One of the fringe benefits of working at home is catching little household emergencies before they become big household emergencies.
I'm stretching the term "household emergencies." Today, while pulling cereal out of the pantry closet, I was met with an aroma that was only slightly less putrid that a decaying animal. It was a rotten potato. This was not a problem last night, but it would have been an even larger problem by 6:30 p.m., which is when I usually roll back in here. Today, though, I could remove the offending vegetable and compost it before too much damage was done.
The point of this post is not to highlight my less-than-stellar housekeeping skills, but to ponder whether there is such a thing as an ancestral aroma sensitivity.
This potato smelled so noxious that I wondered if it had something to do with my Irish ancestry, with the fact that Mom's relatives mostly came from the west of Ireland and were driven away by the potato famine.
Could I be especially sensitive to this because my great-great-grandparents smelled it all too often? Putrid potato PTSD? You never know.