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Fun fact: one of the symptoms I get of migraine is the inability to ignore smells. At all. Cat owners? Your house smells like ammonia. Cologne wearers? You still stink underneath the cloying odor. Cleaning products? Smell forever. I get to choose between smelling my own halitosis or the unbearable mint odor for hours on end.
I don't get migraines, but I've experienced smells like what you described. Not often, maybe once a year, my nose will turn up to 100 and I can smell everything in the house. And it's not pleasant. Not even cooking and delicious food smells good, because the combination of smells are nausea inducing.
Interesting, I also have migraines and they also make me hypersensitive to smells (apart from the typical sensitivity to light and sound).
@phanto
Fun fact: cat owners have solved this problem because the ammonia kills your ability to smell over time. This doesn't apply to all cat owners of course, you need to ignore the smell for a while to let the ammonia kick in.
I just wouldn't recommend this method to OP since the effect is hardly reversible.
@Okokimup