I didn't know it was this bad, but I decided not to get LASIK for a different reason. It'd fix my near-sightedness, but also normalize my superior close-up vision. I can easily read ultra-fine print that most people need a magnifying glass for, and LASIK would destroy that. Absolutely not worth the small benefit of getting rid of my glasses.
Ha! I thought I was the only one that loved being able to see any swimmers in my water bottle. I guess that's more of a drawback, but being able to have magnifying vision is pretty awesome. I use contacts sparingly when working, and glasses the rest of the time, and the maintenance thereof is not really a big deal.
I'm very nearsighted. But as I've aged, my "best distance" has increased from ~20 cm to ~40 cm. So now it's perfect for computer work. And I only need glasses for driving, movies, etc.
Yeah, totally! It's great for working on small objects, tiny screws, and so forth. It's honestly like an everyday superpower.
I take my glasses off to read up close; I can't make out faces across a room without them, but at close range they actually make things blurrier. Contacts kill it, too, which is why I didn't use them for long. I've been thinking of getting a pair just for using in VR, since my glasses don't fit well, but I dunno.
I didn't even realize people with normal eyes couldn't see as closely as I could. Is it really true that normal eyes have a near point of almost 10 inches?