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Sailaway wrote:
It has just occurred to me that you could have lasiks done on just one eye. That way you could read with one eye and see distance with the other. Sailors that we know where she had always worn contacts, she got that done, and doesn't have to wear glasses at all now. "Ryk" wrote in message .. . I've got a Garmin GPS76 at the helm that provides all the functionality I really need, backed up with a direct connection to the PC running Fugawi at the nav station. Unfortunately, I no longer have teenaged eyes and the combination of small size, lack of contrast, rain, darkness, etc. can make it hard to read at the most important moments. I'm at the point where I can still read the phone book, but only in good light and probably getting a little worse. I wear 1.75 dime store glasses to read in bed and nothing at the computer screen. About 6 or 7 years ago I was watching TV and ran across a show (maybe on the History Channel ?) that described in part how the Army before the start of W.W.II was woefully short on qualified candidates for flight training. One reason for the shortage was due to a large number of otherwise qualified potential candidates having poor eyesight, so the Army hired a bunch of opthamologists to train the candidates to regain good eyesight from refractive errors like myopia and presbyopia. They showed films from the period where they were using all sorts of strange machines to retrain the eyes. Some time after seeing that show I read a description of the eye exercises for retraining refractive errors that the Army opthamologists gave their candidates. Now I see a number of *new* training systems for vision improvement for sale like the "See Clearly Method" and others that base their methods on the original Army/opthamologist methods, or the Bates method, or a combination of the two. The Army method has been successful for a lot of people, and the Bates system has also been successful for a lot of people. Some need one, others need the other. Still other people may need a combo of the two to be effective. Bottom line is, if you are willing to spend the time and effort, you can get a lot of correction. If though like me most of your refractive error is from astigmatisms, be prepared to spend some serious work to correct it. I started using the original Army methods when I first saw them and stopped cold the progression of worsening, (which up till that time meant about 1/4 diopter per year worsening on average) and have since improved one whole diopter. If I had dedicated enough time and energy to it I believe I would have improved my eyesight a lot more. I hate wearing glasses so the time I spent working on my eyes has enabled me to see good enough again to read without them. BTW, if you have become farsighted, you will get pretty rapid improvement using the Army methods - that seems to be by far the easiest to correct. But thanks for reminding me. Passing the CG OUPV test means having no more than 20/200 uncorrected, so now I'm going to dust off that document and get back to working on my vision. |
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