Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Eye Balls
#1
I am 72. 6 years ago was the 1st time I went for an eye exam. The Dr. said my eyes were off enough to effect my depth perception. So I got my 1st pair of prescription glasses. The 1st time on the bike after that was like seeing in 3D again. Cornering was so much clearer it is hard to describe. It made an enormous difference riding.

I just went in for another exam. Believe it or not, my eyes got slightly better and a new prescription was in order. Haven't been able to test it riding yet (weather) but driving is very clear again.

The eye exam was covered by Medicare. I had to pay an extra $36 for the prescription. Then around $125-$150 to get it filled at Walmart-Costco. Well worth it for me.

This crept up on me.

Mike
Reply
#2
Don't need glasses for most things (computer, reading) but for driving, especially at night, I need them to read signs. For fine print, especially if small or if the light is low I need cheaters.

You're lucky to have lasted this long. Big Grin
Just to add, the last two prescriptions I've had to use bifocals (I get to use progressives). Helps to keep the instrument panel in focus and see down the road.
Reply
#3
Near vision has gone down hill last couple of years. Have to use 1.50 non Rx reading glasses now for computer work. I do a lot of reloading and fly fishing so for that detail work I've got 2.50. Luckily from about 2.5 feet away from my eyes to infinity I'm still solid and don't require anything to drive/ride. I seem to remember at an eye exam in my "yut" that I had 20/10 vision so I guess I had some room to 'depreciate'.
Reply
#4
[You're lucky to have lasted this long. Big Grin


But how long have I been riding/driving not realizing I needed distance glasses? The change was dramatic. I have been using cheaters for reading and close work since my late 50s.
Reply
#5
Vision is everything and you really don't know had bad it has become until you get glasses.
I was 50-51 when I first started to use reading glasses and they made a huge difference. My work involved constant reading of files and documents and with the new glasses the words and images seemed to leap off the pages Big Grin
That was 28 years ago so of course I've graduated to full lenses and have bi-annual checkups.
Reply
#6
I remember the exact moment my eyes went bad. I was on a plane coming back from an elk hunt in Montana. Sitting in my seat, reading a book, everything was fine. I flipped the page to continue reading and noticed the page had been double printed... as had the next page, and all the rest of the pages too. Came home got an eye exam and yep needed glasses. It was amazing how it happened all at once. That was at 40. At 44 I got my first pair of bifocals. Glasses are great if you don't have naturally good vision. Now at 66, putting on my glasses is like putting on my young eyes again.
Reply
#7
Well, I am coming at this from a completely different perspective. I got my first glasses at age 5 - nearsighted. The doc said I probably needed them at 3, but they caught it at 5 because that's when you start the letters and numbers thing in kindygarten.

From 5 until 27 my eyes degraded steadily - I have "Coke bottle" glasses. However, since high school it's been contacts. Vision is somewhat stable now and the massive nearsightedness held off the need for readers until about 50.
Reply
#8
I never needed glasses until a sudden change at age 41. I wore glasses for years after that with a new and stronger prescription needed every year. About 5 years ago I was diagnosed with cataracts and had lens replacement surgery in both eyes. Now, at nearly 69 years I can see as well as I did at 20, just need 1.5 readers for fine print.
Reply
#9
(01-22-2017, 05:35 AM)DAC_imp Wrote: Well, I am coming at this from a completely different perspective. I got my first glasses at age 5 - nearsighted. The doc said I probably needed them at 3, but they caught it at 5 because that's when you start the letters and numbers thing in kindygarten.

From 5 until 27 my eyes degraded steadily - I have "Coke bottle" glasses. However, since high school it's been contacts. Vision is somewhat stable now and the massive nearsightedness held off the need for readers until about 50.

I have a friend who went through the same type of thing. She said "until she got her glasses she thought trees were just big green fuzzy things" she was amazed of her new world.

I have been very lucky and should have known better. I have a Dr. apt in one year and will probably go biannual after that. The Dr said I do have early signs of a cataract starting in one eye.
Reply
#10
(01-22-2017, 01:37 PM)gmike_imp Wrote:
(01-22-2017, 05:35 AM)DAC_imp Wrote: Well, I am coming at this from a completely different perspective. I got my first glasses at age 5 - nearsighted. The doc said I probably needed them at 3, but they caught it at 5 because that's when you start the letters and numbers thing in kindygarten.

From 5 until 27 my eyes degraded steadily - I have "Coke bottle" glasses. However, since high school it's been contacts. Vision is somewhat stable now and the massive nearsightedness held off the need for readers until about 50.

I have a friend who went through the same type of thing. She said "until she got her glasses she thought trees were just big green fuzzy things" she was amazed of her new world.

I have been very lucky and should have known better. I have a Dr. apt in one year and will probably go biannual after that. The Dr said I do have early signs of a cataract starting in one eye.

I have a friend who went through the same type of thing. She said "until she got her glasses she thought trees were just big green fuzzy things" she was amazed of her new world.

I have been very lucky and should have known better. I have a Dr. apt in one year and will probably go biannual after that. The Dr said I do have early signs of a cataract starting in one eye.
I have one too in one eye, but it's well off to the side and hasn't moved. It's been there for 6-7 years. So far, so good.
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)