5 signs you may need glasses

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5 signs you may need glasses

 

If words appear blurry as you read this on your phone or computer, you may need glasses.

If your eyes feel tired or ache, you may need spectacles. You also may need to cut back on your screen time.

If you’re getting headaches frequently, you should see your eye doctor. You may need glasses, or it could be something else altogether.

Having trouble reading that text on your phone? Is it from your boss saying “You’re fired!” or is it from your would-be employer saying “You’re hired!”? You may need glasses to know the difference.

Here are 5 signs you may need glasses:

 

1. You’re having trouble reading

With age comes wisdom, but it also brings vision issues. It’s harder to read restaurant menus, texts from friends, email from family and recipes for mealtime.

If you have searched your smartphone settings to increase the size of the text or you are switching to audio or large-print books, you may need glasses.

Around age 40, presbyopia (or age-related farsightedness) hits everyone. You may find yourself squinting to read a note or holding your phone at arm’s length to see a text more clearly.

Having difficulty reading is one of the surest signs you may need glasses.

If you’ve never needed vision correction before age 40, reading glasses may help you at least temporarily. Progressive lenses, which help you to read text, see road signs in a distance and everything in between, may be a better long-term solution for your reading difficulties.

 

2. You (or your child) struggle to see at a distance

If your child is getting poor marks on in-class assignments but doing well on homework, your son or daughter may be having trouble seeing what’s on the board or projector but reading clearly what’s on take-home worksheets.

Your child may be myopic (nearsighted), and glasses can make it easy for your child to see the teacher and the board clearly again.

 

3. Your night vision is worsening

Driving at night is a challenge, but if lane markings are hard to see, street lamps have halos and the oncoming headlights cast cause glare, you may need glasses.

Good vision is vital to road safety, and glasses with an anti-reflective coating can dim the glare from those approaching headlights.

If you’re having trouble seeing dials on your dashboard, single-vision or progressive lenses can help you see that light signaling you are nearly out of gas or petrol.

Progressive lenses (which help you to see clearly at distances near, far and in-between) may also help you to better see your dashboard, lane markings in front of you and road signs in the distance.

 

4. The details are fuzzy

Perhaps your vision troubles aren’t determined by distance: Objects look a little out of focus at any distance.

If objects or words are partially clear but blurry around the edges or you’re experiencing double vision, you’re showing common signs of astigmatism, which means it’s definitely time for glasses.

Astigmatism also affects night vision and can cause headaches and eye tiredness.

 

5. Headaches and tired eyes

If you’re suffering daily headaches or your eyes are feeling tired and painful by the afternoon, you may need glasses — but you could also be experiencing digital eye strain.

If you spend eight hours (or more) a day in front of a laptop for work, computer glasses can be a big help reduce headaches, tired eyes and other symptoms of digital eye strain.

 

When to see your eye doctor

The list above is just a handful of signs you may need glasses. Regular eye exams will ensure you can see clearly when driving at night, when reading restaurant menus and even to distinguish if that text was from your boss or would-be employer.

If you’re experiencing frequent headaches or your vision is blurry, don’t wait until your next eye exam. See your eye doctor now. Sure, you may need glasses, but it could be something else causing your blurry vision and headaches.

IF YOU ARE EXPERIENCING ANY OF THE ABOVE SIGNS YOU MAY NEED GLASSES: Find an eye doctor near you and book an appointment for a comprehensive eye exam.

 

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