Ryan Neely
Contributor
This seems like a stupid question, and I promise I'm not purposefully being obtuse, but what does it mean to you to "be congested?"
Here's some background. I have seasonal allergies. They've been a serious consideration for every aspect of my life. As a youth, I was half-blind for three days thanks to an over-excited cottonwood (for example).
I think, due to these allergies, my body seems to produce copious amounts of phlegm. (Note: I have not scientific data to back up this hypothesis.) Not to be terribly uncouth, but I have considered the constant nasal drainage, the never-ending sniffle, and the every-present throat-clearing as a family trait. (My father sniffles and snorts. My grandfather is never without a hankie in his hand or a lugie flying from his mouth.) There have often been times when medical professionals have had to irrigate my ears, extracting pencil-eraser-sized packets of wax.
I go into this kind of detail because ... I would consider this to be congestion. (Thanks to four years of allergy shots, however, these symptoms have been dwindling with rapid speed.) However, when discussing my concerns of "chronic congestion" in relation to scuba, I am essentially told it's not an issue.
Indeed, it hasn't been an issue ... thus far. To be fair, my max depth to date has only been forty feet, but equalizing has been easy and simple, and I've not experienced any discomfort of pain.
This leads me to wonder if the symptoms I consider "chronic congestion" is, in fact, nothing more than what other people experience every day as well. (In other words, perhaps I'm not a special snowflake. Perhaps my experience is, in fact, quite elementary.)
So, let me ask, what symptoms do you consider to be "congestion?"
Here's some background. I have seasonal allergies. They've been a serious consideration for every aspect of my life. As a youth, I was half-blind for three days thanks to an over-excited cottonwood (for example).
I think, due to these allergies, my body seems to produce copious amounts of phlegm. (Note: I have not scientific data to back up this hypothesis.) Not to be terribly uncouth, but I have considered the constant nasal drainage, the never-ending sniffle, and the every-present throat-clearing as a family trait. (My father sniffles and snorts. My grandfather is never without a hankie in his hand or a lugie flying from his mouth.) There have often been times when medical professionals have had to irrigate my ears, extracting pencil-eraser-sized packets of wax.
I go into this kind of detail because ... I would consider this to be congestion. (Thanks to four years of allergy shots, however, these symptoms have been dwindling with rapid speed.) However, when discussing my concerns of "chronic congestion" in relation to scuba, I am essentially told it's not an issue.
Indeed, it hasn't been an issue ... thus far. To be fair, my max depth to date has only been forty feet, but equalizing has been easy and simple, and I've not experienced any discomfort of pain.
This leads me to wonder if the symptoms I consider "chronic congestion" is, in fact, nothing more than what other people experience every day as well. (In other words, perhaps I'm not a special snowflake. Perhaps my experience is, in fact, quite elementary.)
So, let me ask, what symptoms do you consider to be "congestion?"