Hey there! Even though we’ve got a much-changed living room over here, I’m going to sideline home progress and DIYs for a hot second to discuss PRK – the eye surgery I had a couple of weeks ago.
I’ve read and heard several bad experiences with PRK in the past few months. For one, an Instagrammer I follow had it done and wrote about her horrible experience. Then I read a bunch of the comments on her post and a lot of them were similar experiences. I also reached out to an aquaintance right after I found out I’d have to have PRK vs. Lasik and was told that “the first few days [after PRK] were excruciating pain”. Eep. That all made me a little nervous. Just a little though. I really have thee best doctor in the whole world and in him I placed all of my trust. In the end, I was glad to read and hear how hard of a recovery it can be because I was fully prepped for the worst on the day of my surgery. However, in saying that, I made sure not to go out seeking stories because I knew my horse might bolt if I did that and I’d be stuck with glasses forever thanks to that pesky little thing we all know as FEAR.
If you were born with perfect vision like my lucky husband, good for you. You have literally saved thousands of dollars. I’m praying hard our kids got his good vision genes.
Then there’s me. I’ve been in glasses/contacts since fourth grade. At the time, I was dying and wishing and hoping for a pair of glasses. I thought they were the COOLEST! (WHAT WAS I THINKING?!) My vision wasn’t horrible and I could see the wipe board at school but I remember telling my mom I really needed to get my vision checked because things were “kinda” blurry. She took me to an optometrist and he told her my eyes weren’t really that bad and that I could probably get away without glasses but if it made me feel like I could see better, he’d give me that super low prescription I needed. Did I ruin my vision forever by begging for them? I don’t know. Either way, fast forward lots and lots of year to when I ran out of contacts last December. If you are a wearer, you know that they can be expensive. I was blessed with an astigmatism on top of my poor vision so I have to wear special contacts that cost even more. Yay! It costs me about $200-250 a year to wear contacts. I prefer them whole-heartedly over glasses because I hate feeling like I’m looking through glass at all you people like you’re an animal at the zoo. I know it sounds dumb but I really just hate the barrier. And I hate how they slide down my nose all day long and knock my kids in the face when I’m going in for a cuddle. And on a superficial note, I hate when I get all dressed up for something and then I get to top off my rad outfit with…glasses. Fantastic. Anyway, I digress. I ran out of contacts and luck had it that we had just paid off a bunch of loans. So my next thought was, well, I could buy another years worth of contacts or I could put that money towards surgery. That’s the great thing about getting your vision corrected btw, you’re going to spend the money either way whether it’s on doctors’ visits (mine were $150 a pop) or on glasses/contacts so why not just spend the money to fix your eyes, right?