Low risk products that people swear by.

  • @[email protected]
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    745 months ago

    Foam earplugs if you’re headed to a noisy area. I know too many people that have damaged their hearing by not protecting it at concerts and other venues with amplified sounds.

    • @[email protected]
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      215 months ago

      While having them as a backup is good. If you enjoy concerts I’d highly suggest spending the money on good earplugs that don’t distort the sound as much. They make the specifically for concert goers and they’re amazing. Putting in Regular earplugs is like listening to a 32kbps mp3.

      • @triptrapper
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        65 months ago

        If anyone’s looking for brand names… Loops have spent a lot on marketing the last few years. I’ve worn them a few times and they’re good, but I think Flare Earshades are just one level above. I can’t believe how good they sound.

      • @[email protected]
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        55 months ago

        Agreed. I have some that just turn the volume down and I keep them on my keychain. It also helps me a lot when there’s background noise to pick out conversation. After the first part of the pandemic, it seemed like everybody had been yelling on their zoom calls and it helped with that as well until either they adjusted back to IRL volume or I readjusted to it.

    • @Hikermick
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      105 months ago

      I pocket these whenever they’re available for free in places where I work. Recently downloaded a free app that measures decibels and was amazed.

      Hearing loss is different from other things they warn you about. Get something in my eye? Guess I’ll start wearing eye protection. Back hurts? Guess I’ll start lifting with my knees. Hearing loss is different. You won’t lose your hearing, you’ll lose the ability to understand what people are saying in a noisy environment, it hurts you socially. Having to say “huh?” repeatedly is embarrassing, it makes you withdraw.

      • @morphballganon
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        35 months ago

        I’m already like that and I don’t have hearing loss

        • Rob T Firefly
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          5 months ago

          Maybe you do, though. It might be worth getting tested if you have access and haven’t already.

      • Bob
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        25 months ago

        I went to see King Gizzard recently, earplugs in pocket, and I suppose I never found a moment to stick them in, but I was stood near the front the whole time and I came away with absolutely none of the usual hearing damage. I don’t know how they did it, but what a great bunch of lads.

        • @RBWells
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          25 months ago

          Sometimes if you get ALL the way in front, you are in front of the speakers so they are pointed away from you, and it’s not nearly as loud.

          • Bob
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            15 months ago

            Well I take solace in the fact that I first assumed it was someone else’s doing.

    • @[email protected]
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      65 months ago

      I once forgot my ear protection while going to the club and had tinnitus for 2 days straight. Devinetively not worth it.

    • @rockSlayer
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      35 months ago

      Hearing damage is part of the concert experience though. If you don’t leave with mild tinnitus did you really even go?

      • @[email protected]
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        5 months ago

        Yes.

        This is a dumb mindset that needs to be changed.

        After 20 years of concerts wearing my studio plugs I can still hear.

        My friends who thought it was dumb are now deaf as fuck and frankly their hearing loss is an annoying self inflicted wound.

        Wear hearing protection ya dingus, every time.

        • @rockSlayer
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          105 months ago

          Actually I’m also the weird friend that uses hearing protection lol all my friends tell me that. I still have tinnitus and plenty of hearing damage from not doing that when I was younger though

      • @macrocephalic
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        75 months ago

        I get that people think that but it’s a stupid take really. Hearing loss is a big contributor to senility.

      • @I_Fart_Glitter
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        25 months ago

        A friend of mine told me he went to a concert that was “so loud it physically hurt his ears.” He thought I was looking at him like he had two heads because that was such a strange experience until I told him that voices at normal conversational volume often “physically hurts my ears.”

        He never knew why I was always asking him to lower his voice, he thought it was just a weird thing I did.

    • @n3m37h
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      15 months ago

      What? Can you speak up I can’t hear you!

    • YⓄ乙
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      -15 months ago

      I don’t see the benefit as i tried it once but could still hear others

      • Rob T Firefly
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        115 months ago

        The same way you can wear warm clothes in freezing weather and still feel the cold, but at a level which won’t physically damage you.