Ms. Alexandre, who tries to help rebuild smell-related neural pathways through memories or emotions, asked Ms. Cousseau to pick a square of colored paper to go with the smell (vivid yellow), talk about its aspects (“acid, sparkling, fresh”) and associate it with a happy thought (her mother cutting lemon in a sun-drenched kitchen in southwestern France).
Ms. Cousseau, cheerful and outgoing, had a positive outlook on her predicament.
“It’s true that I panicked, but I quickly told the school because I knew that they could help,” she said. Not all students felt as comfortable coming forward. “There are people in my class who didn’t want to do that, who were infected and I didn’t even know about it,” she said.
Even established professionals can be stigmatized because of Covid-19.
Mathilde Ollivier, 33, an independent oenologist who advises winemakers in the Loire Valley, realized one morning in February that she could not smell her shower gel, sending her scrambling through toiletries to see if any scents came through. She followed a training regimen and after several weeks — once wines no longer had the persistent smell of roasted hazelnuts — felt confident enough to return to work.
But a fellow oenologist was bewildered that she had told her clients about her “embarrassing” illness. Another said it was a mistake to open up to the local media about her experience. Ms. Ollivier countered that transparency was crucial to keeping her clients’ hard-earned trust.
“We have to talk about it,” she said, to break the taboo.