VERY strongly seconding this. I wear contacts I can leave in for weeks at a time and it’s fantastically better than glasses. You only need to take them in and out rarely compared to regularly contacts, and you never have to worry about dropping or breaking them. You can wear sunglasses or google glass or whatever with no problems, you can go out in the cold without them fogging up, you don’t have to worry about them falling off your head if you do martial arts or a cartwheel, and if you have a strong prescription (my contacts are −9) contacts distort your vision a LOT less than glasses of a similar prescription. You don’t have to fumble for glasses when you wake up. You get way better peripheral vision. Obviously way better for sex. The list probably goes on.
I found them irritating my eyes, more so than other contacts. But I’m from not-humid climate, results may vary on the coast. Also make sure you see your optometrist on schedule, mine recommended I stop using them after two years for eye health reasons.
And to be fair, I second all of drethelin’s comments about convenience.
This is a very important point, and part of the problem is you can’t tell whether you’ll get used to putting in and wearing contact lenses without trying it. The first time you do it at the doctor’s office will be awkward and probably painful.
The first time you do it at the doctor’s office will be awkward and probably painful.
Confirmed. It also used to take an unusually long time to put them on and get them off my eyes. The doctor even let me know that after a while, looking back at how long it used to take me, I’ll be surprised/amused by it, after having gotten used to the technique.
VERY strongly seconding this. I wear contacts I can leave in for weeks at a time and it’s fantastically better than glasses. You only need to take them in and out rarely compared to regularly contacts, and you never have to worry about dropping or breaking them. You can wear sunglasses or google glass or whatever with no problems, you can go out in the cold without them fogging up, you don’t have to worry about them falling off your head if you do martial arts or a cartwheel, and if you have a strong prescription (my contacts are −9) contacts distort your vision a LOT less than glasses of a similar prescription. You don’t have to fumble for glasses when you wake up. You get way better peripheral vision. Obviously way better for sex. The list probably goes on.
To provide the voice of dissent;
I found them irritating my eyes, more so than other contacts. But I’m from not-humid climate, results may vary on the coast. Also make sure you see your optometrist on schedule, mine recommended I stop using them after two years for eye health reasons.
And to be fair, I second all of drethelin’s comments about convenience.
This is a very important point, and part of the problem is you can’t tell whether you’ll get used to putting in and wearing contact lenses without trying it. The first time you do it at the doctor’s office will be awkward and probably painful.
Confirmed. It also used to take an unusually long time to put them on and get them off my eyes. The doctor even let me know that after a while, looking back at how long it used to take me, I’ll be surprised/amused by it, after having gotten used to the technique.