If you keep up with your booster shots, probably nothing. If you don't then Tetanus is an outside possibility. If your jaw starts getting sore or you have trouble swallowing go to the doctor right away.
go to you local beautitions and they gently poke through your ear\ears
You should either go to a piercing place in your local mall or place and get your earring to go all the way through if you do not want to do that either try to get it to go all the way through with a needle or stud earring that has a sharp needle point on it. If the earring does not go all the way through no matter what you do you should close it and treat it with disinfecting spray or 91% isopropyl alcohol.
The part of the earring that goes through your ear is called "the post".
First look at the shape of the earring and imagine how it would go through someone's ear. If it still won't go through then clean your ears. It may get any gunk that is blocking the hole! newtest3 hi - this happens to me, and if you haven't put your earring in at the back for a while, the back might be hard to get to - try piercing from the back - with someones help preferably - and it will go through at the front. If you have been trying too much to get it in, then it may be inflamed and it would be best if you left it for a few hours or over night.
The main difference between the magnetic and the clip-ons are how they look. Clip-ons are okay for dangly, hoops, or large earrings. However if you want small earrings or studs, you should stick with magnetic earrings because the small clip-ons tend to look either childish or grandmotherly.
They are the same thing, both names are used to identify the same piece of jewellery. A post earring is one that has a post that goes through the ear, usually secured with a butterfly, as opposed to a wire, which is generally longer and more flexible. A stud earring is an earring design that sits on the ear lobe as opposed to a drop type earring which hangs from the lobe, or a hoop earring that incorporates the fastening as part of the earring. So, to sum up, a post is one of the ways in which an earring is designed to go through the pierced hole of the ear lobe and a stud earring is a style of earring.
"Members are prohibited from attaching, affixing or displaying objects, articles, jewelry or ornamentation to or through the ear, nose, tongue, or any exposed body part (includes visible through the uniform). EXCEPTION: Women are authorized to wear one small spherical, conservative, diamond, gold, white pearl, or silver pierced, or clip earring per earlobe and the earring worn in each earlobe must match. Earring should fit tightly without extending below the earlobe. (EXCEPTION: Connecting band on clip earrings.)"So basically, whether you're on or off duty, you can't have a piercing or tat that shows. From what I can tell you could keep your belly button piercing- EXCEPT they might make you take it out for boot camp... they're really strict there...but if you wanted to get it pierced, or re-pierced after then you should be good :)
What I do is that I get petroleum jelly and out it on the holes where the piercing was pierced, in order for the jewelry to slide in painlessly. Get one end of the jewelry and slide it through both holes, then tighten the ball.
The nose typically hurts more because the piercing goes through the cartilage. The belly button piercing is just through a flab of skin.
A surface piercing is when the bar is ran through a surface flap of skin, rather than completely through a piece of body tissue. The eyebrow is not a surface piercing.
Earring organizers will help you see which earrings you have. These organizers display earrings in an orderly fashion, if used correctly, and will allow you more time instead of digging through a jewelry box.
A tongue piercing is a piercing through the tongue or any part of the tongue, including the web underneath.