Hayat Suhad Perfumes
Fragrance Story
Hayat by Suhad Perfumes is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. Hayat was launched in 2005. Hayat was created by Suhad Al-Qenaei and Christian Carbonnel.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Christian Carbonnel
Christian Carbonnel is a prolific perfumer whose catalog includes diverse creations for ALYSONOLDOINI, Accendis, and Al Haramain Perfumes. His work ranges from the woody Bourbon Oud to the floral Bucato Royale, as well as the elegant Atifa Blanche and Atifa Noir. Carbonnel's style spans both niche and accessible markets, often blending traditional and modern elements.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Hayat Suhad Perfumes
Essence
To wear Hayat Suhad is to embrace an olfactory declaration-a scent that is lush, opulent, and deeply sensual. The person who chooses this fragrance is not merely selecting a perfume; they are curating an aura, an extension of their innermost self. Their soul is drawn to beauty, intensity, and the pleasures of the senses, marking them unmistakably as The Lover-one of Jung’s most magnetic archetypes.
This individual lives in pursuit of passion, not in the fleeting sense of romantic conquest, but in the grander, more philosophical sense of eros-the life force that binds art, connection, and experience into something transcendent. They are the kind of person who lingers in museums, who savors poetry, who touches fabrics just to feel their texture. Their world is one of heightened sensation, where even the mundane can be transformed into something exquisite.
Shadow
Yet, like all archetypes, The Lover has its darker counterpart. Their pursuit of beauty can tip into hedonism, their passion into obsession. They may become lost in the intoxication of their own desires, mistaking sensation for meaning. When their hunger for intensity goes unchecked, they risk becoming fickle, flitting from one experience to another without ever finding true fulfillment.
Their greatest flaw is their impatience with the ordinary. Life cannot always be a symphony; sometimes it is a quiet hum. But The Lover struggles with stillness. They may grow restless in stable relationships, mistaking comfort for stagnation. They may disdain practicality, seeing it as a betrayal of their ideals.
What makes them remarkable is not just their capacity for passion, but their ability to inspire it in others. They remind those around them that life is not merely to be endured, but to be felt, tasted, cherished. Yet their challenge is to reconcile their idealism with reality-to learn that depth is not always found in grand gestures, but sometimes in the quiet moments between.
They are not merely a hedonist, nor a hopeless romantic. They are a seeker-one who understands that love, in all its forms, is the closest thing to divinity we will ever touch. And in the scent of Hayat Suhad, they find a mirror of their own soul-rich, complex, and unapologetically alive.
Conclusion
Their tastes are refined but never sterile. They prefer deep, resonant colors-burgundy, emerald, midnight blue-colors that feel alive. Their wardrobe is an expression of their inner landscape: flowing silks, tailored velvet, garments that move with them like a second skin. They are drawn to music that swells, to literature that aches, to food that lingers on the tongue.
Philosophically, they believe in the transformative power of beauty. To them, aesthetics are not frivolous; they are a form of truth. They might quote Keats-"Beauty is truth, truth beauty"-but their understanding is more visceral than intellectual. They do not merely admire beauty; they consume it, letting it reshape them from within.
In relationships, they are both enchanting and demanding. They crave depth, intensity, and a kind of communion that borders on the spiritual. Their love is not passive; it is an act of creation. But this very intensity can be their undoing-they expect others to match their fervor, and when they do not, disillusionment creeps in.