stolid_agnostic,

Doctor Mike says not to do it, but I have been for years. This started when I got a wax ball that impacted against my eardrum and made me functionally deaf on one side until I could get into an urgent doctor’s appointment. The very next day, the same thing happened on the other side. I knew what was up for the second time and was able to get something from the pharmacy to handle it myself.

As best I can tell, there are two dangers:

  1. Mechanical damage, perhaps caused by accidental means
  2. Leaving bits of cotton behind that can then become infected

For me, I am fine taking this risk and plan to continue doing so daily.

VinesNFluff,
@VinesNFluff@pawb.social avatar

Mechanical damage would require a major freak accident or you to be an idiot about it.

The real issue (according to my doctor, who has a lot more patience than most doctors and actually educated my stubborn ass on this) isn’t just the cotton residue you mentioned (though that is very much a factor) but also the fact that for every [small unit of measurement] of wax the QTip pulls OUT, it is also pushing IN about [small unit of measurement] of it.

This can mean infections, as you mentioned. As you push foreign content AND the wax (which is itself full of trapped bacteria) closer to your sensitive bits. It can also accelerate blockages depending on the consistency of your wax. If you have that issue that your ears get wax blockage periodically, q-tips ensure it happens even faster.

stolid_agnostic,

I have actually heard about the wax getting shoved in, so I know what you are referring to there. I have considered it but still think I’m better of continuing to use them. Everyone is different, though.

Apparently most Asian people don’t actually produce noticeable ear wax, it’s more of a caucasian thing.

VinesNFluff,
@VinesNFluff@pawb.social avatar

Not sure about noticeability, but yes, Asian people have different earwax consistency to whiteys like me. :P

lemmefixdat4u,

The Asians who have dry ear wax also tend to not have smelly armpits. It’s a genetic thing.

smithsonianmag.com/…/a-lucky-two-percent-of-peopl…

stolid_agnostic,

What’s funny is that I got downvoted over that lol.

I saw someone get downvoted into oblivion once for pointing out that a significant number of Asians don’t need deodorant. I think that there are a lot of default-white types who can’t think outside that.

oxjox,

Hitachi Magic Wand.

qyron,

If a company can successfully desig, build and sell heavy machinery while at the same time manufacturing personal care items, let them be.

TauZero,

I am still sad Hitachi was too embarrassed to carry on the legacy of its name and sold off the Magic Wand brand to its subsidiary manufacturer. Hitachi, the brand name was a compliment to you, not a liability! You lost out.

feef,

What is its original purpose?

jaguargoosey,

Back massages

MaxHardwood,

And they’re only $50 for the actual Hitachi model. Always assumed it would be far more expensive.

ColeSloth,

They aren’t being used wrong. It’s just that no one will say it’s OK to use them that way for liability purposes for when someone inevitably screws it up or already has too much wax. It also depends on what type of wax your ears make (people have different kinds. Wet, dry, or somewhere in between)

I’ve used them for decades “the wrong way” and checked my ear canal with a little bluetooth camera thing made for ears. My canal and eardrums are immaculate, so it happens to work great for me.

Cotton swabs were invented in the 1920s for the purpose of ear cleaning. They were marketed as such until around 1980 when the market became worried about lawsuits from people stabbing their ear drums or people with lots of wet wax built up already in their ears compacting it towards the ear drum instead of it getting cleaned out.

phoenixz,

I never use them to clean my earsz I use them to masturbate my ears. Nothing so good as a good ear scratching

Dkarma,

This dude spits str8 facts.

Also fun fact one of the arguments against using q tips is “addiction”.

WoodlandAlliance,

deleted_by_author

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  • ergifruit,

    really putting the “ooh” in “oo-mox”

    phoenixz,

    Uuuuuumooooxxxxx

    tiago,

    earussy

    weeeeum,

    Honing rods in the kitchen. People always try to use these to sharpen their knives but it never works and when their blade that’s dull as a butter knife isn’t any sharper they have a big hissy fit about it.

    Most chef knives will form a burr (a deformation at the edge), even if sharp or very sharp, and this burr will reduce the cutting performance and it will feel “dull”. You don’t need to sharpen the knife again, it’s still technically sharp so it is honed instead. The honing rod’s grooves will realign the edge and the knife will be “sharp” again.

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