Why do elevators make me dizzy

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Playing Elevator-Induced Dizziness

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E.R. physician Dr. Travis Stork explains how dizziness in an elevator is actually caused by motion sickness. Learn why the disorienting feeling occurs and get tips to help combat the sensation.

I get just a bit dizzy when I am standing in close proximity to an elevator. Once, I was standing with my back to a mirrored wall in a new building and got the same feeling, and it was only then I realized there was an elevator behind me.

I am not afraid of elevators, ride in them often, and don't have this feeling when I am actually inside of one.

It happens while I am waiting for one to arrive and is a mild sensation, but noticeable. I've never passed out or collapsed, but one time I did "fall into" an elevator when I lost my balance trying to enter it.

I've speculated that maybe it is some sort of inner ear issue that manifests only when the elevator is vibrating. However, it only seems to happen in the context above.

This has happened my whole life, and I have asked multiple doctors about it only to get a strange look from them.

Does this happen to anybody else?

When you enter an elevator when it is still stationary, you don’t feel anything unusual. This is because the forces acting on your body are all balanced and at equilibrium. Since the body is at rest, physics says (and so do we) that the body will want to continue to be in that state of rest. However….

The elevator was truly an ingenious invention when talking about buildings topping 20 floors, or even 5 floors, for that matter. Simply enter one of those moving rooms, press the destination floor number on the keypad, and Ding! The door closes. Now, if it’s not a particularly crowded space, then a few seconds later, you’ll hear another ding, and you’ll be on your desired floor.

There is not one iota of doubt that elevators have made our lives infinitely simpler when it comes to scaling buildings, but there is still something a bit weird about them, right?

Just after the starting or stopping of an elevator, don’t you feel a bit different? A sensation in your head or stomach that just makes you feel a bit weird. Why is that?

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The Role of Gravity And Inertia

We know that Earth has a strong gravitational force, and in fact, gravity is the reason you’re sitting there with your laptop/phone in hand, rather than floating aimlessly through the air. Gravity has a tendency to pull everything towards it, and I do mean everything.

In other words, anything that even dares to move, gravity immediately starts pulling it down by resisting its upward motion. This is the reason why you always come back down when you jump in the air; if gravity were not present, you would simply float away into space, bouncing around the heavens with no way of coming back down.

This entire phenomenon is directly associated with the first law of motion, provided by Newton. Back to the classroom for a moment: Newton’s first law of motion states that “An object either remains at rest or continues to move at a constant velocity unless acted upon by an external force.”

This means that if a person is standing at rest, then they will continue to stay in the same state unless acted upon by an external force (like a push, shove, pull or simply their own need to walk). The same thing applies to elevators.

Elevator-Induced Dizziness

When you enter an elevator when it is still stationary, you don’t feel anything unusual. This is because the forces acting on your body are all balanced and at equilibrium. Since the body is at rest, physics says (and so do we) that the body will want to continue to be in that state of rest.

However, the sudden movement of the elevator breaks that state of rest and the person begins to move upwards, giving them a strange fuzzy sensation in the head. Some experience drowsiness, light-headedness, or even a mild headache. This happens because of an imbalance of the organs (located in our ear) that help us keep our balance and orientation to the world.

When these organs get disturbed, they cause a physiological change in us, which leads to feelings of nausea and dizziness.

That feeling only lasts for a short time, not more than a few seconds, at most. This is again due to the first law of motion. Since you are now moving at the pace of the elevator (since you are in the elevator itself), the forces again acting on your body have found their balance, making you feel completely at ease (provided the lift is not an old, rusty one that jerks and bumps all the way up!).

Eventually, the elevator comes to a halt. You will again experience a sudden jerk as you cease moving and your head will feel funny for just a moment. Since you were in a state motion, your body wanted to remain in that state of motion, but the sudden stop broke that motion, resulting in you feeling that odd sensation again.

Newton’s First Law of Motion

This is why this sensation depends a lot on how the elevator moves. An elevator with smoother starts and halts will be more desirable than one that jerks every time it begins its climb or decelerates to a stop. People can even become physically sick due to these sudden jerks, as gravity messes with heads pretty badly at extreme heights.

Drowsiness After Take-off or Landing of an airplane

The same basic laws apply in this situation. When an airplane takes off and ascends into the air, it essentially moves you against the force of gravity. The plane continues to ascend, and at a certain altitude, it stops changing. This is when you feel that slight ‘falling’ sensation. You’re not actually falling; it’s just the plane’s state of upwards motion disappearing, allowing your body to feel normal again.

This is a natural phenomenon that every human being feels, which makes me wonder: how does Superman feel every time he shoots up into the sky with a booming bang of sonic energy?

Let’s not even talk about it… humans certainly wouldn’t be able to withstand those powerful forces!

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Correct answer:

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Suggested Reading

References

  1. University of California
  2. Darthmouth
  3. Harvard Health

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