A beginning
First of all, season's greetings to you all out there, may you get what you wish for this christmas. I bet that comfortable eyes is on the top of most of our lists this year =)
Second of all, a big thank you to Rebecca and everyone else who have been filling this site and LaserMyEye with useful information and just plain support, I've been browsing these two communities for the last 6-9 months, when it got more and more clear to me that what I was experiencing after my laser surgery was certainly not normal, despite what the clinic tried to reassure me.
- Man how I wish that I had come across these pages before having the, at the time, splendid idea of having parts of my eyeballs evaporated by laser =)
But I'm getting ahead of myself, so let me start by telling the background of my case, which - sadly - is not much different than others that I have read here. And in our case, I guess Marx was wrong when he said that history first repeats itself as a tragedy, then as a farce. Regarding laser eye surgery, it just remains a tragedy.
I'm a 27 year old guy, Danish, but living in Norway. I've always used glasses since I was little, and then lenses in my teens and 20's. I'm one one of those persons who always hated my glasses, and with a vengeance. Lenses worked out well for me, but I found them expensive, as well as bothersome, having to always mind keeping solution and containers around and such. So the idea of getting eye surgery had been in my mind for many years, and you always saw these smiling people in the ads, as well as hearing how safe and minor the procedure was, just a few minutes and a small zap, and you'd be off glasses and lenses for the rest of your life, right?.
Well, I pride myself with common sense and a decent amount of intelligence, as well as a higher education, so I didn't just jump out in this without second thought. I browsed the net to look at clinics and as importantly, different methods. Unfortunately, my research must have been incomplete, since I never came across this site of LaserMyEye until after the procedure, but I sure read a lot of articles and a lot of people's opinions. To me, it seemed like LASIK was the great culprit, with flap problems and dry eyes, whereas PRK seemed more safe, albeit with a longer recovery time afterwards.
Well, I thought, that's alright with me, the safer the better. I "only" had about -1.75 and -2.25 prescription anyway, as well as some minor astigmatism, so I thought I was the perfect candidate, with a small prescription, no prior dry eye, and going with the surface treatment instead of LASIK.
Coincidentially, that's what the LASIK clinic called me as well, the perfect candidate, which makes my current situation all the more ironic.
I started noticing my dry eyes about day 5 after the procedure. The first 5 days I had quite the opposite problem, with eyes leaking water like they were competing with the Niagara Falls, as well as an excruciating pain in both eyes that made me unable to sleep more than 2-3 hours a night, without having to wake up, forcing topical anesthetic into my eyes, and hoping for another 2-3 hours of relief. Those 5 days were the most horrible I have ever experienced, to be honest.
First of all, season's greetings to you all out there, may you get what you wish for this christmas. I bet that comfortable eyes is on the top of most of our lists this year =)
Second of all, a big thank you to Rebecca and everyone else who have been filling this site and LaserMyEye with useful information and just plain support, I've been browsing these two communities for the last 6-9 months, when it got more and more clear to me that what I was experiencing after my laser surgery was certainly not normal, despite what the clinic tried to reassure me.
- Man how I wish that I had come across these pages before having the, at the time, splendid idea of having parts of my eyeballs evaporated by laser =)
But I'm getting ahead of myself, so let me start by telling the background of my case, which - sadly - is not much different than others that I have read here. And in our case, I guess Marx was wrong when he said that history first repeats itself as a tragedy, then as a farce. Regarding laser eye surgery, it just remains a tragedy.
I'm a 27 year old guy, Danish, but living in Norway. I've always used glasses since I was little, and then lenses in my teens and 20's. I'm one one of those persons who always hated my glasses, and with a vengeance. Lenses worked out well for me, but I found them expensive, as well as bothersome, having to always mind keeping solution and containers around and such. So the idea of getting eye surgery had been in my mind for many years, and you always saw these smiling people in the ads, as well as hearing how safe and minor the procedure was, just a few minutes and a small zap, and you'd be off glasses and lenses for the rest of your life, right?.
Well, I pride myself with common sense and a decent amount of intelligence, as well as a higher education, so I didn't just jump out in this without second thought. I browsed the net to look at clinics and as importantly, different methods. Unfortunately, my research must have been incomplete, since I never came across this site of LaserMyEye until after the procedure, but I sure read a lot of articles and a lot of people's opinions. To me, it seemed like LASIK was the great culprit, with flap problems and dry eyes, whereas PRK seemed more safe, albeit with a longer recovery time afterwards.
Well, I thought, that's alright with me, the safer the better. I "only" had about -1.75 and -2.25 prescription anyway, as well as some minor astigmatism, so I thought I was the perfect candidate, with a small prescription, no prior dry eye, and going with the surface treatment instead of LASIK.
Coincidentially, that's what the LASIK clinic called me as well, the perfect candidate, which makes my current situation all the more ironic.
I started noticing my dry eyes about day 5 after the procedure. The first 5 days I had quite the opposite problem, with eyes leaking water like they were competing with the Niagara Falls, as well as an excruciating pain in both eyes that made me unable to sleep more than 2-3 hours a night, without having to wake up, forcing topical anesthetic into my eyes, and hoping for another 2-3 hours of relief. Those 5 days were the most horrible I have ever experienced, to be honest.
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