Start writing a post

The bizarre ways my smell and taste changed after Covid

smiling woman smelling bougainvilleas in closeup shot
Photo by GESPHOTOSS on Unsplash

During the first week of New York's lockdown back in March, I started to feel unwell. Most of the symptoms matched Covid-19, so I diligently quarantined and waited to recover.

An antibody test a month later confirmed it was indeed coronavirus; thankfully a mild case and I'm now fighting fit. However, like many others, there have been two lasting changes - my smell and taste. Months later and I still have problems with both senses - and it just keeps getting stranger.

When I was initially ill, my smell and taste were dull but ultimately the same. Everything tasted as it had before Covid just less vivid and interesting, as with any other flu or bad cold I'd had. A couple of weeks later and both almost entirely disappeared, with only sweet flavours able to seep through.

Aside from helping me kick my salt and vinegar chips habit, the month of no taste and smell was pretty depressing. I accidentally left a pan of mushroom soup cooking on the stove and went for a bath. When I came out the usually pungent food was burnt to a crisp along with my pan, but still I couldn't smell a thing.

A few weeks later and one day I was on my way for a social distancing walk with a friend. I put on some perfume for their benefit, and the floral aroma wafted over me. It's ridiculous to say, but it was such a wonderful moment in an odourless, tasteless lockdown. As everyone who continuously consoled me said, the smell and taste did indeed one day come back. I thought that would be the end of it, I was out of my bland, bland woods.

Nope.

Over the last two months my taste has completely changed from before having Covid-19. I used to be a chicken korma girl, now I can manage the spiciest sauce in the supermarket. I used to be obsessed with savoury flavours, now I find myself increasingly gravitating towards sweet. Sharp cheese, vinegar, chilli, I can hardly taste any of them. My smell has started coming back in recent weeks, but in all the wrong ways. My favourite scented candle smells like vomit, my shampoo smells like rotten food and no matter how much I clean my apartment it always smells wrong, oh so wrong. I've taken Covid tests (negative), I've tried ruling out any other possible external factors, and the conclusion I keep coming back to is - my smell and taste is absolutely f****d.

As the race for a Covid-19 vaccine continues, and scientists around the world research how long the impacts of this virus will last - I am left wondering, will I ever be able to taste cheese again?

Women founders continue to come up against common challenges and biases

Written by Kelly Devine, Division President UK & Ireland, Mastercard

Starting a business may have historically been perceived as a man’s game, but this couldn’t be further from reality. Research shows women are actually more likely than men to actively choose to start their own business – often motivated by the desire to be their own boss or to have a better work-life balance and spend more time with their family.

The recently published Mastercard Index of Women Entrepreneurship 2021 found that in the category of 'Aspiration Driven Entrepreneurship’ – capturing those who actively choose to start their own business – women in the UK surpass men: 60% vs 56%. And Mastercard research from February 2022 found 10% of female business owners started their business in the past two years compared to 6% of men – meaning women were 67% more likely to have started a business during the pandemic.

Yet, there are common challenges that women founders continue to come up against - not least the gender imbalance in the household and long-held biases which are still prevalent.

In the UK, women are almost three times more likely to be balancing care and home commitments than men, and this was exacerbated during the pandemic as the additional barriers of school closures and lockdowns meant that the care time of dependents rose significantly on a day-to-day level for women. In addition, women were less likely to have access to a home office, greatly impacting the work they were able to accomplish when working from home was the only option.

It's also widely known that female business owners are still more likely to struggle to access funding for their business ideas. According to Dealroom, all-women founding teams received just 1.4% of the €23.7bn invested into UK start-ups in 2021, while all-male leadership teams have taken almost 90% of the available capital.

Without financial support, and when juggling significant time pressures both at home and at work, how can women grow their companies and #BreaktheBias (as this year’s International Women’s Day termed it)? What tools or support can save them time and money, and give them the headspace they need to focus on building their business?

With female owned businesses collectively estimating revenue growth of £120 billion over the next five years, solving this problem is bigger than supporting women – it’s about supporting the national economy.

Using tech to level the playing field

There are clearly societal issues at play that need to be resolved. But when we look at the rise in technology businesses during the pandemic, we can plainly see an alternative source of support critical for business growth: digital tools.

A third of female business owners say new technologies will be crucial to the success of their business in the future and one in five say it is the most important thing for business growth.

With new technology comes new ways to pay, create, and work. And yet there are barriers that prevent business owners accessing this technology. Women are significantly more likely to say they want to use more digital tools but don’t know what is best for their business and also more concerned about the security of digital tools.

When technology is adopted by businesses – whether using online accounting solutions or messenger services for communicating with staff – it saves them time, allows them to maintain and grow their customer base, and ultimately increases cost savings and profit.

By drastically improving the training and support that is available to women-owned business to access and utilise technology we will allow these businesses to grow and succeed. And we know there is demand for it.

Research done by the IFC and Dalberg shows that female entrepreneurs are more likely to invest time and money in business development. This includes product development, customer base expansion, and digital tools and training and there are plenty of services available offering this type of support – many of them for free.

One such programme is Strive UK – an initiative of the Mastercard Center for Inclusive Growth – which aims to reach 650,000 micro and small business owners across the UK and empower them with the tools they need to thrive in the digital economy through free guidance, helpful tools and one-to-one mentoring.

Working together with small business experts – Enterprise Nation, Be the Business and Digital Boost – we hope to ensure hundreds of thousands of UK female business owners have the tools they need to succeed and reach their ambitious goals. Because this ambition remains strong in the UK, with female business owners largely optimistic about the future despite the multitude of challenges they are facing. Four in ten say they will grow their business in the next five years – compared to only a third of male business owners – and they’re also 35% less likely than men to say they plan to downsize or close the business.

But if we do not empower female entrepreneurs to access the tools and technology they need to grow, there is a risk this optimism could be misplaced. Support programmes that provide business owners with guidance and mentorship can help ensure this isn’t the case, allowing female entrepreneurs to not only survive but thrive in the months and years ahead.