So, the PS on this: I had just bought a bunch of contact lenses via the popular online retailer whose name starts with 1 800.

What to do with them. Sell them on FB Marketplace? I semi-jokingly asked my doctor. 

He gave me a shrug.

Turns out I got a refund for my unopened lenses. That put like $120 back in pocket.

 

Colin Wood

Good to know your eyesight can improve with time/as you get older.

And I’m certain you wold have found a buyer on Facebook Marketplace–especially in the Daytona Beach area.

Marjorie Suddard

I’m sitting in the chair waiting for the eye doc RFN, actually. I’m always anxious during the “better or worse” phase–I get a weird test anxiety because WHAT IF I GET IT WRONG? Then it’s headaches, difficulty reading, dogs and cats living together, right?

Margie

Colin Wood

Marjorie Suddard said:

WHAT IF I GET IT WRONG?

That’s pretty much every day of my life.

wae

wae


PowerDork


12/13/23 1:32 p.m.

I was all happy a couple years ago when my (very awesome) optometrist told me that he was going to dial my contacts prescription back a little.  I asked him if that was unusual that my vision would get better and he just laughed.  “No,” he said, “your close-up, reading vision has gotten worse, so we’re going to sacrifice your long-distance vision to make it easier for you to read when you have your contacts in”.

Pretty much ruined my day right there….

Msterbee

I’ve been nearsighted most of my life.  I don’t like putting things in my eyes so I wear glasses.  Fortunately my prescription is pretty weak. I could drive day or night without them if I really had to but I don’t like doing it.  The bigger problem is things close to my face.  My need for reading glasses started at 45 (Apparently this is pretty much the age it starts for everyone?) and has gotten progressively worse over the years.  What’s really annoying though is that I need to look over my glasses to read instruments and information on the instrument panel.  Annoying. angry

Nicole Suddard

After many years of my nearsightedness getting worse and worse, I finally got good news from my eye doctor this year: my eyes have stabilized.

Apparently it’s pretty normal for your eyesight to completely divebomb through childhood and adolescence and then even out in your late ’20s. Who knew? Still can’t see clearly beyond an arm’s length ahead of me, but at least the big blur is no longer getting closer and closer every year.

Msterbee

Nicole Suddard said:

After many years of my nearsightedness getting worse and worse, I finally got good news from my eye doctor this year: my eyes have stabilized.

Apparently it’s pretty normal for your eyesight to completely divebomb through childhood and adolescence and then even out in your late ’20s. Who knew? Still can’t see clearly beyond an arm’s length ahead of me, but at least the big blur is no longer getting closer and closer every year.

That sucks. My younger daughter’s vision is like yours.  She can’t do anything without glasses.  I couldn’t imagine having to wear glasses that much.  A literal pain since wear glasses too much gives me headaches.  indecision

Nicole Suddard

In reply to Msterbee :

I switched to contact lenses in middle school and have worn the same brand ever since – a much better solution for an active lifestyle, but still annoying to deal with. I get headaches from wearing glasses, too, so the contact lenses are the lesser of the two evils for me. Every year I get closer to considering lasik surgery.

Marjorie Suddard

I’m back from eyedoctorland, and he confirmed that not only is my distance vision better, it’s common after a certain age and usually paired with deteriorating close-up vision. (To put it more succinctly, your focal distance changes.) So yay, me–I have barely any correction for distance these days, but readers got another boost. And I have a tiny cataract in one eye. So now I am expecting a random package with hairnet, support stockings and grippy socks to appear in my mailbox any day now.

Margie



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