maybe you have infected ears, you shouldn't usually feel much pressure on your ears, usually just a slight tensing up...I really don't know. sorry D;
Chew gum or suck on a breath mint. When you swallow it will help equalize the pressure changes in your ears and get rid of the "bubbles".
Because your jaw is closely connected to your ears and your jaw moves when you swallow. That is also how you wiggle your ears.
Possibly a ruptured drum. If you blow your nose & you can feel it in either of your ears, that is confirmation.
valsalve. by whoever? well, i think you should suck sweets and swallow alot whilest your on the plane then afterwards, hold your nose and blow through your nose. not really hard just a little so your ears pop, the swallow. repeat this until your ears are clear. by p-bennett by macfanpro: You really can not. In a airplane, the barometric pressure (read: the pressure of the air) changes as the plane climbs and desends. The popping is your ears internal air escaping. How p-bennett's answer works is by inducing popping, equalizing the pressure.
because as you swim deeper the water pressure pushes agensed your ears
you must just have a stomach bug.
When you go up on an airplane, the air pressure around you decreases while the pressure inside your ears remains the same, causing a pressure difference. This pressure difference can lead to your eardrums feeling blocked or pressured. Swallowing, yawning, or chewing gum can help equalize the pressure by opening the Eustachian tubes and allowing air to flow in or out of the middle ear.
well you can swallow baby octupus and feel in your stomach, well the tentacles actually
This is caused by changes of air pressure in your middle ear.
what does a horse feel when it put its ears flat
if the aie pressure in the throat and outside the body is less than the air pressure in your middle ear when you swallow the air pressure in your middle ear reaches the same pressure as the air in your throat and outside , and the eardrum moves quickly back-or'pops' into place
Ears