Let’s talk about glasses.
I’ve been wearing glasses for 11 years. I started wearing them in 7th grade when I realized that the whiteboard I was watching my teacher write on 5 feet from me shouldn’t have been as blurry as it was. When I fully grasped what that meant, I was pretty devastated.
Glasses still weren’t cool when I was growing up. Even though the designs were becoming more fun and interesting, there was still a dorkiness I felt when wearing them. I mostly brought those feelings on myself (I actually completely brought them on myself). I don’t think ANYONE cared as much as I did about the fact that I was now resigned to wearing glasses. I so desperately wanted to pretend I was some kind of cool person that I resented myself a little bit for wearing my glasses. There were definitely a few times where I tried convincing myself I could get away with not wearing them. But BOY was it nice to clearly see the world when I had them on! The self-consciousness I felt was pretty instantly quelled by the wonder of seeing things in sharp focus for the first time in a long time.
Now, my prescription is mostly supposed to be used for distance. I’m near-sighted, presumably from genetics or the books/Gameboy games I would look at in the dark for years. I really hoped all the carrots I ate as a kid would help remedy the damage from that. However, they obviously didn’t and I now found myself needing assistance to see anything more than 8 inches away from my face. I felt freedom in this, though. The fact that I wasn’t permanently confined to my glasses at the time was a saving grace in the midst of my resentment in having to wear them. It was especially nice to be able to remove my glasses for plays, talent shows, or important events. It was less nice being unable to see well, but at least I looked… marginally better…?? Anyways… I really only needed them to see whiteboards in class or a friend running towards me from far away. It was great and noncommittal.
Then came high school and my introduction to contacts. They changed EVERYTHING. Literally. I started wearing contacts (if I remember correctly) during my sophomore year of high school? It was traumatizing undertaking the task of poking my eyes daily in the name of exceptional vision. Luckily, though, it didn’t take long to accustom myself to the routine and enjoy wearing contacts. It was liberating to have my full field of vision back without having to wear glasses. HOWEVER, wearing them all the time started to mess with my already changing prescription to the point that I am now 100% dependent on eyewear and will be for the rest of my life. Yay.
Honestly, though, it’s not as bad as I thought it would be as a kid. Sure, I still feel funny on days when I have to wear my glasses for a whole multitude of reasons (one of which being that the prescription on my glasses is two years behind my contacts). And sure, taking off my contacts at the end of the night and revealing the blurry world that my eyes naturally see still sometimes weirds me out for a good hour. But it means that my friends and I get to bond over our mutual love of Warby Parker designs and make fun of each other’s prescriptions by trying on each other’s glasses. It keeps life just that much more interesting.