About a year ago, the wife got me a pair of nice Oakley sunglasses. The idea was to take them up to an Oakley dealer to get prescription lenses for them. I went up there one day, and they told me that I couldn't get lenses for them because my prescription was too strong.
That was probably the straw that broke the camel's back. The Army offered refractive eye surgery for years. I toyed with the the idea but never did it. Deployments got in the way. Plus I am the biggest wussy when it comes to my eyes. My annual flight exam includes that puff-of-air glaucoma test, and it takes several attempts before we can get a good reading. I hate that puff of air, let alone the thought of lasers and crazy stuff on my eyes. Nowadays I figure, with all the budget cuts and such that are coming down the pipe, if I was going to do it then I had better do it now.
I went in for the consultation. The optomologist performed a standard eye exam, then put a series of numbing eye drops into my eyes, waited an hour, and repeated the exam. They then compare the two results and if it is within a certain parameter, and there are no other disqualifying issues such as a irregular cornea, then you are "go".
The pre-op gave the run-down on the different types of surgery. Laser -Assisted in situ Keratomileusis, better know as LASIK, is an all-laser surgery, and Photorefractive keratectomy, or PRK, involves an electric toothbrush-looking instrument that scrubs a layer off of your eye in place of the laser. While the latter sounds pretty midievil, it has its advantages. Because of my stronger prescription, it was recommended that I go with LASIK.
Last tuesday, the wife dropped me off at the hospital with my "goody bag" from the pharmacy: 3 Vicodin, one bottle of antibiotic eyedrops, one bottle of steroid eyedrops, a boatload of Refresh eyedrops, and a free pair of sunglasses. About 10 minutes before the surgary, everyone in the group popped one of the vicodin and then texted our individual rides to start heading to the hospital to come pick us up. Unfortunately for me, I was the first one and my happy pill hadn't QUITE kicked in yet (talking with the nurse the next day, she said folks at the end of the line were actually falling asleep on the table). It was fairly uncomfortable, but the procedure took all of about 3 minutes. They got me started on the steroids and antibiotic, put my sunglasses on, and sent me on my way after only being at the hospital for an hour. I got home and went right to bed, still pretty high. I woke up about 1PM wanting to die. Tons of stinging, burning and so on. I popped another Vicodin and fell asleep again. Woke up again at about 6pm. No pain, no burning, and I could see without glasses for the first time since I was five years old. A pretty brutal regiment of eye drops go along with it: Refresh drops every 2 hours for the next few months to keep everything wet and hasten the healing. I take the antibiotic and steroid drops every 4 hours until tomorrow. I also have to wear sunglasses whenever im outside, to include PT and formations which wearing of sunglasses is otherwise verbotten.
I went to my 1-week post-op today. I can see 20/15 in my left eye and 20/20 in my right--and my right may improve still as it heals. The only side effect is allot of glare, halos and "starbursts" when driving at night. As my eyes dilate beyond the diameter of the "flap" that was cut on my retina, the refracted light causes all of that, and all of that will go away as everything heals up.
Like I said, I have been wearing glasses for 25 years. It is an incredible, and borderline annoying lifestyle change. I don't have to do the "where's my glasses" dance every morning that I do if they got knocked off my nightstand in the night. Ill reach up to my face to take off my glasses before putting the sunglasses on without thinking, and of course they're not there. Same with changing clothes and just about anything else that glasses got in the way of up until now. Its going to take quite awhile to get used to it. I'm pretty much done for the flying season because of all this, but cant wait to see how "my new eyeballs" affect my pattern next season.
So.....if you have Myopia (short-sighted), go get the consultation and if you are a candidate for the surgery, BY ALL MEANS get it! I can't tell you how amazing it is to be free of glasses for, pretty much, the first time ever.