- Joined
- Dec 22, 2003
- Messages
- 36,691
I just started wearing glasses two weeks ago. My eyesight has always been really very good but I'm closer to 50 than 40 now and work at monitors all day and there's a small requirement for close up work (like if you're reading your phone).
In the two weeks I've been wearing them - for monitor work - I've seen a precipitous drop in the quality of my eyesight without them - at much greater distances than has ever been required (eg. - my TV is 6 feet away from me and now is slightly blurry, when for years (and up until two weeks ago) it has been crystal clear).
I honestly think that glasses are bad for my eyesight in general. Sure, they're great for the actual problem (headaches when reading phone and 8 hours a day of spreadsheets) - but the knock-on effect on the rest of my non-glasses time is both stark and obvious. To me at least.
So I've google searched - and there's a lot of articles like this one - saying that a lot of people mistakenly believe that glasses can make your eyesight worse / that your muscles can atrophy etc. etc. But that they're wrong.
Harvard health says:
- which I'd totally buy, but for the fact it's made a difference at distance. Not 6 inches from my eyes - but 6 feet away. (If I put my glasses on and look at the TV it becomes unreadable - because it's not what the prescription is for).
There are lots of articles saying this is a "myth" - but I can't really find any studies. I've come across this BBC Futures article which says:
That absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
In some places nearly 70% of people believe that wearing glasses make your eyes weaker. This is obviously only anecdotal evidence - and dismissed because of this. But if up to 70% of people anecdotally believe that glasses make their eyes weaker then that's incredibly strong grounds for further research.
The global eyewear market is worth in the region of $150-180 billion. It's very much not in their interest to fund research that might find out that they are potentially damaging people's eyesight. In fact, the industry's only interest is to conduct research designed to show positive outcomes.
I'm perfectly happy to consider the possibility that my experience isn't telling me the right things. That glasses aren't causal in this. But, despite all appearances to the contrary, I'm not a fucking idiot. The specifics of what is happening to my eyesight in the 14 days since I've started wearing glasses, at a time when I'm paying particular attention, is giving me serious pause for thought.
I'm tempted to keep wearing them for about a month then go back to specsavers and get the full works again. See if they can detect any difference (presuming they actually log everything *exactly*). However, the difference is small - 6 inches to 6 feet - and I'd probably still be able to read everything down to the smallest lines etc. - so it might not be worth it.
But still. It's making me think.
Whadda other speccy four-eyes FH members think?
In the two weeks I've been wearing them - for monitor work - I've seen a precipitous drop in the quality of my eyesight without them - at much greater distances than has ever been required (eg. - my TV is 6 feet away from me and now is slightly blurry, when for years (and up until two weeks ago) it has been crystal clear).
I honestly think that glasses are bad for my eyesight in general. Sure, they're great for the actual problem (headaches when reading phone and 8 hours a day of spreadsheets) - but the knock-on effect on the rest of my non-glasses time is both stark and obvious. To me at least.
So I've google searched - and there's a lot of articles like this one - saying that a lot of people mistakenly believe that glasses can make your eyesight worse / that your muscles can atrophy etc. etc. But that they're wrong.
Harvard health says:
There are two reasons people wrongly blame glasses for worsening presbyopic vision. First, the underlying condition worsens during the period when they start wearing reading glasses, so they associate the glasses with declining vision. Second, they get used to seeing near objects well when wearing reading glasses, so when they take them off, their vision seems to have gotten worse. They blame the reading glasses, when they're really just experiencing the contrast between corrected and uncorrected vision.
- which I'd totally buy, but for the fact it's made a difference at distance. Not 6 inches from my eyes - but 6 feet away. (If I put my glasses on and look at the TV it becomes unreadable - because it's not what the prescription is for).
There are lots of articles saying this is a "myth" - but I can't really find any studies. I've come across this BBC Futures article which says:
...which I'm happy to take at face value, given the BBC's resources, followed by:What’s surprising is how few trials have been conducted on the prolonged effect of wearing glasses
...which I'm unsurprised about - Auntie's journos (and journalists in general) have never been able to make the link that if you don't do research, then you don't produce evidence.from what we know there’s no persuasive evidence that wearing reading glasses affects your eyesight
That absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
In some places nearly 70% of people believe that wearing glasses make your eyes weaker. This is obviously only anecdotal evidence - and dismissed because of this. But if up to 70% of people anecdotally believe that glasses make their eyes weaker then that's incredibly strong grounds for further research.
The global eyewear market is worth in the region of $150-180 billion. It's very much not in their interest to fund research that might find out that they are potentially damaging people's eyesight. In fact, the industry's only interest is to conduct research designed to show positive outcomes.
I'm perfectly happy to consider the possibility that my experience isn't telling me the right things. That glasses aren't causal in this. But, despite all appearances to the contrary, I'm not a fucking idiot. The specifics of what is happening to my eyesight in the 14 days since I've started wearing glasses, at a time when I'm paying particular attention, is giving me serious pause for thought.
I'm tempted to keep wearing them for about a month then go back to specsavers and get the full works again. See if they can detect any difference (presuming they actually log everything *exactly*). However, the difference is small - 6 inches to 6 feet - and I'd probably still be able to read everything down to the smallest lines etc. - so it might not be worth it.
But still. It's making me think.
Whadda other speccy four-eyes FH members think?