At what age did you get glasses? Did you know that the optometrists lied to you in order to make money?
Do you wear glasses Any Forums?
For me, I was around 18 years old, but they told me i had pseudo myopia, but i needed glasses in order to see. A couple of years later my vision was so bad that they told me it was genetic
I was told my eye sight was bad so I was recommended circumcision. I had the surgery and my eye sight is still bad.
shit ass thread
shit ass op
I don't but when my eyesight has gotten worse since I was a teenager. Recognised in my last year of highschool that I couldn't see as clearly as I should past a few metres.
Not convinced I need glasses, going to start training my eyes when I move into my new apartment. If that doesn't work after 6 months I'll submit to the ocular Jew.
I got glasses way too late, and it was like discovering a new world again. Suddenly everything was clear.
Look into the endmyopia movement and learn active focus. That actually works compared to the bates method which you will stumble upon when looking into eye exercises
this again? okay. i will post again. i have what i will call "classical myopia." right now i am -1.25 and -1.50. And I have been wearing glasses since I was a kid. actually my myopia improved recently. it used to be -1.50 and -1.75.
back in the day even old people who had worn glasses all their lives only had mild myopia. there was never this -5 kind of shit. i guess i am thinking about wwii and before. maybe radiation and nuclear testing has something to do with it? i don't know why some of us can wear glasses all our lives and still be in the -1 range.
look at carl jung in this picture. he wore glasses all his life and you can see he only has a mild prescription. i wonder why that is. at least the prescription looks mild to me. look at that lens. that cannot be more than a -2.
Did you know that you can naturally reverse your myopia?
Its probably even milder than it looks, because the glasses today have a much higher refractive index, which reduces the "small eye effect"