Optometry Forums


Reply
Thread Tools Display Modes

time for contacts...

 
 
lavenlight@hotmail.com
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      02-06-2006, 02:11 AM
I've written on here a couple of times before, and I've always
appreciated the response, so I figured I'd give this group a try again.
:-)

Basically, my glasses broke the other day. While they're being fixed,
I've thought about contacts a little more. My only concern is the
doctors appt/adjustment involved.

I've always been less than a fan of eye doc appts. I had eye surgery
when I was a child (I'm 21 now), and so eye doctors visits were always
kind of scary to me. I always had trouble letting them put drops in and
stuff. Even now, I still don't like going. I saw my parents'
opthamologist once or twice, and both times he was nasty to me, called
me a "baby", and actually grabbed my eyelids and forced them open when
trying to put drops in. (They were burning from the first set he put in
and I was trying to "blink it off" I guess.) He also gave me a glaucoma
test I guess (it involved drops and pressing a paper or something into
my eye and a lamp really close?) Whatever it was, it hurt really bad.
And when I get them dialated...it always lasts all day. Needless to
say, I didn't go back to my parents' opthamologist, and I saw an
optometrist for my last visit. He was really nice and understood my
uneasiness.

So back to the relevant stuff. What's usually involved in a contacts
visit? I think if I were allowed to put them in, I would feel more
control, and I would handle it better. Is there anything I can do to
prepare myself for the idea of sticking something in my eye? I've read
that some people "practice" by washing their hands really well and,
well, poking the white part (I used to know the name from bio, oh well)
a little. Is there really anything else I can do to get myself ready?
I was thinking of stopping by the optometrist place and chatting with
them for any ideas they might have, too.

 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
The Real Bev
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      02-06-2006, 02:52 AM
(E-Mail Removed) wrote:

<tale of woe and intrigue with an ophthalmologist who desperately
needs a good slapping snipped>

> ...Needless to say, I didn't go back to my parents' opthamologist, and I
> saw an optometrist for my last visit. He was really nice and understood my
> uneasiness.
>
> So back to the relevant stuff. What's usually involved in a contacts visit?
> I think if I were allowed to put them in, I would feel more control, and I
> would handle it better. Is there anything I can do to prepare myself for
> the idea of sticking something in my eye? I've read that some people
> "practice" by washing their hands really well and, well, poking the white
> part (I used to know the name from bio, oh well) a little. Is there really
> anything else I can do to get myself ready? I was thinking of stopping by
> the optometrist place and chatting with them for any ideas they might have,
> too.


Some people worry more than others about the supposed difficulty of inserting
and removing contacts. I looked at it the same way I looked at having a baby
-- hey, most people survive it and most of them do it more than once so it
can't be anywhere near as bad as it might seem to be on the surface!

I don't think it's sensible to try touching your eye even with clean hands.
Your fingers aren't anywhere near as smooth as wet contacts and there's a
chance that you'll do something that you might wish you hadn't done.

The optometrists deal with new contact-wearers all day and know how to teach
people to deal with their lenses. Personally, the most important part (after
cleanliness, of course) is keeping both your upper and lower eyelids from
blinking while you insert/remove the lenses -- not a difficult thing to do,
really.

Chatting with the doc beforehand wouldn't hurt. Even people with severe
phobias about touching their eyes learn to use contacts, although some don't
including one ophthalmologist in my mom's group :-(

Find a sympathetic optometrist, explain your fears, and take it from there.

--
Cheers,
Bev
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%
Sign on restroom hand-dryer:
"Push button for a message from your congressman."
 
Reply With Quote
 
Dan Abel
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      02-06-2006, 03:11 AM
In article <qKzFf.404$(E-Mail Removed)>,
The Real Bev <bashley101+(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

> (E-Mail Removed) wrote:


> > So back to the relevant stuff. What's usually involved in a contacts visit?
> > I think if I were allowed to put them in, I would feel more control, and I
> > would handle it better. Is there anything I can do to prepare myself for
> > the idea of sticking something in my eye? I've read that some people
> > "practice" by washing their hands really well and, well, poking the white
> > part (I used to know the name from bio, oh well) a little. Is there really
> > anything else I can do to get myself ready? I was thinking of stopping by
> > the optometrist place and chatting with them for any ideas they might have,
> > too.



> Some people worry more than others about the supposed difficulty of inserting
> and removing contacts. I looked at it the same way I looked at having a baby
> -- hey, most people survive it and most of them do it more than once so it
> can't be anywhere near as bad as it might seem to be on the surface!


After our first was born, my wife swore that that was it, no more!
Being smart, I didn't say a thing. Not one thing. We did have more,
when my wife was good and ready.


> I don't think it's sensible to try touching your eye even with clean hands.
> Your fingers aren't anywhere near as smooth as wet contacts and there's a
> chance that you'll do something that you might wish you hadn't done.



When removing contacts, I have considerable contact between fingers and
eye. I'm not sure that your idea is so bad. I don't know that it will
help, either, but it sounds worth a try.


> The optometrists deal with new contact-wearers all day and know how to teach
> people to deal with their lenses. Personally, the most important part (after
> cleanliness, of course) is keeping both your upper and lower eyelids from
> blinking while you insert/remove the lenses -- not a difficult thing to do,
> really.



My OD didn't do a thing for me. His assistant did it all.

> Find a sympathetic optometrist, explain your fears, and take it from there.


Sounds good to me.

Some people have problems, and some don't.

--
Dan Abel
(E-Mail Removed)
Petaluma, California, USA
 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Atrophy of the Optic Nerve Lelouch Optometry Archives 2 08-20-2009 03:55 PM
Three of a Kind. Lelouch Optometry Archives 1 08-02-2009 02:05 PM
My Headaches Lelouch Optometry Archives 1 07-20-2009 05:20 PM
Swine influenza H1N1 just in time Lecture & more alrc Optometry Archives 1 04-30-2009 12:19 AM
Eye colour can change over time? Zetsu Optometry Archives 7 03-21-2009 01:34 AM


All times are GMT. The time now is 10:09 PM.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14