BACKGROUND
I'm 22, I have dry eye the kind that's always dry with vascularization all around the whites of both eyes. I used to be on the computer all day long and had absolutely no problem I loved it. At around 21 years of age I went on a 5 month accutane cycle of a relativly high dose 80 mg per day. When I got off my like long severe acne was gone but I had dry eyes. At first I didn't understand it but after an entire year of suffering, 2 ophthalmologist doctors , various endocrine and other doctors+my own research I found the problem.
I used to care about my eye veins, now I couldn't care less. The point is not understanding what I had (chemical induced permenant dry eye) when I re-enrolled back to college for computer science...
PROBLEM
I now can't stand to look at the computer without my eyes burning... i'm about 2 semesters into the degree...
I wasted my time before sitting still with acne and depression after high school but now that I finally am moving forward I can not continue with this path due to dry eye, a new obstacle.
I NEED SOLID advice i'm at a deadlock. Having wasted $$$ on semester tutitions, do I continue with computer science? basically my job prospects after graduation will involve staring at a computer, or do I switch immediately, and to what? what are some good majors that do not require a computer once in the job field?? Please help me... I am very determined to keep moving forward..
I am willing to accept/tolerate low levels of comfort, but dry eye and the computer screen especially on dry days is below that comfort level.
MISC
My dry eye has been around for about a year and a half now, I've been on restasis for about 8 months straight now dilligently, it offers maybe 0.01% relief, my dry eye is permenant, not only did the tear layer get disrupted, but I have systemic dryness of the body, on dry days i will be mildly dehydrated, all mucus membranes fully dried up. I don't care about these other symptoms I just went to move forward.
Thank you for reading
I'm 22, I have dry eye the kind that's always dry with vascularization all around the whites of both eyes. I used to be on the computer all day long and had absolutely no problem I loved it. At around 21 years of age I went on a 5 month accutane cycle of a relativly high dose 80 mg per day. When I got off my like long severe acne was gone but I had dry eyes. At first I didn't understand it but after an entire year of suffering, 2 ophthalmologist doctors , various endocrine and other doctors+my own research I found the problem.
I used to care about my eye veins, now I couldn't care less. The point is not understanding what I had (chemical induced permenant dry eye) when I re-enrolled back to college for computer science...
PROBLEM
I now can't stand to look at the computer without my eyes burning... i'm about 2 semesters into the degree...
I wasted my time before sitting still with acne and depression after high school but now that I finally am moving forward I can not continue with this path due to dry eye, a new obstacle.
I NEED SOLID advice i'm at a deadlock. Having wasted $$$ on semester tutitions, do I continue with computer science? basically my job prospects after graduation will involve staring at a computer, or do I switch immediately, and to what? what are some good majors that do not require a computer once in the job field?? Please help me... I am very determined to keep moving forward..
I am willing to accept/tolerate low levels of comfort, but dry eye and the computer screen especially on dry days is below that comfort level.
MISC
My dry eye has been around for about a year and a half now, I've been on restasis for about 8 months straight now dilligently, it offers maybe 0.01% relief, my dry eye is permenant, not only did the tear layer get disrupted, but I have systemic dryness of the body, on dry days i will be mildly dehydrated, all mucus membranes fully dried up. I don't care about these other symptoms I just went to move forward.
Thank you for reading


(And keep in mind, that if your eyes are too bad NOW to do something, that doesn't mean they will stay that way - although I agree with you that computer science is probably a risky career choice with your eye situation, so if you can come up with a plan B that sounds like a good plan to me!)
(there's a job right there for you, Katewest)
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