These are my opinions and mine alone, based on what has happened during my little journey through the land of eye disease. Just so you know where I’m coming from I had Lazik 7 years ago after being assured by 3 eye doctors that I was an “excellent candidate”. Following Lazik it took two and a half years and six eye doctors to get an accurate diagnoses. I told each and every one of them what I (correctly) thought was wrong, they just “couldn’t” see it. Finally, with the correct diagnoses it took me another two years and eight eye doctors before I found someone to effectively treat me, each one could have done so but would not. Two years nine months after Lazik I realized one of my prescription medicines was the primary cause of my eye disease. The seven eye doctors I had seen up to that point couldn’t be bothered to tell me, unfortunately by this time my eye problems where quite advanced and multifaceted. In short, I’m firmly convinced that I was the victim of malpractice and fraud committed by these eye doctors just to generate more office visits and charges to my insurance company. I would be delighted if my following interpretations helped some of you.
So here are some of some unhelpful eye doctor’s comments and what I think they mean:
“I don’t know” ............. This means if they answered my question it would be helpful to me in understanding what was going on.
The blank stare …………..I would get this in response to a comment or complaint I made and it means the eye doctor doesn’t have a good lie prepared, so they would just say nothing.
“I don’t know what is wrong with your eyes”…………..This lie was actually cause for hope, if I had only known what the eye doctors were really up to. It meant the cure for my eye disease was so easy (early on) that if they had diagnosed me the eye doctors would have lost a lot of billable office visits. Not to mention the opportunity of creating a chronic condition out of any easily cured one, which is what eventually happened.
“How can that be”…………….I would get this response after telling the eye doctors how I had “cured” my eye problem for a few months. (Early on and just by luck, I had stumbled across an effective therapy). I now realize this eye doctor comment is another hopeful one. It meant that I was so close to figuring out what was wrong with my eyes that the eye doctors were afraid I’d catch them in a lie, so they would just get me to talk and they could find out how much I’d actually figured out.
Please feel free to add more eye doctor interpretations, you’ve worked out, and best of luck to all of you.
So here are some of some unhelpful eye doctor’s comments and what I think they mean:
“I don’t know” ............. This means if they answered my question it would be helpful to me in understanding what was going on.
The blank stare …………..I would get this in response to a comment or complaint I made and it means the eye doctor doesn’t have a good lie prepared, so they would just say nothing.
“I don’t know what is wrong with your eyes”…………..This lie was actually cause for hope, if I had only known what the eye doctors were really up to. It meant the cure for my eye disease was so easy (early on) that if they had diagnosed me the eye doctors would have lost a lot of billable office visits. Not to mention the opportunity of creating a chronic condition out of any easily cured one, which is what eventually happened.
“How can that be”…………….I would get this response after telling the eye doctors how I had “cured” my eye problem for a few months. (Early on and just by luck, I had stumbled across an effective therapy). I now realize this eye doctor comment is another hopeful one. It meant that I was so close to figuring out what was wrong with my eyes that the eye doctors were afraid I’d catch them in a lie, so they would just get me to talk and they could find out how much I’d actually figured out.
Please feel free to add more eye doctor interpretations, you’ve worked out, and best of luck to all of you.
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