visionary
Eventually it worked, and he was able to get two more rounds of drops in there afterwards. The Poking Blue Lance of Glaucoma didn't go as well. "You won't feel a thing if you keep your eyes wide open," he said. I kept them open as wide as I could, but the Lance would keep brushing my eye lashes which caused the flinch. I was really trying. I knew it wasn't going to hurt.
"You keep pulling back," he said.
No shit. Maybe if this device looked like a fluffy bunny and not a Romulan torture device, I wouldn't have. His bedside manner left a lot to be desired, but he did a pretty good job. The last eye doctor wasn't even able to get the drops in. He was pretty busy so he had to be in and out of the examination room, which gave me time to rest my eyes and play with the various equipment, like the giant lens mask and whatever else was on a swivel arm. There was some awe-inspiring blonde patient roaming around who was looking for color contacts; she was all tall and tan and pretty much your stereotypical California girl dressed in pink, but she was upset that she had brown eyes. They were so dark, she had trouble finding color contacts that would have any affect on her. She whined, and though I couldn't see her when she said it, I assumed she pouted.
"You have beautiful brown eyes," the doctor said in a helpful, fatherly tone.
"I HATE them," she responded woefully.
They found her contacts that were able to turn her eyes a more desirable shade of blue or green (she wanted either one or the other). After analysing my glasses, Doc returned and told me that I had a vertical inversion, that my eyes had a tendency to want to pull away from each other, a worse astygmatism than most people have and that my brain has learned to compensate for all these things by actually shutting off my left eye from time to time in order to keep me from becoming too disoriented. He seemed amazed that I made a living out of reading and editing, and that my major in college was English Literature.
"You have a different way of seeing things," he said.
I kinda knew that already.
3 comments:
Did you hear that cackle? Yes, that was me. Let the games begin!
Did I ever tell you about the time that it took two nurses to hold me down while the doctor pried my eye open, all just to put eye drops in? Did I mention that I was 8 at the time? Did I tell you about how every year I had to deal with the blue light torture device from the ages of 7-14? Did I tell you how it once got caught under my lid because I blinked at the worst possible moment? But, luckily, I didn't panic and shred my eye apart. Nope, I just opened the eye. Very carefully.
You may now freak out. Again.
Good times, good times..
P.S. Hee! I just caught my new title.
We all knew that!
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