In which I didn’t get dilated, but I did get lectured.

For breakfast I had two soft-boiled eggs and toast with tea. I was going to bathe after, but it was too late by then so I ran upstairs and got dressed. I grabbed my Christmas cards and my knitting, clicked to my dog, and ran out the door with Bindu on my heels.

…aaaaand I left my bento box on the counter. Damn.

I drove my brother’s pickup downtown, and got rockstar parking right in front of the building. I went in, signed the forms I’d already submitted electronically, and paid for my exam in advance.

Then I was called into the back, where I put my chin on tissue paper and pressed my forehead against the bar at about five different machines. Then I was seated in The Chair. The doctor’s assistant came in and asked me a bunch of questions focusing closely on the floaters – I assured her I hadn’t torn a retina and that it was all cool. The doctor came in and blinded me with a light brighter than the sun for awhile, and said things like, “Nice.” and “Good blood vessels!” Then he said, “How long have you had that–” and I interrupted, “It’s a mole. I’ve had it forever.” I need to get the thing removed because it always gets the optometrists excited, like I’ve got eyelash cancer or something. It’s a mole. On my lower eyelid. Do we have to discuss it? It’s gross enough as it is!

Then they walked my light-blind ass down the hall and pointed at a counter; I took my contacts out. The assistant put me on yet another machine (aaaaand I’m still not color blind, k thx bai). Back in the examination room, the doctor looked at my eyes yet again. Then he located my new prescription (“1, or 2? D, or E?”), and afterward I followed the assistant to yet another machine for topography.

My new contacts will be in by the end of the week and they’ll cost $75 each. (I’ll probably wear them for 5 or 6 years before replacing them again, so it’s a screaming deal really.) And when I get them, I will be able to see things! From a distance! On purpose! How hard will THAT rock?!

They didn’t threaten me with dilation, and I didn’t ask for it. Considering how long the good doctor stared at the back of my eyeballs with a laser, I think I’m okay for at least another year.

When the assistant asked me if I wanted new glasses I said yes, so she handed me a paper with the total damage for the gas permeable contact lenses (plus superfun $90 fitting fee) and led me to a room full of frames. She pointed at a few sections and said they were women’s frames, said she’d send someone to me, and flapped off in her nurse’s scrub top.

I started checking out frames. They’re all square these days, and smaller than I ever thought I could wear. The ones I chose are almost exactly what I’d envisioned this morning when I was thinking about frames – they’re basically tortoiseshell, because brown is my favorite color, but they’ve got bright teal too so they’re fun. Here’s the link. They’re “fairly inexpensive,” per the optician. I did not choose either of the $300 frames that I’d thought were cute.

There was another pair of black frames that I might go back for; there’s no reason not to have more than one pair of glasses, and SINCE I STILL DON’T NEED BIFOCALS they can pull the lenses right off the shelf and cut them to fit any frames I want pretty much on the spot.

So, yeah: I might end up with more than one pair of glasses, depending on how much I like these when I get them in a day or two.

The optician who fitted me congratulated me on my first pair of new glasses in twenty years, and then gave me a rather deeply paternal lecture listing the negative long-term effects of improper tear absorption caused by contacts. Okay, okay, okay, lecture noted: no more wearing contacts for more than 12 hours. I promise.

He then turned himself into my personal ‘if the world ends’ go-to guy, because he revealed he’d been collecting antiquated optical equipment and was hand-making glasses in his free time. I’ve always been concerned about the end of the world for one reason and one reason alone: what if the world ends and then I break my only glasses? Well, now I know: I could go find this guy, and he could make me new ones in his garage. Even without power. He assures me that he can do the math.

What a relief! Seriously. What good is someone who consumes resources but can’t even stand watch? I’ve always worried about this vision thing, in terms of its impact on my personal survival of the next dinosaur-killer.

 

6 Responses to I have ordered the cutest frames ever!

  1. pj says:

    Oh, thanks. Now I’m looking at frames. I kind of know what I want, I just don’t know the designer that spits them out. I could spend days doing this. Make it stop.

    My optometrist has the ugliest frames in my price range. How come yours are cute? And how come I now think that heavy rimmed glasses are “cute”? I mean, I thought they went out of style in 1970. I hate being old, stupid and out of fashion.

    Still ~heart~ you though.

    The frames I got are actually called NM Passport, in Sea Turtle (that’s the color), by Signature. Update: I found them and linked to them in the article. -m

  2. Seth says:

    I have to go to an eye doctor soon, my eyes are seriously fucked up, but I am scared about it…don’t want to have to start wearing glasses or contacts.
    Your post makes me want to make an appointment though…big step!

    Don’t be scared! Let me tell you, there’s no feeling quite like walking out of the optometrist’s office with new lenses and BEING ABLE TO SEE. You get all giddy realizing you can see individual bricks, leaves, facial features… it’s really worth it. Go make an appointment! Eye people are fun! -m

  3. Brad says:

    Get a copy of your prescription and order your glasses from here: http://zennioptical.com/cart/home.php. You can have tons of different styles, maybe not quite as fashionable as those cool ones that you picked out, but they do have some fun stuff.

    My next glasses are coming from Zenni, as well as pair of prescription sunglasses. Something I’ve always wanted, but that has always seemed like such an unaffordable luxury.

    If you decide to order some, let me know and I’ll tell you how to measure your PD.

    Wow. I really like some of the frames they have in the women’s fashion section! And cheap! -m

  4. Jim@HiTek says:

    Humans have been surviving with bad eyes for a couple million years. Don’t think you have much to worry about, but it’s cool you have a potential backup if you need it.

    Well, yeah, okay, whatever. But that was before the Niven-Pournelle dinosaur killer. -m

  5. shenry says:

    Oh, it’s like that Twilight Zone episode where the book-loving, bespectacled banker goes to the bank vault for lunch, which is lucky for him because a World War III ensues and he is safe within the vault. Then the bank teller climbs out of the rubble, does a little exploring, and ends up at the Library… which is totally intact with all the precious books preserved. And the banker gets all giddy because he now has all the time in the world to read… and then something happens… I can’t remember exactly… maybe he trips… but I know for sure that he breaks his glasses and it’s all tragic because now he can’t read and all the books become worthless to him.

    The moral: protect your glasses in the advent of global catastrophe.

    And those frames are totally you.

    That is exactly it! Don’t break your glasses after the fucking world ends! -m

  6. connie says:

    Hello I sent you an email. Thanks!

    Okay! -m