Yes --tom--, I did very much find that interesting. ![Big Grin :D :D](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f600.png)
I now even more stand by my second paragraph in the post just above yours!![Eyebrow :eyebrow: :eyebrow:](/community/styles/scubaboard/smilies/eyebrow.gif)
I fail to see that DAN answered the question they posed of themselves. :shocked2:
If you have a perforation it is not safe to dive.
If you have a healed perforation (ie. no longer perforated) and you have been blindly following typical "Western" medical practices all your life, by all means have an ENT charge you for permission to try to equalize your ears underwater.
![Coffee :coffee: :coffee:](/community/styles/scubaboard/smilies/coffee.gif)
![Big Grin :D :D](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f600.png)
I now even more stand by my second paragraph in the post just above yours!
![Eyebrow :eyebrow: :eyebrow:](/community/styles/scubaboard/smilies/eyebrow.gif)
DAN:Q: Is it safe to dive with a perforated tympanic membrane?
I fail to see that DAN answered the question they posed of themselves. :shocked2:
If you have a perforation it is not safe to dive.
If you have a healed perforation (ie. no longer perforated) and you have been blindly following typical "Western" medical practices all your life, by all means have an ENT charge you for permission to try to equalize your ears underwater.
![Coffee :coffee: :coffee:](/community/styles/scubaboard/smilies/coffee.gif)