Lasik?

Collector Freaks Forum

Help Support Collector Freaks Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
I did it about 4 years ago.

Best money ever spent.

However, my eyes swelled up the next day after it and I could not see very well for 2 weeks. I was really upset about it...they even had to give me temporary glasses so I could actually see.

Luckily the swelling went down and I now see 20/15 in both eyes.

I could NEVER go back to contacts or glasses again.

Good luck!

I do have the night halos but think I have always had them...they are worse now but no big deal. You have to really stare to see them.
 
Reading all this has me thinking. I may need to do this. With what I do for a living, painting and sculpting all this small 1/6 detail stuff, I have to do something. I can't see closeup anything. NO lie! I know, the bloody Figuremaster can't see! :google Watch me without glasses when I break out a TV dinner! :lol WHY do they make TV dinners with instructions so small, NO ONE can read them!
Anyway, it's true. I need all manner of closeup glasses to see with (Far off vision is fine), and the headaches kill. This may be something I have to do, not just want to. Post operative swelling of eyes scare me though. :monkey4

Scared, but may have no choice. After I turned 40, my vision went to s#it!
You should see me trying to paint eyes now...need freaking coke bottles to do it! :lol That's why I never post in-prog pics with me in them. You'd all laugh your butts off. I look like a mad scientist!

Let me know how it goes Badmoon. Pulling for you.
And I may be right behind you! :D
 
Reading all this has me thinking. I may need to do this. With what I do for a living, painting and sculpting all this small 1/6 detail stuff, I have to do something. I can't see closeup anything. NO lie! I know, the bloody Figuremaster can't see! :google Watch me without glasses when I break out a TV dinner! :lol WHY do they make TV dinners with instructions so small, NO ONE can read them!
Anyway, it's true. I need all manner of closeup glasses to see with (Far off vision is fine), and the headaches kill. This may be something I have to do, not just want to. Post operative swelling of eyes scare me though. :monkey4

Scared, but may have no choice. After I turned 40, my vision went to s#it!
You should see me trying to paint eyes now...need freaking coke bottles to do it! :lol That's why I never post in-prog pics with me in them. You'd all laugh your butts off. I look like a mad scientist!

Let me know how it goes Badmoon. Pulling for you.
And I may be right behind you! :D

I certainly will! That is why I posted my Cigs thread and now this. I know that quitting smoking was a big step and I wanted to share. This is also a big step and I am pretty excited and nervous. I will certainly keep you all posted. I can tell you Les that if you have trouble seeing close up it may be harder for you to have the procedure done. What they do is something called mono vision. A guy that I work with just had it done. They fix one eye to see up close and leave the other one alone. Then you have to train your eyes to see this way. It worked for the guy that I work with though. He loves it. I was told that when I turn 40 I still have just as much chance as the next person needing glasses to see up close. It has something to do with the aging of the eye. I am still fairly young at 27. If it happens after 40 at least a had a long while with not needing anything. With as much as I spend on statues and toys I think I can manage this. Healthcare is a funny industry. People always complain about it but yet I don't think alot of people take it seriously. We spend more on our cars then are on bodies. Anyways thats a whole other issue. I will keep you all posted! Thank you too for your support that means alot!

Edit: Here is some info that I found on the mono vision procedure

Specialized LASIK Eye Surgery with Monovision

After the age of forty, we all will begin to lose the ability to accommodate or focus the lens of our eye. This is a universal phenomenon and not caused by any disease or illness.

When the ability to accommodate is lost, it means that the eyes cannot adjust or focus images at different distances. Therefore, different glasses, at different focal lengths, are required for distance and near vision. People may find that if they can see well at distance, they now require glasses to read at near and vice versa.

This problem is called Presbyopia and is usually corrected with bifocals or glasses with two focal lengths, one for near and one for distance. Presbyopia may also be corrected with Monovision. Monovision corrects one eye for distance and one eye for near. Monovision can only be used in patients who wear contacts or who have refractive surgery. Thus, the need for glasses with two different focal lengths is resolved by focusing each eye at a different focal length.

People over 40, who require glasses for distance vision – nearsighted or myopic individuals – frequently find that they can read up close quite well without their glasses. Correcting their distance vision to 20/20 almost always means that they will need glasses to be able to read up close. This is because they can no longer focus or adjust their focal length.

Typically in Monovision, the eye that is correct for distance is the dominant eye. One can usually determine which eye is dominant by raising a thumb, holding it out in front of both eyes, and blocking an object with the thumb while both eyes remain open. Once the object is blocked, close one eye or the other, and the eye that cannot see the object is the dominant eye.

