If its new, bleeding is normal unless its been more than 2 weeks. Maybe you snagged it or hit it. If its old and you haven't hit it, you may be wearing poor quality jewelry. Start wearing surgical steel, glass, titanium, or real gold. You may be allergic to your current earrings or they just may be poor quality. If this doesn't help, go check in with your piercer or even a doctor.
Since i did my ears myself, my piercing holes were very tender and bleed if I irritated the earring. Anyways, if you take out your earring, it is likely that the hole will close up, so NO, do not take it out. I didn't, and now my ears are all healed and healthy. Just make sure you clean it with salt water [no hydrogen peroxide or alcohol].
you have a ear infection !
scar tissue from the piercing procedure.
u can if u want the hole to close
Its just like an earring hole but I have no idea why they do that. Mine is 20 years old!
They are the same thing, both names are used to identify the same piece of jewellery. A post earring is one that has a post that goes through the ear, usually secured with a butterfly, as opposed to a wire, which is generally longer and more flexible. A stud earring is an earring design that sits on the ear lobe as opposed to a drop type earring which hangs from the lobe, or a hoop earring that incorporates the fastening as part of the earring. So, to sum up, a post is one of the ways in which an earring is designed to go through the pierced hole of the ear lobe and a stud earring is a style of earring.
Anytime you are old enough to make that decision, if you are a minor then you will need parental consent.
It depends on how long it has been out. I would use some rubbing alcohol on the hole then slowly force your earring in. just go a little bit at a time, and it will hurt, but hopefully it will work for you like it does for me.
plugs you stick in your ear that cause nothing like water to get into your ear canal.
you should wear a small stud , nothing to outragious , because you can look too OTT!
It might have a bladder infection.
see a dentist! stat!