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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
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    the foggy wetlands,los osos,ca
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    Progressive lenses

    I need to get new glasses and was wondering about progressive lenses? A friend of mine who has them says they make your eye's get worse. That your vision goes faster with them. Has anyone heard or thinks this is true? I thought maybe it was just her and that her eye's are getting bad just because. But I can't tell her that she is stubborn and believes what she believes. (giggle)
    I am having that thing where I am sitting and knitting and when I look up I can't see cause it is blurry and it is taking a bit for them to focus. When I wear my glasses they work for seeing far ahead but then I can't see up close. And now I need a magnifier lens to take splinter's out and so on. No big I like me in glasses just need one's that work for what I need without owning a bunch of reading glasses and distance glasses. Of coarse reading one's are waaaay cheaper. Any thoughts?
    Blessed are the flexible, for they shall not be bent out of shape.
    > Remember to appreciate all the different people in your life!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
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    14,498
    I'm in the reading glasses club ... half a dozen pairs strewn all over the house, in my purse, in my jersey pocket, where I can (usually ) find them when I need them!

    I like having full, unobstructed distance vision, including ALL my peripheral vision, and never more so than when I'm on the road (bici, moto, running, car). So I have contacts for my distance prescription and I just deal with not being able to see up close without glasses. Lately I almost always have a pair perched on my nose, granny-style, when I'm indoors.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  3. #3
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    You know it is cheaper. My friend said her glasses including the office visit was almost 600. ouch! And if you go to the dollar store they are even cheaper only a $1.00 (hence the name)! lol
    Blessed are the flexible, for they shall not be bent out of shape.
    > Remember to appreciate all the different people in your life!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Washington, DC
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    Getting progressive lenses or reading glasses is a major event... an admission of age, so to speak. I have had progressive lenses for more than 3-4 years now. The first week or ten days were hard (I was dizzy) because you need to get used to the way you use the lenses. I don't think your eyes get any worse. My prescription has not changed.

    What was funny is that the day picked my first pair of glasses with progressive lenses, I had dinner with a couple of friends of mine (both use glasses). They told they did not need reading glasses yet, but when the menus and the bill came, they read those by removing their glasses or held the bill high to read it by looking above their glasses.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
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    Well I think it's pretty common for people with nearsightedness to be able to read without correction for many years. I've been using reading glasses with my contacts for I think 12 years now, but when I'm home with my contacts out, it's only recently that I sometimes (not usually) need a little bit of "help" to read. If the type isn't super small and there's a reasonable amount of light, I don't need any. DH wears glasses for distance vision and same for him, his close vision is fine without any correction at all. If they were to make progressive lenses (or regular bifocals) for people like him or your friends, the bottom tier would be plain glass (no correction) anyway. So why pay extra for it?
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    Portland, OR
    Posts
    324
    I am at that age , according to my doctor where it is just because of my age that my vision needs are changing. I have had progressives for some time as I am far sighted and my work does require close up and reading.

    Over the last year, I have had a problem even with those, so now I have 2 pairs of progressives, 1) a general purpose pair for most things; and 2) a "working" pair for computer and close up work. The working pair have a higher transition line to give me more close up lens area.

    It is a PITA, but I like being able to work without eye strain. I should note I have to have prism and astigmatism correction also.

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  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
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    Washington, DC
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    Quote Originally Posted by OakLeaf View Post
    Well I think it's pretty common for people with nearsightedness to be able to read without correction for many years. I've been using reading glasses with my contacts for I think 12 years now, but when I'm home with my contacts out, it's only recently that I sometimes (not usually) need a little bit of "help" to read. If the type isn't super small and there's a reasonable amount of light, I don't need any. DH wears glasses for distance vision and same for him, his close vision is fine without any correction at all. If they were to make progressive lenses (or regular bifocals) for people like him or your friends, the bottom tier would be plain glass (no correction) anyway. So why pay extra for it?
    For me, at the end it was an issue of comfort and safety to some degree. I was progressively annoyed at not being able to read my watch when I was driving or, at a stop, not being able to glance at a map or read an address. I still can read comfortably without my glasses and some detail oriented tasks are more easier without them, but now I don't have to remove them or do awkward eye contortions to look above or below the glasses. The comfort is well worth the price, in my view. I had the reading prescription for more than a year before actually caving in and ordering the progressives.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    the dry side
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    4,365
    Quote Originally Posted by Brandi View Post
    You know it is cheaper. My friend said her glasses including the office visit was almost 600. ouch! And if you go to the dollar store they are even cheaper only a $1.00 (hence the name)! lol
    Good lord, love those expensive eye clinics. WTF?

    I've been getting my glasses at Costco optical for years. I have two sets of progressives, one for eveyday and one for work. Each set was less than $200, I'm sure. I've been a fan of the Costco optometrist ever since he figured out what my problem with contacts was, and the expensive eye clinic guy couldn't. That was lot of money down the toilet until we got that solved.
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  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2010
    Location
    Denver
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    1,942
    Quote Originally Posted by Irulan View Post
    Good lord, love those expensive eye clinics. WTF?

    I've been getting my glasses at Costco optical for years. I have two sets of progressives, one for eveyday and one for work. Each set was less than $200, I'm sure. I've been a fan of the Costco optometrist ever since he figured out what my problem with contacts was, and the expensive eye clinic guy couldn't. That was lot of money down the toilet until we got that solved.
    That's not really an absurd price depending on the prescription. Even at Target Optical with insurance, non-progressive distance lenses for me are about $300. Add in non-clearance frames and I pay about $400 (and then I have to wait about 3 weeks to get them).

    Which is why I'm wearing glasses that are about 4 years old.

    "I never met a donut I didn't like" - Dave Wiens

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Central Indiana
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    6,034
    Quote Originally Posted by Brandi View Post
    You know it is cheaper. My friend said her glasses including the office visit was almost 600. ouch! And if you go to the dollar store they are even cheaper only a $1.00 (hence the name)! lol
    I don't wear progressives, but my lenses, frames and exam run close to that (although not quite) because my prescription is so bad (-1200 or so in each eye). By the time everything gets factored in, it adds up. So, yes, maybe your friend just went to an expensive optician or maybe she just has a difficult prescription.
    Live with intention. Walk to the edge. Listen hard. Practice wellness. Play with abandon. Laugh. Choose with no regret. Continue to learn. Appreciate your friends. Do what you love. Live as if this is all there is.

    --Mary Anne Radmacher

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
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    Quote Originally Posted by indysteel View Post
    I don't wear progressives, but my lenses, frames and exam run close to that (although not quite) because my prescription is so bad (-1200 or so in each eye). By the time everything gets factored in, it adds up. So, yes, maybe your friend just went to an expensive optician or maybe she just has a difficult prescription.
    You could be very right about that. Maybe it is a hard perscrpt.
    Blessed are the flexible, for they shall not be bent out of shape.
    > Remember to appreciate all the different people in your life!

 

 

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