From No Glasses To Lots of Glasses To No Glasses.....Wow!
For ten years I used glasses and my optometrist took the time to blend my two prescriptions.
I required reading glasses and also glasses for distance that I needed for driving & watching TV.
It was annoying to have two pairs but bifocals never worked for me since movement created blurs.
Pool was annoying as neither reading nor distance glasses covered the table without sacrificing
something. I mentioned this to my eye physician and he came up with the idea of comingi up with
a blend. We went to the conference room at his office and set up objects at distances varying from
2 ft up to 12 ft. He had me wear this headgear contraption that let him experiment with different lenses.
He would switch the left and right lenses by replacing them with other strength lenses that were in
trays on a handcart. He must have spent 20 mins switching lenses all the time asking which lens
combination gave me the clearest sight for up close and far away. We came up with a billiard glasses
prescription which was a weakened version of my reading prescription combined with a stronger
distance prescription. This essentially let me see a frozen ball on the near rail and far rail pretty clear.
I only play on 9’ and 10’ pool tables so if you do as well, this approach works the best. Then I went and
purchased a Ray Ban Aviator frame which looked better than some of the goofy looking billiard glasses
and had prescription lenses made. Periodically over the years, my prescription had to be changed due
to my cataracts getting worse and worse over time. I think it was changed once & on the second occasion,
the difference was so little that I decided to just stay with what I already had.
Then the sky opened up.......heaven sent me a present. I had been hearing for years that my cataracts
weren’t bad enough to warrant surgery. This is more likely some insurance issue more so than anything
else, I.e., cost containment. But last year my optometrist told me it probably time to think about cataract
surgery as my condition had reached the stage where light passage was now severe. Driving at night
became really a challenge and so I avoided it as much as possible other than short distance trips.
So last year I had cataract surgery. My left eye was done last May and the right one done in a June. And
just with the left eye repaired, my vision became wonderful even though I still had a right eye yet to be
done. Three weeks later the right eye was done and I found paradise. My vision was restored so much
so that I no longer need eyeglasses at all. Gone.....eliminated.......almost 20/20......my eye surgeon said
if my eyes ever get tired from reading, just go buy a pair of the weakest strength reading glasses at the
drug store or supermarket.....like 0.5 or something. The bottom line is I no longer need any eyewear.
Apparently when you start developing cataracts, the condition has to reach some stage of severity before
surgery is recommended or even allowed under most health insurance coverage. Maybe if you wanted to
pay for the surgery as an elective procedure and not involve health insurance the surgery might be able
to be scheduled whenever you wanted instead of awaiting this gradual, unavoidable degradation of sight.
Anyway, all I can state with absolute certainty is I did not decide to get the prescription lens implants and
just went with standard lenses. Through my Blue Shield 65+ HMO coverage, which is inexpensive @ $20
mth, my out of pocket for cataract surgery was under a grand. See how much prescription eyewear runs
you over the years? It isn’t cheap but being able to see things clearly, bright and with colors is everything.
Matt B.