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Read more: How to Choose a Fragrance Mist: A Buyer's Guide
How to Choose a Fragrance Mist: A Buyer's Guide
Most fragrance mists are designed around scent. A functional fragrance mist is designed around a nervous system state. The difference determines whether the product works when you actually need it, or just smells good while you need it. Three questions to ask before buying: Does it name the nervous system state it's designed for? Does it name the compounds and their mechanisms? Does it tell you when to use it? A product that answers all three is making honest functional claims.Read more -
Read more: GROUND: The Re-Entry Mist (And the Neuroscience of Coming Back to Yourself)
GROUND: The Re-Entry Mist (And the Neuroscience of Coming Back to Yourself)
GROUND is formulated for re-entry: the work-to-life transition, the scattered not-quite-present state, the moment of arriving somewhere physically but not yet mentally. Its compound profile (cedrol, bergamot linalool, vetiver, sandalwood) engages the orienting response and activates parasympathetic tone through direct autonomic modulation. The full science is below, including why presence is a nervous system state rather than a decision.
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Read more: FOCUS: The Cognitive Reset Mist (And How It Addresses Brain Fog at the Mechanism)
FOCUS: The Cognitive Reset Mist (And How It Addresses Brain Fog at the Mechanism)
FOCUS is formulated for adenosine-driven cognitive fog and scattered attention—the afternoon dip, the post-context-switch fragmentation, the moment your brain stops cooperating. Its compound profile targets adenosine receptors and the autonomic nervous system directly: 1,8-cineole (eucalyptus) for adenosine modulation and AChE inhibition, hesperidin/limonene (yuzu) for sympathetic suppression, mint for trigeminal activation. This is the full science behind it, and why it works differently from stimulants (modulation vs. blockade, no crash).Read more -
Read more: CALM: The Nervous System Reset Mist (And Why We Chose Sandalwood Over Lavender)
CALM: The Nervous System Reset Mist (And Why We Chose Sandalwood Over Lavender)
CALM is formulated for sympathetic overdrive—the running-hot, activated nervous system state that accumulates across a demanding day. Its compound profile targets the HPA axis and GABA-A pathway directly: α-santalol (sandalwood) for cortisol modulation, linalool (thyme) for parasympathetic activation, cedrol (cedarwood) for autonomic modulation. This is the science behind it, why sandalwood does something lavender doesn't (HPA axis modulation vs. GABA-A only), and the specific moments it's designed for.Read more -
Read more: Why One Functional Fragrance Isn't Enough
Why One Functional Fragrance Isn't Enough
Nervous system states are physiologically distinct. Sympathetic overdrive, adenosine-driven fog, and dorsal vagal shutdown each have different mechanisms, different compound targets, and different intervention requirements. A single fragrance formula is a compromise across all of them. The compounds that calm sympathetic activation (α-santalol, linalool, cedrol) work against the compounds that clear adenosine fog (1,8-cineole, hesperidin). State-specific design is the more honest and more effective approach.Read more -
Read more: How Fragrance Compounds Act on the Nervous System: The Molecular Mechanisms
How Fragrance Compounds Act on the Nervous System: The Molecular Mechanisms
Functional fragrance works because specific molecules act on specific biological targets via the olfactory pathway. This is a compound-level breakdown of how each key ingredient in CALM, FOCUS, and GROUND produces its documented nervous system effect: α-santalol (HPA axis modulation), linalool (GABA-A receptor activation), 1,8-cineole (adenosine receptor activity and AChE inhibition), hesperidin/limonene (sympathetic suppression), cedrol (parasympathetic activation), and why the combination matters as much as the individual compounds.Read more