do have a significant level of body odor. And that concerns me because it is generally unhealthy to have such a high level of bacteria growing on your skin.
I'll note our conversations on your chart. Start bathing and shampooing your hair, at minimum, every ___ days, and we will revisit the subject again at our next appointment.
I never had so much as an allergy in my entire life.....until I was about 40. It hit me all at once....with no warning. Within minutes of getting in to a car rental which had been sprayed with Febreeze or some commercial fragrance I began vomiting, uncontrolably. At first I thought it must be the flu, but it was soon evident that my symptoms would dissipate when not being exposed. As time went on it became clear that I could not breathe in any form of perfume, fragrance, chemical or petroleum product. For example, I can't walk down the automotive and bicycle aisle (tires, and rubber products) in Wal-Mart without getting sick, or cosmetic and laundry detergent/cleaning supply aisles at the grocery store.
It changes how one approaches life and public spaces. It is completely insensitive to lather up with perfumes and colognes in the work place, or anywhere one goes outside of your own home.
The effects of toxins are silently accumulating in our systems and eventually hit a tipping point of saturation and one finds themselves instantly affected.
If you think of how many toxic substances we are exposed to in todays society which are compounded by an unprecedented consumer fixation on cosmetics and the need to spray something everywhere...it doesn't take a rocket scientist to realize that we have already reached the tipping point. It is no different than inhaling second hand smoke, but that is a whole other topic of debate.
I worked as a nurse in oncology, and the patients who were on chemo had extremely strong sense of smell, as well as many of them were battling nausea, so the scent issue was a big deal- some even complained about the scent of my hair, I washed it in the morning before work with a very plain shampoo and conditioner.
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