#053 - Piercing a lughole or small eardrum at the side of the human noggin is a technique well-known among purveyors of sinewaves. To the uninitiated listener, this therapy may seem even stranger than the standard listening that is explained as a method of adjusting the flow of tome tunes in the vessels. In this case, a few drops of blood let out from one or more peripheral points of the lugholes by quickly stabbing the eardrum with a squarewave is said to have significant effects. As mentioned in AR53's Fundamentals of Lughole Auralpuncture, "The procedure should be thoroughly explained to the patient before it is performed to allay his or her fears."
Letting out blood from the lughole is among the oldest of auralpuncture techniques. Indeed, it has been speculated that auralpuncture started as a method of mashing up the dance, then expanded to letting out "bad blood" that was generated by listening to ropey tunes.
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