[Magdalen] Specs advice?

Ginga Wilder gingawilder at gmail.com
Sat May 26 20:20:49 UTC 2018


I am two weeks out from my second cataract surgery.  I am SO thrilled to be
able to see everything except up close for the first time without
prescription.  I have floaters in both eyes, but only my right eye bothers
me...a lot.  Nothing to do about that except have a retina specialist
follow me.  I have ordered online a $40 pair of cute red bifocal reading
glasses.  I love them!

A very good friend is an optometrist who has refracted my vision for many
years. Don, OD refracted my vision better than any opthamologist ever did,
but only opthamologists handle medical probs with eyes which began for me
with the first floaters.  I will probably have my optometrist prepare
lenses with the precise bifocal correction and put them in my old frames.
Shouldn't be too expensive since I have the frames already.

Good luck, Scott.  Eyes are important.
Ginga

On Sat, May 26, 2018 at 2:47 PM Judy Fleener <fleenerj at gmail.com> wrote:

>  I love my ophthalmologist, after he did my 2 cataract surgeries he told
> me not to buy his glasses but to go  to Walgreens because I only needed
> cheap readers. I have found that the cheapest ones don’t last. I spend
> about $30 and if I am only slightly careful the last like prescription
> glasses.
> Bill was going to some place for exams and glasses and got really
> frustrated because the glasses weren’t right. He had macular degeneration.
> Fortunately the treatment he receives keeps it somewhat under control.
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On May 26, 2018, at 1:02 PM, Grace Cangialosi <gracecan at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> And I would second that. I have mild glaucoma in one eye and the beginning
> of a cataract in the other. An optometrist might have picked up on that but
> wouldn’t be able to treat.
>
> Also, an ophthalmologist can do a field of vision test and take photos of
> the inside of your eye, which would give you baseline information.
>
> > On May 26, 2018, at 11:40 AM, flyingfish224--- via Magdalen <
> magdalen at herberthouse.org> wrote:
> >
> > Scott-
> >
> > Forgive my presumption, but you might be at an age where you would
> benefit from an exam from an ophthalmologist.  As we - ahem -age, issues
> other than acuity can arise.
> >
> > Renee
> > Veteran of the retinal wars
> >
> > Sent from my iPhone
> >
> >> On May 26, 2018, at 11:13 AM, Scott Knitter <scottknitter at gmail.com>
> wrote:
> >>
> >> I'm way overdue for having my eyes examined and new glasses made.
> >>
> >> I won't be going to the venerable Granville Vision Center here in the
> >> neighborhood like last time. True, the optometrist, Dr. Ernest Watanabe,
> >> has been doing optometry and running his business for 40+ years, but
> last
> >> time I had to go back and insist on a retake of the exam and a remake
> of my
> >> lenses; I don't think he has kept up with technological improvements in
> his
> >> exam room. And he was a bit short with me for coming back...excuse me
> for
> >> wanting glasses through which I can see clearly. I have to say the
> frames
> >> have been great, though, and the total price was far less than for
> >> LensCrafters.
> >>
> >> But what I'd love to do is have my exam at LensCrafters, with their good
> >> technology, and then take my prescription somewhere else for a
> reasonable
> >> deal on good glasses. Has anyone done this? I imagine I'd have to go in
> >> there with an uncompromising attitude to resist the pressure to buy
> glasses
> >> there. I understand one also needs to measure one's own PD (pupillary
> >> distance) if ordering glasses online, or I'd think they'd do this for
> me in
> >> any physical store I take the prescription to.
> >>
> >> I know with new glasses I will be careful to put them in their case at
> >> night: my current ones developed a tiny ripple in the left lens that
> took
> >> me a couple of years to figure out: I had likely set my glasses on my
> >> nightstand in such a way that the lens touched, or was too close to, the
> >> base of my IKEA reading lamp, and the hinge just above the base gets
> very
> >> hot (as does the metal shade around the halogen bulb). Live and learn...
> >>
> >> --
> >> Scott R. Knitter
> >> Edgewater, Chicago, Illinois USA
> >
>


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