arkmabat wrote:My ears can get messed up for a whole night after a concert. Sleep on it and if it's still there in the morning see a doctor.
OP wrote:I have waited 3 days since this happened in my left ear.
And it has not recovered by itself.
arkmabat wrote:My ears can get messed up for a whole night after a concert. Sleep on it and if it's still there in the morning see a doctor.
OP wrote:I have waited 3 days since this happened in my left ear.
And it has not recovered by itself.
This is the main reason why people test on speakers at a reasonable volume, and with a limiter engaged. It's not a definite solution, but a safety mechanism.Jedinhopy wrote:Until i took of my headphones after a few seconds.
Sounds like it. The medical term is:Jedinhopy wrote:I think i have got noise induced hearing loss.
Go see an ENT specialist!Jedinhopy wrote:I have waited 3 days since this happened in my left ear.
And it has not recovered by itself.
Has no influence. And unless you have very oozing ears - stop doing that!Jedinhopy wrote:I have tried to clean my ears with earwax on both my ears by using ears sticks.
Has no effect with any ear related issues - stop doing that!Jedinhopy wrote:And then i have tried to fill both my ears with water to see if the hearing loss would go away.
The so called "pressure equalization" known among divers. It is a temporary relief and sees if your internal ear (stapedial bone) is still working correctly. Swallowing is another thing that can re-balance your ears again. Also, a temporary solution.Jedinhopy wrote:And then i even tried to inhale a huge amount of air and then i shut my mouth and then i hold my nose and after that pressing out all the air through out my ears with all breath power i have.
Go see an ENT specialist!Jedinhopy wrote:And there is nothing i can do to fix this problem.
I have no command over my ears.
It will, after you contacted a specialist and get proper medication.Jedinhopy wrote:I just wish sleeping would heal my damaged ears.
Your ear (or rather the brain connected to it) is trying to compensate - so it raises specific frequencies ("trains" the ear to do so). This in turn can sound as if you have a tinnitus - the lines are really, really thing. And the longer you wait for fixing what's wrong, the more likely it is that you'll keep the tinnitus.Jedinhopy wrote:I have a static high frequency sine wave in my left ear.
I think it's called tinnitus.
This is why you should use hearing protection during a concert.arkmabat wrote:My ears can get messed up for a whole night after a concert. Sleep on it and if it's still there in the morning see a doctor.
Then you suffer from permanent frequency selective hearing loss, which gives the impression that you hear "offset". Granted, our ears do not work the same for L/R... but if you play an instrument loud, or go to a lot of concerts, but don't think about hearing protection... you will loose frequencies really quick.arkmabat wrote:On a side note, my ears hear a little bit different I think. My left ear is closer to my crash and snare.
I have much worse vision in my right eye but cleaning it has not seemed to do much good. During thousands of years of doing things like fleeing from lions, the difference in hearing from one ear to the other probably didn't make that much of a difference. They're just design flaws. We weren't created by a higher being who knew what we'd be up to many years later.Aloysius wrote:+1 for cleaning your ears.
Good. Once in highschool I plugged my headphones into an 8 ohm powered socket and electricity literally shot out of the earpieces when my buddy strummed his electric guitar. Really grateful I wasnt wearing the headphones.Jedinhopy wrote:I am not using a headphone amp.arkmabat wrote:My bad.
Was the OP using a headphone amp?
Or this: http://www.cerberusaudio.com/Software/Products/Ice9/GaryG wrote:
Of course the real lesson to be learned here: switch to Reaper, the auto-mute function is awesome!
The brain is trying to compensate for ear damage.Compyfox wrote:Your ear is trying to compensate - so it raises specific frequencies
There is a saying...I have tried to clean my ears with earwax on both my ears by using ears sticks
You can easily fix that by applying strong distortion to your left earMy left ear has got low pass filtered
Of course it's the "brain" as ultimate nerve center to adjust what is going on. Sorry for the confusion.Chris-S wrote:The brain is trying to compensate for ear damage.Compyfox wrote:Your ear is trying to compensate - so it raises specific frequencies
That's one possible cause for tinnitus.
Sorry, but not funny.DJ Warmonger wrote:You can easily fix that by applying strong distortion to your left earMy left ear has got low pass filtered
I am not going to apply a EQ treble boost to the left stereo channel.DJ Warmonger wrote:You can easily fix that by applying strong distortion to your left earMy left ear has got low pass filtered
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