OK, for anyone that doesn't know which is their dominant eye, find an object about a foot wide (a picture on the wall will do) 6-10 feet away from you.
Stand or sit directly in front of it, extend both arms out in front of you and fashion a 'frame' using both hands and cinch down so that you are making a really tight frame around that object.
Look through the frame with both eyes and make sure you are centered. Now close your right eye, open it, and then alternately close your left eye. Which one is most centered in your 'frame'? That is the one that is dominant.
Well, I know I am left eye dominant, but after not wearing my contacts since last Wed. (see thread http://forums.azbilliards.com/showthread.php?t=34324), I decided to put brand new ones in on Sat. morning for a tournament.
My eye dr. said that to be able to see closeup (reading and computers) AND distance, to put in one contact (a -2) in one eye and a -3.5 in the other eye, even though the prescription to see clearly in both eyes is -3.5. If I wear both -3.5's, I can't even tell if a ball is frozen.
Well, I did, and it wasn't until Sunday that I figured out that I had the weaker strength in my dominant eye....the one that does most of the sighting and aiming!
And guess what, it didn't work. I kept missing balls that should have been easy, and had me scratching my head...and selling out.
My reasoning was that when I was 18, I was in a bad accident that tore off part of my eyelid. I feel it damaged my right eye a lot, and was very surprised that even after all these years, the right and left eye are both the same degree of blindness, lol. So I felt that the right eye needed the most correction, while my dominant eye should be ok with the weaker prescription.
If you did the little exercise above, you may have found that your recessive eye can't even see anything in your 'frame'.
It should have made sense to give the most correction to the dominant eye, again the workhorse that does all the sighting, aiming, and calculations, but I was trying to be smarter and figured just the opposite.
So, I really played poorly and wondered if anyone else has played around with that method of working their contacts to take advantage of their dominant eye. I would really love to get the eye surgery, except I am a big chicken and heard of 2 reports where their eyes got even worse than before the surgery.
Don't worry, Umma and 1PRoscoe, The Queen should have it all fixed by Wed.
Stand or sit directly in front of it, extend both arms out in front of you and fashion a 'frame' using both hands and cinch down so that you are making a really tight frame around that object.
Look through the frame with both eyes and make sure you are centered. Now close your right eye, open it, and then alternately close your left eye. Which one is most centered in your 'frame'? That is the one that is dominant.
Well, I know I am left eye dominant, but after not wearing my contacts since last Wed. (see thread http://forums.azbilliards.com/showthread.php?t=34324), I decided to put brand new ones in on Sat. morning for a tournament.
My eye dr. said that to be able to see closeup (reading and computers) AND distance, to put in one contact (a -2) in one eye and a -3.5 in the other eye, even though the prescription to see clearly in both eyes is -3.5. If I wear both -3.5's, I can't even tell if a ball is frozen.
Well, I did, and it wasn't until Sunday that I figured out that I had the weaker strength in my dominant eye....the one that does most of the sighting and aiming!
My reasoning was that when I was 18, I was in a bad accident that tore off part of my eyelid. I feel it damaged my right eye a lot, and was very surprised that even after all these years, the right and left eye are both the same degree of blindness, lol. So I felt that the right eye needed the most correction, while my dominant eye should be ok with the weaker prescription.
If you did the little exercise above, you may have found that your recessive eye can't even see anything in your 'frame'.
It should have made sense to give the most correction to the dominant eye, again the workhorse that does all the sighting, aiming, and calculations, but I was trying to be smarter and figured just the opposite.
So, I really played poorly and wondered if anyone else has played around with that method of working their contacts to take advantage of their dominant eye. I would really love to get the eye surgery, except I am a big chicken and heard of 2 reports where their eyes got even worse than before the surgery.
Don't worry, Umma and 1PRoscoe, The Queen should have it all fixed by Wed.