Dream About perfume scent smell

Tony Crisp Interpretation: Example: I went back in time in circles, almost as if going unconscious. I went back and back and then there came this awful smell such as I’ve never expe­rienced. I always felt it was the smell of death. I would wake ternfied. One night my husband, a practical and down to eanh man, said he would read me to sleep to see if it helped me not to have the dream. It made no difference, I still had the nightmare. Imagine my surprise though. He said “I knew you’d had the dream again for there was an awful smell in the room for a minute” (Mrs E C).

A smell can remind us of a particular situation or person. Odour attracts, repels, relaxes or offends, and so depicts feeling responses and intuition, and may summarise what we feel about a person or situation. Frequently in dreams a smell expresses an intuition of some­thing rotten in one’s life if the smell is bad—rotten might mean ‘bad’ emotions felt in a relationship, a hunch or feelings about something, as in the example; memories. Good smell: good feelings; non-verbalised intimations or love.

Also explainable by the large number of idioms regarding smell. Idioms: on the right scent; throw someone off the scent; in bad/good odour with; odour of sanctity; smell a rat; smell of greasepaint; smells fishy; something stinks to high heaven; like stink; raise a stink; what you did stinks.

See nose under body.

Tony Crisp Interpretation

A smell can remind us of a particular situation or person; odor attracts, repulses, relaxes, or offends; so it can depict feeling responses or intuition, and may summarize what you feel about a person or situation; frequently in dreams a smell expresses an intuition of something rotten in one’s life if the smell is bad; the rotten smell might mean “bad” emotions felt in a relationship; a hunch or feelings about something, as in the example below; memories. Good smell: good feelings; nonverbalized intimations or love. Example: “I went back in time in circles, almost as if going unconscious. I went back and back, and then there came this awful smell, such as I’ve never experienced. I always felt it was the smell of death. I would wake terrified. One night my husband, a practical and down-to-earth man, said he would read me to sleep to see if it helped me not have the dream. It made no difference, I still had the nightmare. Imagine my surprise, though. He said, ‘I knew you’d had the dream again, for there was an awful smell in the room for a minute.’ ” (Mrs. R. S.)