If you had to give up one of your 5 senses for a month, which would you pick?

Before anyone starts, yes, I recognize that science now identifies more than the traditional 5 senses but I’d like to limit this thread to the 5 “classic” senses of taste, touch, sight, hearing, and smell.

So if you had to give up one for a month, which would you pick? Which would be your last choice?

I’d pick sense of smell. Although I never lost my sense of smell when I had Covid, it doesn’t sound that bad or dangerous to not have it. A co-worker has no sense of smell and I’ve talked to him extensively about it. There are more times that I can think of where not having the sense would come in handy than losing any other.

Losing sense of touch would be last on my list. That just sounds like a horrible accident waiting to happen.

I did lose my sense of smell when I had covid. It came back after a couple weeks. It sucked. Coffee tasted just bitter. Food all tasted flat and boring. I’d be curious if losing taste rather than smell would be preferable, but don’t know the answer.

Sight. I’m already blind in one eye. I’ve had surgery on my good eye and was literally blind for awhile.
I was surprised how well I got around.

A month would be my limit, tho’.
Wouldn’t want to have to learn Braille.

I don’t have a sense of smell. Mostly I feel pretty lucky! But if I had to choose another I’d say taste. I’d probably lose a couple pounds.

Easy one – taste for sure. In fact, I might sign up for such a one-month program if it was offered to me, maybe drop a quick 10 pounds.

smell or taste to lose.

Last choice, by far, is sight

My sense of style. Because according to my kids it’s pretty nonexistent anyway.

More seriously, are you counting taste as only what your tongue senses? In that case I’d pick taste, since much of the eating experience is actually from your olfactory nerves.

Well, it’s a good thing Dung!!
:face_with_open_eyes_and_hand_over_mouth:

I’ll send you some Lumē , just in case.

I’ll take a month of complete silence. But only a month.

That’s what I’m thinking. If you don’t have smell, you lose most of taste as well.

My Daddy had a fall and got a pretty bad concussion. They had to removed a blood clot, the old fashioned way.

Anywhoo he lost his sense of smell. (he said hearing in one ear, also. I was skeptical about that).

His smell came back one day, several years later. Man, it distressed him. He wanted it to go away again. Smells of any kind alarmed him.
Things were always burning or rotten.
I reckon his brain had to relearn to classify which were bad smells or good smells.

I once asked my co-worker if he could swallow a pill and then have a normal sense of smell, would he do it. He said that he probably would just to see what he had been missing. I think it would be completely overwhelming. You’d want to start out in an environment with as few odors as possible. And even in such an environment, I wonder how many actual scents are there that we’re just nose-blind to.

And the thought of smelling a public bathroom for the first time. :nauseated_face:

Yeah, what he said.

That would be my second choice and it’s pretty close to first. Again, relying on what my co-worker has told me, texture of food is more important to him than just about anything else. He can’t tell when his wife makes spicy dishes.

Taste. It would suck, but it seems harmless and non-disruptive to lose for a while. With smell, I’d be worried about not being able to detect something genuinely dangerous, like a gas leak.

And that’s more or less how I found out he has no sense of smell. Before I knew about it, I thought I smelled smoke in the hallway and went to his office to see if he smelled it too. He didn’t.

My hearing is pretty bad as it is. I could handle a month of deafness , no problem.

Smell for sure.

Usually, IIRC, such polls always have smell first and sight last.

No contest, it would be smell.

I think “touch” is pretty important.