I know this isn't my place to butt in, but I have this exact same problem.
And I assume it's perfectly normal, seeing as ears aren't designed to have stuff shoved inside them.
That makes absolutely no sense, and that is not how this works.
You also weren't intended to wear clothes. Are you telling me you're damaging your skin by wearing them?
In-ear headphones do not go in your ear much at all, they are mostly at rest in the ear canal. This is nowhere near enough inside to cause any kind of damage, hearing wise or otherwise.
Again, if this is a problem for you, see a doctor, it is NOT normal.
Also, the page says "In-Ear Buds"... So there must be no difference, I can't see one anyway.
This is explained several posts above me. There are MANY types of headphones, do not lop "earbuds" and "in-ear headphones" into the same category, they are hugely different.
Not to most people out there. If it makes you ache, you are a minority.
Wear overly heavy clothes and your limbs will begin to ache, same as wearing backpacks/etc will cause ache.
Your clothes example doesn't make sense, do you shove your clothes inside you? No.
Clothes are the body equivalent of on-ear headphones if you want to make a connection.
You missed my point but I'm not delving any deeper into how you are incorrect for the sake of keeping this thread on topic.
Again, this is not true for majority of people out there.
In-ear headphones only make certain people ache due to certain reasons, not because "they are in your ear" that train of logic makes absolutely no sense at all. IEMs are not inside your ear ANYWHERE CLOSE ENOUGH to causing any kind of damage, or doing anything harmful.
The straight fact is the IEMs are far larger than your ear canal, you can shove them in as far as possible using force until it hurts, and they still will not be in enough to cause damage, they just don't fit. This is how they are designed.
This is getting off topic. If you've used IEMs for an extended period of time, you would know all of this. Bonus points: I've asked a couple otolaryngologists and they have said the same thing I did. So long as the volume is not too high, you are fine. They are designed to not cause damage from just "being in there" thanks to the rubber padding.
You also weren't intended to wear clothes. Are you telling me you're damaging your skin by wearing them?
In-ear headphones do not go in your ear much at all, they are mostly at rest in the ear canal. This is nowhere near enough inside to cause any kind of damage, hearing wise or otherwise.
Again, if this is a problem for you, see a doctor, it is NOT normal.
This is explained several posts above me. There are MANY types of headphones, do not lop "earbuds" and "in-ear headphones" into the same category, they are hugely different.
You missed my point but I'm not delving any deeper into how you are incorrect for the sake of keeping this thread on topic.
Incredibly common = a few people.
Again, this is not true for majority of people out there.
In-ear headphones only make certain people ache due to certain reasons, not because "they are in your ear" that train of logic makes absolutely no sense at all. IEMs are not inside your ear ANYWHERE CLOSE ENOUGH to causing any kind of damage, or doing anything harmful.
The straight fact is the IEMs are far larger than your ear canal, you can shove them in as far as possible using force until it hurts, and they still will not be in enough to cause damage, they just don't fit. This is how they are designed.
This is getting off topic. If you've used IEMs for an extended period of time, you would know all of this.
Bonus points: I've asked a couple otolaryngologists and they have said the same thing I did. So long as the volume is not too high, you are fine. They are designed to not cause damage from just "being in there" thanks to the rubber padding.
Sound stage?
Thinking about coming a mod to simply not moderate.