The pressure grew. It wasn’t pain yet, but a strange, full sensation, as if her ear was slowly filling with concrete. She could hear her own breathing, amplified and echoey inside her head, while the flight attendant’s safety reminders sounded like distant, garbled radio static.
Maya took the gum. She chewed wide, moving her jaw side to side, forcing her throat muscles to work. Then she combined it with a sip of water from her bottle—swallowing hard with her nose pinched. This created a powerful vacuum and muscle pull in the back of the throat.
She swallowed. Nothing.
Click. A soft, wet, glorious pop .
She yawned theatrically, earning a glance from the teenager next to her. Still nothing. clogged ears from flying
The teenager next to her, a frequent flyer, noticed her distress. “Chew this,” he said, offering a piece of gum. “But not just chomping. Big, exaggerated, jaw-cracking yawn-chews.”
But during a flight’s ascent, the cabin air pressure drops quickly. The air inside your middle ear becomes relatively higher in pressure, pushing your eardrum outward. On descent, the opposite happens: the cabin pressure rises, compressing the air in your middle ear and sucking your eardrum inward. That stretch—the eardrum bowing like a trampoline under too much weight—is the pressure and muffled hearing you feel. The pressure grew
Suddenly, the world rushed in. The crying baby two rows back, the whine of the landing gear, the pilot’s announcement about the temperature in Orlando—all of it crystal clear. The pressure vanished, replaced by a faint, residual soreness. Her eardrum had snapped back into place.