
There are, for most of us, certain sounds that we will never forget. For those of us lucky enough to have children, it might be their first angry little cry; it might be the moment-stretching shriek of past catastrophe; it might be that strange sound that you get inside your head when you just know that something is broken. It might be a song that was playing when you first met your partner, or the one that your grandmother used to sing to you. It might even be the sound of your friend rolling from his cinema seat in gales of laughter at the sight of Mr Creosote exploding after ‘just one more mint’*.
I am of a generation that can be transported back to the Saturday Morning ‘Pictures’ by the merest scent of Butterkist popcorn, Westler’s Hot-Dog sausages and farts. I cannot hear the name Flash Gordon without ducking to avoid the thwack of pea-shooter projectiles (usually soggy balls of Izal toilet paper as nobody could afford to waste perfectly good dried peas) on the back of the neck. The smell of wet clothes, chlorine and fear immediately transports me back to schoolboy showers: a freezing, white tiled gauntlet to run.
Thousands of people have been robbed of their sense of smell by the recent Covid epidemic. You will probably be able to find a queue of people happy to attest to the fact that I have never had any taste, but I wonder how my memory would cope with no smell to fall back on. I presume that all those things I had forgotten prior to their reappearance after an olfactory trigger would be lost forever. At least bus journeys would be much more comfortable.
A life without smell would be difficult enough, but I cannot begin to comprehend how it must feel to be permanently deprived of either sound or vision. The prospect is – as I am sure many will want to point out – no laughing matter. I could not agree more… except… well… if we, as a species, were not able to find humour in even the worst of happenstances, what would we do? Humour is what makes us human. We can anthropomorphize all we like, but the truth is that we are the only species (on this planet at least) with a sense of humour. (The same cannot be said of ‘a sense of disdain’ which cats appear to have mastered very well indeed, thank you very much.) It is this humour that allows us to ‘rise above’ the challenges posed by what could be, in other circumstances, debilitating loss.
Humour bubbles up from human beings even when we feel that it should not. Go to almost any funeral, however sombre, and you will at some point hear laughter. As a boy I spoke to a Second World War amputee who had lost a leg to a landmine. He remembered the flash of pain, the realisation of what had happened and he remembered screaming out ‘My leg, I’ve lost my leg!’ He also remembered, from the near distance, hearing one of his comrades shouting out, ‘No you haven’t, it’s over here’ and he remembered laughing and knowing that he was going to be ok. Of course this was twenty years later. Time might have knocked the corners off a little bit, but it does pose the question of when humour is appropriate and when it is not.
My own feeling (for what it is worth) is that humour is not a weapon, it should never be used to wound. (Those who are accused of not being able to take a joke, should probably not have to do so – and those who persist in making them should probably be offered counselling or, at least, have a bat shoved up their nightie.) Yet I also know the importance of ‘Hitler Gags’, for example, on morale in that dreadful mid-century episode. Even twenty years later it was not unknown to hear the strains of ‘Hitler has only got one ball…’ across the school playground. Thankfully the days of personal abuse as humour have gone, and if they haven’t, they bloody well should have, but they do seem to have been replaced by a culture of taking offence at absolutely everything which might, in the future, make the world a very sombre place indeed – and certainly not the place for a waiter to offer what is clearly an extremely obese and troubled man one mint more than he could possibly hope to eat…
*An unforgettable afternoon at the cinema with the ubiquitous Crispin Underfelt and ‘Monty Python’s Meaning of Life’.
And all the world is biscuit-shaped
It’s just for me to feed my face
And I can see, hear, smell, touch, taste
And I’ve got one, two, three, four, five
Senses working overtime
Trying to take this all in
I’ve got one, two, three, four, five
Senses working overtime
Trying to taste the difference ‘tween a lemon and a lime
Pain and pleasure and the church bells softly chime… Senses Working Overtime – XTC (Partridge)
N.B. If any of you found this in your mailbox on Monday – as did I – I apologise. I do not know how or why and I really don’t expect you to read it again!








