You could also be using too much pressure make sure your pinky is out of the ring and when you pull the horn away from your face there shouldn`t be a white ring where the mouthpiece was. My guess if it`s an ambesure problem is that your mouthpiece is too low on your top lip, or not centered. I would heavily emphasize pedal tones until the problem is fixed. Stay away from higher notes whatever you do if you have to play in school or something try to avoid playing anywhere above the staff and take it down an octave if you need to. For a few days I would recommend playing only flow studies, long tones, and pedal tones for shortened practice periods. Otherwise, it`s almost definitely an ambesure (<- spelling?) problem. Have you switched any kind of equipment lately? Mouthpieces, trumpets, etc? If you changed mouthpieces, you should probably take your new one back if you can, since that likely means your problem is that your chops don`t match well with the mouthpiece.
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