As a side bar, I once interviewed a lady who lost her vision ( went totally blind) at 15 years old. Through advances in technology, and 50 years later she had an operation to give her vision back when she was 65. I remember that interview very well, and now I understand a little more clearly what she was feeling.
My right eye has always been extremely myopic. I could see things up close but not things farther than an arms length away. I have had glasses and contact lense since I was 16 years old. For many years hard and soft contact lense were a miracle to me, I could put them on in the morning and see great all day long even read with the contacts. I was an excellent patient for daily wear soft lense. However, age causes everyone to lose short vision over time, and I was slowly developing a cataract in that right eye. So even with glasses, readers, or contacts the short vision was dicey with flares and halo’s around lights in the night time becoming increasingly problematic. If I wanted to see a stage play clearly I had to wear contacts but to read the Playbill I had to have reading glasses. It was just one of those things you just get used to over the “snail’s pace” of time. Friends had radial keratotomy and laser surgery to correct their vision, but I was never sure it was right for me although my “prescription”seemed to be perfect for the operation.
For the last decade I have been using contact lense for stage work, but for everyday I just had my distant correction glasses which I took off to read or do work close. For me that was easier than using readers with my contacts. But the glare of lights at night time was really getting to me... with nothing that glasses or lenses could do to correct it.
I have a great optomologist who noticed the cataract developing in my right eye, causing most of the problems of light and glaring. That was the bad news, the good news: with new developments in eye surgery a patient did not have to wait until cataracts are really bad before getting rid of them. The best news was that while they were extracting the cataract they could implant a lense to make me see distance more clearly. And it is an outpatient procedure which meant I was less than two hours in the hospital. It was simple and virtually painless. The IV for the procedure was the worst part.
I feel like the lady who got her sight back. I have never seen so clearly in my right eye. In fact the biggest problem I have had all week is adjusting to more light and more color in my perception than I have had in a long time. I am almost over loaded with new colors and a new sense of distance. I wake up in the middle of the night and can clearly see what time it is on the cable box clock. This may not be a trill to some, but it is very exciting to me.
The funniest thing that happened to me during my procedure happened at the prep. I went in early in the morning and was escorted to an exam room before taken to a hospital bed. There a nurse put a series of drops in my “surgery ready” eye. These were in addition to the three sets of drops I had put in that eye at home already. She would matter of factly tell me what the drops were for, i.e. “this will dilate your eye” .... “this is an anti-inflamitory”. Then she put a drop into my eye that started stinging like crazy, and said, “This is to numb the eye.” I said, “It stings, than’s an oxymoron.” She paused for a moment and said, “No it is just a mild anesthetic.”
The lady I interviewed said that, after her surgery, if she got lost in the house she would just close her eyes so she would remember her way around. For me I just close one eye to remember.
Happy St. Patricks day to all the Irish and wannabes.
As you were,
Jay
2 comments:
Eyes are precious gift to anyone of us.
Treasure them with love.
Jay Dee
I chose to have the cataract surgery before I needed it, too, Jay. No pain...but I used to be able to read by holding the book up close. Now I have to have reading glasses, 'cuz they don't tell you that, if you're nearsighted, you're gonna wind up farsighted. :/
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