A woman's perfume tells more about her than her handwriting. — Christian Dior
A woman's perfume tells more about her than her handwriting.
Author: Christian Dior
Insight: There's something almost unsettling about this claim—we usually think of perfume as the most superficial of choices, something we grab in a rush or follow because an ad told us to. But Dior was onto something about how we communicate through scent in ways we don't fully control. A perfume choice reveals your instincts. It shows what draws you in when you're not overthinking—do you go for comfort or risk? Florals or woods? Something that announces you or something only people close enough will notice? It says something about how you want to move through the world. The real insight here isn't about perfume versus handwriting—it's that we leak information constantly through choices we treat as minor. Handwriting, after all, is something most people feel self-conscious about. We're guarded with it. But fragrance? We choose it at a moment when we're just being ourselves, reaching for what makes us feel right. Your coffee order, the music on your playlist when no one's listening, the temperature you keep your room—these small, seemingly trivial choices often speak louder than the things we carefully craft. We assume the deliberate choices reveal us. Sometimes it's the ones we barely think about at all.