Patients over forty must make a choice. Either both eyes are corrected for distance or one eye is corrected for distance and the other for near. If the patient is unsure of what they would like, contacts can sometimes be used to simulate post-operative results.

If you are over 40, or wear bifocals or reading glasses, your LASIK surgeon will want to discuss Monovision as part of your Consultation in order to make sure you get the best possible results.

If you are over 50 and do not wish to have monovision LASIK, you will most likely require reading glasses after your LASIK surgery. For patients over 50 who wish to have both their far and distance vision corrected without monovision or using reading glasses, a possible option to explore in order to effectively manage their presbyopia is Lens Replacement Surgery.
 
Last edited:
YUCK! Sounds like it's coke bottles for work tonight! :google
And I am not even a Presbyterian!

I KEED! I KEED! :monkey5

But seriously...

I may be too old. Hell, I am FOUR YEARS FROM FIFTY!

50:emperor
-46
4 :monkey2

Just four freaking years! :monkey1:monkey1:monkey1:monkey1

So, glasses it is! I won't use contacts. :monkey4 I can't stand ANYTHING in my eye, so that is a no-no. But I can dream.
Good luck to you though. I hope this works and you see better. I really do.

It aint' fair man! It just ain't fair! :banghead

But it is fair if your procedure works! Pulling for you will all my heart.
And congrats on the cigs man. That must be hard.
 
Les you're only 6 years older than me and I just had this done last year when I was 39 and I have still been sculpting up close. My focus gets a little fuzzy if I am not using enough light but its the same as before my surgery. The best thing you could do is just go for a consultation which is often free. At the very least they may take you from needing coke bottles to store bought reading glasses for detail work.
This is really a conversation you can have with people who have worn glasses and hated it, because no one else understands. I originally got contacts because of my martial arts. My eyesight was horrible but you can't do ground fighting, throws and mat work with glasses, and you can't see a technique demonstrated without them. Unfortunately for twenty years people thought I was stoned because my eyes got so red from the lenses.
If you have any interest in this at all go talk to the doctors and listen to the success stories.
 
Les you're only 6 years older than me and I just had this done last year when I was 39 and I have still been sculpting up close. My focus gets a little fuzzy if I am not using enough light but its the same as before my surgery. The best thing you could do is just go for a consultation which is often free. At the very least they may take you from needing coke bottles to store bought reading glasses for detail work.
This is really a conversation you can have with people who have worn glasses and hated it, because no one else understands. I originally got contacts because of my martial arts. My eyesight was horrible but you can't do ground fighting, throws and mat work with glasses, and you can't see a technique demonstrated without them. Unfortunately for twenty years people thought I was stoned because my eyes got so red from the lenses.
If you have any interest in this at all go talk to the doctors and listen to the success stories.

Anzik is right. It can't hurt to sit in on a consult.
 
Ok I am getting really nervous and really paranoid. I have spent most of the morning looking up lasik horror stories. I know I'm and a$$. Anyways the surgery is tomorrow and I am so affraid. LOL! It's my eyes and I don't want them to be ruined. I did select a really good surgeon and that gives me peace of mind. I never should have spent as much time online watching the surgeries and such. Now today I read some peoples horror stories and I'm freaking out. :horror
 
Ok I am getting really nervous and really paranoid. I have spent most of the morning looking up lasik horror stories. I know I'm and a$$. Anyways the surgery is tomorrow and I am so affraid. LOL! It's my eyes and I don't want them to be ruined. I did select a really good surgeon and that gives me peace of mind. I never should have spent as much time online watching the surgeries and such. Now today I read some peoples horror stories and I'm freaking out. :horror
I did the same. All was good, it was something about the paperwork thats says if you go blind your screwed. Just dint worry the worst thing you can do right now is stress about it. I was for a bit then thought let me look at the list of people who went to this doctor and it was a pretty big whos who list so it people who have much more to lose then me trust him why wouldnt I. Unless your Doctors names shows up in these horror stories I wouldnt worry to much. Remeber there are people that go to these $499 an eyes places and that these are a lot of these horror stories.
 
I did the same. All was good, it was something about the paperwork thats says if you go blind your screwed. Just dint worry the worst thing you can do right now is stress about it. I was for a bit then thought let me look at the list of people who went to this doctor and it was a pretty big whos who list so it people who have much more to lose then me trust him why wouldnt I. Unless your Doctors names shows up in these horror stories I wouldnt worry to much. Remeber there are people that go to these $499 an eyes places and that these are a lot of these horror stories.

