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Flying With Barotrauma !!link!! May 2026

Then came the descent. This is where physics turns cruel. During ascent, the trapped air expands; it’s uncomfortable, but it wants to get out. During descent, the outside pressure rises, and the trapped air shrinks, creating a vacuum. Your eardrum, that thin parchment of nerve endings, gets sucked inward like a concave mirror. The needle becomes a hot ember.

I felt it first as a dull recognition, a fullness like cotton soaked in seawater. Then, as the Boeing’s landing gear retracted with a thud, the fullness crystallized into a needle. Not a sharp prick, but a slow, rotating drill bit pushing from my eardrum inward toward my jaw. My own head had become a pressure chamber, and the only valve was jammed. flying with barotrauma

The cabin pressure began its slow, algorithmic climb as the plane pushed back from the gate. For the 150 other passengers, this was a quiet prelude to sleep. For me, it was the tightening of a vise. Then came the descent