Thanks! Thats what I keep telling myself too. I know that I picked a good doctor. He is one of the first to do it in PA. I need to just accept the risk and go for it and know that the majority of the people don't have problems. This is still going to be a long night. I was never this nervous in my entire life. Hell I'll be honest I am really scared now for some reason. I have done a lot of crap that should have worried me but this takes the cake. I will get through it though. If all goes well this time tomorrow I may be able to get on and at least briefly sum up how it went.
 
Thanks! Thats what I keep telling myself too. I know that I picked a good doctor. He is one of the first to do it in PA. I need to just accept the risk and go for it and know that the majority of the people don't have problems. This is still going to be a long night. I was never this nervous in my entire life. Hell I'll be honest I am really scared now for some reason. I have done a lot of crap that should have worried me but this takes the cake. I will get through it though. If all goes well this time tomorrow I may be able to get on and at least briefly sum up how it went.
Well on Thursday you can update us. You won't be doing anything tommorow. They told me just to come home and sleep, try my best to keep my eyes closed and not to watch TV or look at a computer screen.

I did my in Aug last year and living with no AC made it tough to sleep during the day so I turned on ESPN and listened to it all day.
 
Well on Thursday you can update us. You won't be doing anything tommorow. They told me just to come home and sleep, try my best to keep my eyes closed and not to watch TV or look at a computer screen.

I did my in Aug last year and living with no AC made it tough to sleep during the day so I turned on ESPN and listened to it all day.

They gave me 5 pills of Valium. They said to take 1 a half hour before the surgery. Then another when I get home. Then they said if I wake up or am restless to just take more and go to bed. I know me though and I am a busy body. However, I have never taken Valium before and non drowsy cold medicine will knock me right out. So you just might be right. I will still try though. Writing about quiting cigarettes really helped me through the process and this has been no different.
 
My kids thought the "fly goggles" were pretty funny.
Just relax dude, and keep thinking that for the first time you will be able to open your eyes and see the alarm clock across the room instead of a glowy red blur.

After your surgery you're going to look at stuff. Just look and people will ask you what you're doing. You'll reply "I can see that! I could never see that before!"
 
My kids thought the "fly goggles" were pretty funny.
Just relax dude, and keep thinking that for the first time you will be able to open your eyes and see the alarm clock across the room instead of a glowy red blur.

After your surgery you're going to look at stuff. Just look and people will ask you what you're doing. You'll reply "I can see that! I could never see that before!"

Thanks Anzik! :cool:
 
how long do you have to keep your eyes closed and just sleep for?
 
how long do you have to keep your eyes closed and just sleep for?

Well the surgery is at 12:30. I am supposed to keep my eyes shut for the rest of the day then and just rest. I am guessing at least until well into the evening.
 
how long do you have to keep your eyes closed and just sleep for?
I could see when I walked out the same day, but they said your eyes will heal better if you let them rest. To do that the best thing you can do is sleep, if not keep you eyes closed as much as you can the rest of the day. I tried to keep my eyes closed as much as I could unless I was getting up to eat or stuff like that.


And yes the goggles kida sucked. One thing I did was wore them at night since they said don't rub your eyes for like 2 weeks or a month cant remember and I was worried I would wake up in the middle of the night and rub my eyes.
 
How long do you think it would be until I could fly again? :monkey2

I wonder if the pressure changes as you go up and down in altitude would affect the surgery?
 
I could see when I walked out the same day, but they said your eyes will heal better if you let them rest. To do that the best thing you can do is sleep, if not keep you eyes closed as much as you can the rest of the day. I tried to keep my eyes closed as much as I could unless I was getting up to eat or stuff like that.


And yes the goggles kida sucked. One thing I did was wore them at night since they said don't rub your eyes for like 2 weeks or a month cant remember and I was worried I would wake up in the middle of the night and rub my eyes.

I am leaving here at 12:00. I plan on following what you said and just turn on ESPN and just lay in bed with my eyes shut. I am a little less nervous than I was last night. I didn't get much sleep and have been up and around since 3:00am.
 
Good, that means it will be easier to sleep when you get home. It'll be over before you know it dude. Your eyes will feel like you've worn your contacts too long, but within 24 hours you will feel fine and your fascination with everything you can see will overwhelm you.
Nash, these doctors have treated people from every walk of life. If you're interested in getting it done, find a place near you and shoot them an email.
 
Back
Top